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Yashwantrao Chavan

Indian politician

Chavan with his family.

Yashwantrao Balwantrao Chavan (Marathi pronunciation: ; 12 March 1913 – 25 November 1984) was an Indian politician. He served as the last Chief Minister of Bombay State and the first of Maharashtra after latter was created by the division of Bombay state. His last significant ministerial post was as the Deputy Prime Minister of India in the short lived Charan Singh government in 1979. He was a strong Congress leader, co-operative leader, social activist and writer. He was popularly known as Leader of Common People. He advocated social democracy in his speeches and articles and was instrumental in establishing co-operatives in Maharashtra for the betterment of the farmers. He is generally regarded as the architect of Modern Maharashtra.

Contents

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Political career
    • 2.1 Offices held in the State Government of Bombay
    • 2.2 Roles in Central Government
  • 3 Split in Congress
  • 4 Public office positions held
  • 5 Death and legacy
  • 6 Legacy
    • 6.1 Yashwantrao Chavan Pratishtan (Foundation)
    • 6.2 Places named after Yashwantrao Chavan
    • 6.3 Literature
    • 6.4 In popular culture
  • 7 External links
  • 8 References

Early life

Yashwantrao Chavan was born in a Kunbi-Maratha family on 12 March 1913 in the village of Devrashtre in Satara District (now in Sangli District) of Maharashtra, India. He had three siblings. Chavan lost his father in his early childhood and was brought up by his uncle and mother. His mother taught him about self-dependency and patriotism. From his childhood he was fascinated by the freedom struggle of India.

Chavan was an active participant in the struggle for independence of India.As a schoolboy in Karad in 1930, he was fined for his participation in the Non-cooperation Movement led by Mahatma Gandhi. In 1932, he was sentenced to 18 months in prison for hoisting the Indian flag in Satara. During this period, he came in contact with Swami Ramanand Bharti, Dhulappa Bhaurao Navale, Gaurihar (Appasaheb) Sihasane, V. S. Page and Govind Kruparam Wani. Their friendship lasted forever.

After completing his high school education from Tilak High school Karad in 1934, he joined the Rajaram College, Kolhapur. In 1938, after obtaining his B.A. degree in history and political science (awarded by Bombay University) he joined Law College of Pune. After obtaining his law degree (LLB awarded by Bombay University) in 1941, he started practice as a criminal lawyer at Karad. In 1942, he married Venutai at Phaltan in Satara district, in a match arranged by their families.

During his college years, Chavan was involved in many social activities and was closely *ociated with the Congress party and its leaders, such as Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel and Keshavrao Jedhe. In 1940, he became President of Satara District Congress. Chavan was one of the delegates at the Bombay session of the A.I.C.C. in 1942 that gave the call for Quit India. He went "underground" before being arrested for his participation in the movement. He spent around two years in jail, and was released only in 1944.

Political career

Offices held in the State Government of Bombay

In 1946, Yashwantrao was first elected as Member of Legislative *embly of the Bombay State from the South Satara cons*uency. In the same year he was appointed as parliamentary secretary to the Home Minister of Bombay State. In the next government of Morarji Desai he was appointed as Minister of Civil Supplies, Social Welfare and Forests. In 1953 he was a signatory to the Nagpur Pact that *ured equitable development of all regions of what is now the state of Maharashtra. The 1950s witnessed the Samyukta Maharashtra Samiti (United Maharashtra Movement) leading struggle for United Maharashtra with Bombay (now Mumbai) as its capital. Chavan never joined the Samyukta Maharashtra Samiti (United Maharashtra Movement) and in fact called Prime minister Nehru, who opposed formation of language based state reorganization, as "Greater than Maharashtra". In 1957 *embly elections Yashwantrao Chavan was elected from the Karad cons*uency. This time he was elected as Leader of Congress Legislative Party, and became Chief Minister of the bilingual Bombay state. The election saw the Congress party losing badly in the Marathi speaking areas to the Samyukta Maharashtra Samiti. However, he was able to persuade Nehru to agree to form Maharashtra and therefore he is regarded as the chief architect in the formation of Marathi speaking state of Maharashtra. On 1 May 1960, Yashwantrao Chavan became the first Chief Minister of Maharashtra. From 1957 to 1960 he also served on the All India Congress Working Committee.Chavan's vision for Maharashtra for the development envisaged the equal development of both the industrial and agricultural sectors across all the regions of the state. He sought to realize this vision through the co-operative movement. Legislation regarding democratic decentralized bodies and the Agricultural Land Ceiling Act were p*ed during his tenure as Chief Minister.

Roles in Central Government

After the resignation of Krishna Menon as Defense Minister in 1962 in the wake of India-China Border Conflict, Yashwantrao was given that portfolio by Prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru. He handled the delicate post-war situation firmly and took several decisions to empower the armed forces and negotiated, along with Pandit Nehru, with China to end the hostilities. He also held the Defense portfolio in the Lal Bahadur Shastri Government during the Indo-Pakistan War of September 1965.

In the by-elections in 1962, Chavan was elected unopposed as Member of Parliament from the Nashik parliamentary cons*uency. On 14 November 1966, he was appointed Home Minister of India by Prime minister, Indira Gandhi. Yeshwantrao came in for criticism at the time of the first congress split in 1969. He had stuck to his earlier commitment to vote for the official Congress candidate, Sanjeeva Reddy in the presidential elections and in doing so, had invited the ire of Mrs. Indira Gandhi, but later be shifted his ground and supported her. In doing so, he exposed himself to the charge of duplicity and of being a fence-sitter. According to Hatalkar, it might be said in his favour that he had nothing in common with the Syndicate faction of the Congress party but was fully in rapport with Mrs. Gandhi's views, if not her methods, that his prime anxiety was to maintain the unity of the Congress, but that when he found that the split was inevitable, he did not suc*b to the blandishments held out before him by some members of the Syndicate.

On 26 June 1970, she appointed him the Finance Minister of India. During his term, Indian economy went into recession for the first time since 1966 and real GDP growth fell by 0.55% in 1972.

He was appointed as the Foreign Minister on 11 October 1974. In June 1975, an Internal State of Emergency was declared in India by the Indira Gandhi Government. This period saw a severe crackdown on leaders and parties opposed to Mrs. Gandhi's rule. Yashwantrao remained in her Government during this period. In the subsequent general elections 1977, the Congress was routed with the party leader and Prime minister, Indira Gandhi herself losing her parliamentary seat. Therefore in the new Parliament, Chavan was elected the Congress Party Parliamentary leader. As Congress now the biggest opposition party, he became the Leader of opposition.

Split in Congress

The annual session of the Congress party was held in Bengaluru at the end of 1978. On this occasion, the party suffered a split, and two separate political parties emerged, namely Congress (Indira) and Congress (Urs). While the former was led by Indira Gandhi, the latter was led by Devaraj Urs, powerful Chief Minister of Mysore. The other important leaders who joined the Congress Urs were Dev Kant Baruah, Kasu Brahmananda Reddy, Sharad Pawar, A.K. Antony, Sarat Chandra Sinha, Priyaranjan Das Munshi and Yashwantrao Chavan. On the other side, Indira Gandhi's new party included leaders like Shankar Dayal Sharma, Umashankar Dik*, Chidambaram Subramaniam, Kamruddin Ali Ahmad, Abdul Rehman Antulay and Gulabrao Patil.

Yashwantrao Chavan's political career suffered a major setback following his decision to move away from Indira Gandhi. Devaraj Urs himself soon joined the Janata Party, following which the Congress(Urs) was renamed the Indian Congress (Socialist). Yeshwantrao was appointed as Home Minister and Deputy Prime Minister of India in the short-lived cabinet of Prime Minister Charan Singh in 1979.

In the general elections of January 1980, Congress (I) won a majority in Parliament and came to power under the leadership of Indira Gandhi. In this election, Yashwantrao Chavan was the only candidate elected from Maharashtra as MP on a Congress(S) ticket. In 1981, Yashwantrao was allowed to return to the Indira-led Congress after a six month wait. Critics at that time commented that the "Fence-sitter has come home to roost". In 1982, he was appointed the Chairman of the 8th Finance Commission of India. He died in 1984.

Public office positions held

Chaven held many important positions during a long and distinguished career. These included:

Death and legacy

He held all important posts in country from deputy PM , Finance Minister , Defence minister to Home minister and External Affairs Minister. He brought important changes in all fields where he held power, he also played crucial role in rebuilding Indian army back after 1962 Sino India War. After his appointment as Defence Minister, He rapidly expanded and modernized military and restored it's dignity which directly helped India in 1971 war. He also played crucial role in 1965 India Pakistan War Yashwantrao Chavan died of a heart attack on 25 November 1984 in Delhi. He was 71. He was cremated in Karad with full state honours on 27 November and his Samadhi (resting place) is situated at Krishna-Koyna Pritisangam. He was known for his character and intellect

Legacy

  • Yashwantrao Chavan holds the record of being the only Maharashtrian leader who held the 4 most important portfolios in the Union government. They are Home, External Affairs, Defence and Finance.
  • When Yashwantrao was appointed Federal Defence minister following the China war in 1962, a popular saying arose in Maharashtra- "हिमालयाच्या हाकेला धावला सह्याद्री" ("Himalayachya Hakela Dhavla Sahyadri"), translated in English, Sahyadri (the mountain range that separates Konkan from the Deccan Plateau) came rushing on the call (for help) by the Himalaya.
  • During the 1960s and early 70s when Yashwantrao was at the peak of his power and influence, he was called Pratishivaji or New Shivaji.

Yashwantrao Chavan Pratishtan (Foundation)

  • In 1985, soon after his death, Yashwantrao Chavan Pratishtan (Foundation) was established in Bombay.
  • In 2010, The Pratishtan ins*uted a corpus at the Ins*ute for Defence Studies and *yses (IDSA) for the conduct of an annual Y B Chavan Memorial lecture. Yashwantrao was the founding President of IDSA. The inaugural lecture in 2010 was delivered by Prof. Sunil Khilnani. Prof. Kanti Bajpai, and Amb*ador Kanwal Sibal delivered the 2011 and 2012 lectures respectively

Places named after Yashwantrao Chavan

  • In 1980, Ujjani Back water named Yashwant Sagar on Bhima River village Ujjani in Solapur district.
  • In 1984, an engineering college named Yeshwantrao Chavan College of Engineering was established in Nagpur.
  • In 1989, an open university named 'Yashwantrao Chavan Maharashtra Open University' was established at Nasik in Maharashtra.
  • Rayat Shikshan Sanstha's renowned 'Science College' in Satara was christened as Yashavantrao Chavan Ins*ute of Science, Satara in 1986.
  • The expressway between Pune and Mumbai is named after him as are the auditoriums in the Kothrud suburb of Pune, at Nariman Point in Mumbai and the Town Hall in Karad.
  • Yashwantrao Chavan Memorial hospital in Sant Tukaram Nagar area of Pimpri is named after him.
  • Shivaji University, Kolhapur has established 'Yashwantrao Chavan School of Rural Development'.
  • In 2009, the Mumbai Pune Expressway, India's first Express-Way, was named Yashwantrao Chavan Mumbai-Pune Express-Way.
  • In 1985, a manmade sanctuary was declared near Devrashtre village, was named as Yashwantrao Chavan Sagreshwar Wildlife Sanctuary

Literature

Yashwantrao Chavan took a keen interest in literature. He established the Marathi Sahitya Mandal and supported the Marathi Sahitya Sammelan(Conference). He was very closely *ociated with many poets, editors and several Marathi and Hindi writers. He initiated compilation of Marathi Vishwakosh (a Marathi language encyclopedia). For this, he nominated Lakshman Shastri Joshi as a chairman. He had planned to write his autobiography in three parts. The first part covers his early years in Satara district. Since his native place is situated on the banks of Krishna River he named the first volume as Krishna Kath. His years as the Chief Minister of the bilingual Bombay state and later as that of the newly formed Maharashtra state were spent in Bombay and so the proposed name for the second volume was "Sagar Tir". Later in 1962 he was appointed Defence Minister of India by Nehru. From then he was in Delhi until his death in 1984; so he had proposed the name "Yamuna Kath" for his third volume. He was able to complete and publish only the first volume.

In popular culture

Yashwantrao Chavan Bakhar Eka Vaadalaachi, a 2014 Indian Marathi-language biographical film by Jabbar Patel covers his role as the Chief Minister of Maharashtra. Ashok Lokhande portrayed the *ular role of Chavan.

External links

  • Yashwantrao Chavan Pratishthan, Mumbai

References

    Expenditure
    • Pay Commission
    • 7th Central Pay Commission (CPC) and Defence Forces
    • Sixth Central Pay Commission
    Revenue
    • Income Tax Department
    • Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs
    Financial Services
    • Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana
    DIPAM
    • Disinvestment in India
    • Disinvestment of Public Sector Units in India
    DPE
    • Efficient monitoring of the capital expenditure
    • *et monetisation and financial health of the Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs)
    SecretariesFinance Ministers
    • R. K. Shanmukham Chetty
    • John Mathai
    • C. D. Deshmukh
    • T. T. Krishnamachari
    • Jawaharlal Nehru
    • Morarji Desai
    • Sachindra Chaudhuri
    • Indira Gandhi
    • Yashwantrao Chavan
    • Chidambaram Subramaniam
    • Hirubhai M. Patel
    • Charan Singh
    • Hemwati Nandan Bahuguna
    • R. Venkataraman
    • Pranab Mukherjee
    • Vishwanath Pratap Singh
    • Rajiv Gandhi
    • N. D. Tiwari
    • Shankarrao Chavan
    • Madhu Dandavate
    • Yashwant Sinha
    • Manmohan Singh
    • Jaswant Singh
    • P. Chidambaram
    • I. K. Gujral
    • Arun Jaitley
    • Piyush Goyal
    • Nirmala Sitharaman (in*bent)
    Ministers of State
    for Finance
    • Nirmala Sitharaman
    • Jayant Sinha
    • Arjun Ram Meghwal
    • Pon Radhakrishnan
    • Anurag Thakur
    • Bhagwat Karad (in*bent)
    • Pankaj Chaudhary (in*bent)
    Chief Economic
    Advisor
    • JJ Anjaria
    • IG Patel
    • IG Patel
    • VK Ramaswamy
    • Ashok Mitra
    • Manmohan Singh
    • RM Honavar
    • Bimal Jalan
    • Nitin Desai
    • Deepak Nayyar
    • Shankar Acharya
    • Rakesh Mohan
    • Ashok K Lahiri
    • Arvind Virmani
    • Kaushik Basu
    • Raghuram Rajan
    • Arvind Subramanian
    • Krishnamurthy Subramanian
    • V. Anantha Nageswaran (in*bent)
    Finance Commissions
    • 1st
    • 2nd
    • 3rd
    • 4th
    • 5th
    • 6th
    • 7th
    • 8th
    • 9th
    • 10th
    • 11th
    • 12th
    • 13th
    • 14th
    • 15th
    Home Secretaries
    • R. N. Banerjee
    • H. V. R. Iyengar
    • A. V. Pai
    • B. N. Jha
    • V. Vishwanathan
    • L. P. Singh
    • Govind Narain
    • N. K. Mukherjee
    • S. L. Khurana
    • T. C. A. Srinivasavaradan
    • S. M. H. Burney
    • T. N. Chaturvedi
    • M. M. K. Wali
    • Prem *ar
    • R. D. Pradhan
    • C. G. Somiah
    • J. A. Kalyankrishnan
    • Shiromani Sharma
    • Naresh Chandra
    • R. K. Bhargava
    • Madhav Godbole
    • N. N. Vohra
    • K. Padmanabhaiah
    • Balmiki Prasad Singh
    • Kamal Pande
    • N. Gopalaswami
    • Anil Baijal
    • Dhirendra Singh
    • Vinod *ar Duggal
    • Gopal Krishna Pillai
    • R. K. Singh
    • Anil Goswami
    • L. C. Goyal
    • Rajiv Mehrishi
    • Rajiv Gauba
    • Ajay *ar Bhalla (in*bent)
    Home Ministers
    • Vallabhbhai Patel
    • Jawaharlal Nehru
    • C. Rajagopalachari
    • Kailash Nath Katju
    • Govind Ballabh Pant
    • Lal Bahadur Shastri
    • Gulzari Lal Nanda
    • Indira Gandhi
    • Yashwantrao Chavan
    • Uma Shankar Dik*
    • Kasu Brahmananda Reddy
    • Charan Singh
    • Morarji Desai
    • Hirubhai M. Patel
    • Zail Singh
    • R. Venkataraman
    • Prakash Chandra Sethi
    • P. V. Narasimha Rao
    • Shankarrao Chavan
    • Buta Singh
    • Mufti Mohammad Sayeed
    • Chandra Shekhar
    • Murli Manohar Joshi
    • H. D. Deve Gowda
    • Indrajit Gupta
    • L. K. Advani
    • Shivraj Patil
    • P. Chidambaram
    • Sushil*ar Shinde
    • Rajnath Singh
    • Amit Shah (in*bent)
    Ministers of State
    for Home Affairs
    • Ratanjit Pratap Narain Singh
    • Kiren Rijiju
    • G. Kishan Reddy (in*bent)

    Yashwantrao Chavan Is A Member Of