Hinduism: Details about 'Chakravarti Rajagopalachari'
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"Chakravarthi Rajagopalachari (Tamil: சக்ரவர்தி ராஜகோபாலாச்சாரி) (December 1878 - December 25, 1972), known as or Rajaji or C.R., was an Indian lawyer, writer, statesman and a Hindu spiritualist. He was the second Governor-General of independent India. Later he became the Chief Minister of Madras State.
With the CongressAt one time considered Mahatma Gandhi's heir, this brilliant lawyer from Salem, Tamil Nadu was regarded in pre-independence years as one of the top five leaders of the Congress along with Jawaharlal Nehru, Rajendra Prasad, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. Rajaji was also related to Mahatma Gandhi - Rajmohan Gandhi is the grandson of both of them. Of the five, Rajaji, Nehru and Patel were christened the "head, heart and hands" of Gandhi, in whose shadows they remained till his death. Ironically, all three of them were to have a tempestuous relationship, bound together only by their common goal and Gandhi's charm. However, they respected each other immensely. Nehru wrote about Rajaji in his autobiography of how Rajaji's "brilliant intellect, selfless character, and penetrating powers of analysis have been a tremendous asset to our cause". Rajaji was perhaps the earliest Congress leader in the 1940s to admit to the likelihood of the Partition. He even prophesied then that Pakistan might break up in twenty-five years. Rajaji was known to be a fierce defender of his political ideals, and did not hesitate to contradict his closest aides and friends in public, whenever he sensed a threat to them. After serving time in British prisons for his work in the independence movement, he became a member of the Governor's Council in 1946.In 1948, after Indian independence was attained, he replaced Mountbatten to become the only Indian Governor-General of India, in which post he continued till the Republic was declared on January 26, 1950. The office was replaced by that of President, first held by Rajendra Prasad. Rajaji became a member of Jawaharlal Nehru's cabinet, first without portfolio, then, after Patel's death, as Home Minister.He was chief minister of Madras from 1952 to 1954.On leaving government, he was among the first recipients of the Bharat Ratna, the Indian government's highest civilian award. The Swatantra PartyAfter his retirement from active Congress politics, C.R. became a strident critic of Nehru and the Congress. As a founder of the Swatantra party in the 1950s, he attacked the license-permit Raj fearing its potential for corruption and stagnation, even while the tide was in favour of Nehru's socialistic pattern. He wrote in his newspaper Swarajya thus -
Decades later the bureaucratic barriers imposed since the 1950s have been gradually removed, and the economy has since made rapid strides, quickly achieving one of the highest growth rates in the world, causing many to re-evaluate Rajagopalachari and the Swatantra Party's positions. Religion, Literature, and PoetryAs a writer, besides his own material, he published English translations of many important Indian and Hindu works: His translations of the Ramayana, Mahabharata, Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads and Bhaja Govindam remain the standard versions.He also translated the Ramayana into Tamil. Some of his poetry was set to music and sung by Carnatic music's dominant personality M S Subbulakshmi at several occasions of importance, and once at the United Nations (meaning - I have no unfulfilled desires left, oh! God) is a very famous song in the semi-Carnatic music genre written by Rajaji and the most popular version, (widely acknowledged as soul-stirring) has been rendered by M.S. Subbulakshmi. Rajaji also composed a hymn "" which was sung in 1966 at the United Nations, again by M.S. Subbulakshmi. Rajaji was considered by many to be an original and profound thinker in matters of spirituality and religion. A popular anecdote recalls his encounter with the Hindu spiritual leader Swami Vivekananda, during his student days. Swami was visiting a student hostel where Rajaji was staying, and he drew the attention of the inmates of the hostel to a painting of Lord Vishnu hanging over the wall and asked them as to why Vishnu' in all his images, was always depicted as blue. Rajagoplachari answered He was ascribed the color of the infinite sky and the unlimited sea, which answer greatly pleased the Swami. The nonagenarian's public life, spanning nearly eighty years are perhaps best recognized by Mahatma Gandhi's rich tribute to him praising him as: "the keeper of my conscience".Rajaji died in December, 1972 after a short illness.
Chakravarti Râjagopâlâchârimr:चक्रवर्ती राजगोपालचारी Rajaji
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