The Hindu Newspaper Editorial Vocabulary : 31 October 2018 -For Various Competitive Exams |
The unifier of modern India
Remembering Sardar Patel’s stupendous role in integrating the princely States into independent India
“By
common endeavo[u]r we can raise the country to a new greatness, while a lack of
unity will expose us to fresh calamities.” These pragmatic but profound remarks
defined the vision and the sterling character of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the
principal unifier of modern India.
Force behind unification
Sardar
Patel’s foresight and tactful navigation of the most turbulent period in
post-Independence, and the resolve he demonstrated in integrating the more than
500 disparate princely States into the Dominion of India is an unparalleled
accomplishment in modern history.
Hailing
Patel’s feat, Lord Mountbatten, the last Viceroy of India, had said: “By far
the most important achievement of the present government is the unification of
the States into the Dominion of India. Had you failed in this, the results
would have been disastrous… Nothing has added to the prestige of the present
government more than the brilliant policy you have followed with the States.”
Patel
was a statesman with a strong sense of realpolitik, a realist to the core and
an earthy politician whose sole aim was to build a strong and united India.
What
makes the merger of the princely States truly incredible is the fact that the
princely rulers had the option at that time to either accede to India or
Pakistan or remain independent. Yet, Patel’s sagacity, foresight, patriotism,
tact, persuasive powers and abiding commitment to fair play enabled him to
untangle a highly complex political and social problem of an unprecedented
scale, without triggering any kind of revolt or civil unrest.
However,
he was also compelled to use coercion by launching ‘Operation Polo’ to liberate
and integrate Hyderabad after the Nizam of Hyderabad entertained false hopes of
either joining Pakistan or remaining independent. In a swift operation lasting
five days, Hyderabad State was liberated in September 1948.
Writing
about Patel’s decisiveness in the Christian Science Monitor , W. Gordon
Graham observed: “Hyderabad, a State covering 80,000 square miles in the heart
of peninsular India, was at that time in the grip of an unscrupulous minority
which aimed at secession from India. Had the bid succeeded, India might not
have survived as a political unit. This situation needed a man of iron who
would not balk at coercive action, and in the Sardar, India had at that vital
moment just the man.”
Indeed
at the most critical time when the country’s political unity was in jeopardy,
India found the man of the moment in Sardar Patel, who displayed amazing
patience, tact and a steely determination in dealing with an intransigent
ruler, who refused to see the writing on the wall and even wanted to take the
issue to the United Nations. Displaying statesmanship of the highest order, Sardar
Patel prevented the attempts to not only Balkanise India but internationalise
the issue as well. The complicated case of Junagarh, Gujarat, was also handled
with dexterity by Patel. I feel that the problem of Jammu and Kashmir would
have been resolved long back had Sardar Patel been given a free hand to handle
it at that time.
A builder of India
Patel
himself termed the entire exercise as a “bloodless revolution” when he wanted
the Constituent Assembly to consider privy purse settlements for the surrender
by the rulers of all their ruling powers and the dissolution of the States as
separate units.
Patel
was an ardent follower of Mahatma Gandhi and never swerved in his loyalty to
his mentor, although there were occasions when he differed with him. Similarly,
he did not see eye-to-eye with Jawaharlal Nehru on certain issues, including
the handling of Jammu and Kashmir. But he did not allow these differences or
personal ego to come in the way of protecting the larger interests of the
country — which were at the core of his heart. He worked shoulder-to-shoulder
with Nehru in building a modern India.
Patel
was a multifaceted personality. He was a dynamic political leader, an organiser
par excellence, a competent administrator and a skilful negotiator.
After
coming under the influence of Mahatma Gandhi, he became his loyal follower and
successfully organised peasants against the imposition of taxes by the British
at Kheda and Bardoli, Gujarat, and in the process he earned the title of
‘Sardar’ for his leadership qualities. The manner in which he marshalled the
peasants and the unflinching stand taken by him eventually forced the
authorities to roll back the taxes.
Architect of the steel frame
The
Iron Man of India was the chief architect of India’s steel frame — the civil
services. Thus, the All India Services were seen as an important cementing
force in promoting the unity and integrity of the nation.
It
will be relevant to recall his famous address to the civil service probationers
in 1947 when Patel told them that the service will have to adopt its true role
of national service without being trammelled upon by traditions and habits of
the past. He said: “Officers must be guided by a real spirit of service in
their day-to-day administration, for in no other manner can they fit in the
scheme of things. Your predecessors were brought up in the traditions in which
they felt out of touch and kept themselves aloof from the common run of the
people. It will be your bounden duty to treat the common men in India as your own
or to put it correctly, to feel yourself to be one of them.” It is in the
fitness of things that the National Police Academy located on the outskirts of
Hyderabad, Telangana, is named after him, as a tribute to the statesman.
Another
aspect of the Sardar that needs to be highlighted is his graciousness and
magnanimity in readily abiding by Mahatma Gandhi’s advice to withdraw his
candidacy for the post of Congress President in favour of Pandit Nehru in 1946,
although a majority of State Congress committees supported his candidature. It
was apparent that the Congress President would become the first Prime Minister
of India. It once again proved his noble intention of placing the country’s
interests above self.
His
love for the motherland was best described by Maulana Azad when he said: “He
made his choice out of two courses that come before a man, namely would he live
for his country or for himself? Sardar chose his country.”
A tribute
I
am glad that the 182-metre-tall ‘Statue of Unity’ is being unveiled today at
the Narmada dam site in Gujarat, in a real tribute and recognition of Patel’s
stupendous role in integrating various princely States and ensuring India’s
unity.
As
we pay our tributes to the great statesman on his birth anniversary today, on
October 31, let us try to emulate his qualities and work towards realising his
dream of providing ‘Suraaj’ in a new and prosperous India.
M. Venkaiah Naidu
(Vice-President of India)
Courtesy: The Hindu
1. Stupendous (adjective) - Impressive, amazing, astounding, astonishing, prodigious, phenomena
2. Princely states (noun) - The
states of India that were ruled by indigenous Indian princes before the Indian
Independence Act of 1947.
3. Endeavour (verb) - Try hard to do or achieve something, aspire, aim, seek, set
out
4.
Calamities (noun) - An event causing great and often sudden damage or distress; a
disaster, catastrophe, tragedy, cataclysm, devastating blow, crisis,
adversity, blight, tribulation, woe, affliction.
5. Profound
(adjective) - very great or intense, earnest, overwhelming, deep-seated,
deep-rooted, fervent, ardent, dreadful, terrible, dire, insightful, percipient,
perspicacious.
6. Sterling character
(noun) - very good in quality; used to describe someone's work
or character.
7.
Disparate (adjective) - things
so unlike that there is no basis for comparison, essentially different in kind;
not able to be compared, contrasting.
8. Accomplishment
(noun) - Something that has been achieved successfully, procurement,
attainment, forte, knack.
9. Hailing
(verb) - fall or be hurled forcefully, to cheer, salute,
or greet; welcome,
to acclaim;
approve
10.
Disastrous (adjective) –
Causing great damage, catastrophic, calamitous, cataclysmic, tragic
11. Statesman
(noun) - A skilled, experienced, and respected political leader
or figure.
12.
Merger (noun) - merging, union, unification, incorporation,
coalescence, confederation, hook-up, link-up
alliance, association.
13.
Accede (verb) - join, become a member of, give in to,
give way to, defer to, accept, assent to, acquiesce in, endorse, comply with,
concur with.
14.
Sagacity (noun) - wisdom, insight, deep insight,
intelligence, understanding, judgment, acuity, astuteness, sense, canniness, percipience,
perspicuity, discernment, erudition, learning, knowledgeability.
15. To
fair play (phrase) - fair-mindedness,
equity, equitableness, even-handedness, impartiality, lack of prejudice,
open-mindedness.
16. Untangle
(verb) - free from a tangled or twisted state, fathom,
understand,
unravel, unsnarl, unjumble, straighten out, sort out, untwist,
untwine.
17. Unprecedented (adjective) - never done or
known before, extraordinary, striking, exceptional,
prodigious, remarkable, unique, freakish.18. Coercion (noun) - force, compulsion, constraint, duress, oppression, enforcement, harassment, intimidation, arm-twisting, pressure, pressurization.
19. Swift (adjective) - prompt, rapid, sudden, immediate, instant, instantaneous, abrupt, unhesitating, headlong.
20. Decisiveness (adjective) - strong-minded,
determined, emphatic, dead set, unhesitating, unwavering, unswerving,
unfaltering, obdurate, intransigent, conclusive, determining.
21. Unscrupulous (adjective) - Having
or showing no moral principles; not honest, unethical,
immoral, amoral, conscienceless, untrustworthy, shameless, reprobate,
exploitative, corrupt, deceitful, devious, underhand, guileful, cunning,
furtive, sly, wrongdoing, unsavoury, disreputable, wicked, villainous, roguish,
sinful, ignoble, degenerate, venal.
22. Secession
(noun) - The action of withdrawing formally from membership of
a federation or body, especially a political state, breakaway,
separation, severance, schism, apostasy, leaving, quitting, desertion
23. Balk at
(Idiom) - To be hesitant
about doing something or to refuse to do it, unwilling
to accept an idea or undertaking, reluctant to, draw back from, flinch
from, shrink from, recoil from, quail at, demur from, scruple to, take exception to, jib at, thwart,
hinder
24. Jeopardy
(noun) - Danger of loss, harm, or failure, peril
25. Intransigent
(adjective) - Unwilling or refusing to change one's views or to
agree about something, inflexible, unyielding, unwavering, unrelenting,
inexorable, inveterate, adamant, tenacious
26. Long back
- past perfect of Long ago
27. Free hand
(adjective & adverb) – the right or authority to do anything you consider necessary, done
manually without the aid of instruments.
28. Common run
(noun) - Ordinary persons, things, or events.
29. Privy purse
(noun) - taxed funds provided by the Duchy of Lancaster to meet
some official expenditure incurred by the monarch, plus his or her private
expenses.
30. Swerved
(verb) - change or cause to change direction abruptly, deviate,
skew, diverge,
sheer,
31. eye-to-eye
(phrase) - Be in full agreement.
32. Multifaceted
(adjective) - Having many different aspects or features, multitudinous
eclectic, sundry, assorted, variegated
33. Competent
(adjective) - having the necessary ability, knowledge, or skill to do something
successfully proficient, adept,
adroit,
accomplished,
skilful,
34. Unflinching
(adjective) - not showing fear or hesitation in facing danger or difficulty,
stalwart, unflagging, unswerving, undaunted
35. Trammeled
(verb) - deprive of freedom of action, restrain,
constrain,
hamper,
confine,
curb, forestall, thwart.
36. Aloof from
(adjective) - Not friendly or forthcoming, detached,
unresponsive, stand-offish, stiff, austere, stuffy, reserved, unforthcoming,
37. Graciousness
(noun) - Courteous, kind, and pleasant, especially towards
someone of lower social status, civil, chivalrous, well mannered,
decorous, sumptuous, opulent, plush, modish, chic.
38. Magnanimity
(noun) - the fact or condition of being magnanimous; generosity, benevolence, beneficence, open-handedness,
munificence, chivalry.
39. Come in the way of (phrase) – prevent, oppose, defy.
39. Come in the way of (phrase) – prevent, oppose, defy.
40. Readily
(adverb) - Without hesitation or reluctance; willingly, ungrudgingly
41. Abiding
(adjective) - lasting a long time; enduring, enduring, durable, everlasting, perpetual, eternal,
unending
Note: All meanings took from Oxforddictionaries.com and Google.com only
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