
Ashwini Vaishnaw, Virendraa Sachdeva, Delhi CM Rekha Gupta pays floral tribute to Syama Prasad Mookerjee
Syama Prasad Mookerjee was the founder of Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the ideological parent organisation of the BJP.
Born on July 6, 1901, in Calcutta, was a multifaceted personality - patriot, educationist, parliamentarian, statesman, and humanitarian. He inherited a legacy of erudition and nationalism from his father, Sir Ashutosh Mookerjee, an esteemed Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University and Judge of the Calcutta High Court.
This upbringing instilled in him a deep respect for India's cultural heritage and a keen interest in modern scientific thought. Mookerjee's academic brilliance was evident from an early age. After excelling at the Presidency College, he earned degrees in law and literature, including a D.Litt. and LL.D.
His tenure as the youngest Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University (1934) allowed him to implement his progressive vision for education. He played a pivotal role in promoting Indian languages and fostering intellectual growth, inviting luminaries like Rabindranath Tagore to inspire students. He later joined the Hindu Mahasabha and, in 1937, united non-Congress forces to form a Progressive Coalition government under the leadership of Fazal-ul-Haq, with himself as the Finance Minister.
In 1940, he became the acting President of the Hindu Mahasabha and declared complete independence for India as its political goal.
Mookerjee resigned from the Bengal Cabinet in November 1942, protesting against the Governor's interference in administration and criticising provincial autonomy as ineffective. His humanitarian efforts during the Bengal famine of 1943, including relief initiatives, highlighted his commitment to serving society.
Post-independence, he joined the interim government under Jawaharlal Nehru as Minister for Industry and Supply, where he laid the foundation for India's industrial growth by establishing iconic institutions such as the Chittaranjan Locomotive Factory, Sindri Fertiliser Corporation, and Hindustan.
However, ideological differences led to his resignation, after which he founded the All-India Bharatiya Jan Sangh (1951) to champion nationalist ideals.
According to the BJP's official website, on the issue of the Delhi pact with Likayat Ali Khan, Mookerjee resigned from the Cabinet on April 6, 1950. Later on October 21, 1951, Mookerjee founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh in Delhi and became its first president.
Mookerjee went to visit Kashmir in 1953 and was arrested on May 11. He died under detention on June 23, 1953. (ANI)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Hindu
32 minutes ago
- The Hindu
The fight for the Opposition space in Gujarat
AAP leader Gopal Italia recently won the Visavadar Assembly seat in Gujarat. This may look like a one-off feat, but it adds to growing evidence that the AAP is eating into the Congress's vote share in the State. Mr. Italia, 35, a former police constable who had once hurled a shoe at the then Minister of State for Home, defeated the BJP's Kirit Patel by 17,554 votes. The Congress came third. The AAP had won from here in the Assembly elections in 2022, but its MLA resigned in December 2023 and defected to the BJP, which necessitated the by-election. The AAP now has five legislators in the 182-member Gujarat Assembly. The Congress has 12 (down from 17 after defections and one candidate's Lok Sabha win). There is critical sub-text here to indicate how the AAP is emerging as an alternative to the Congress. Also Read | Kejriwal hails bypoll wins as 'semi-final to 2027'; says Gujarat fight between AAP, BJP With a vote share of 13% in 2022, the AAP had finished as the first runner-up in 44 seats where the Congress candidates forfeited their election deposits. In 33 seats, the combined strength of the two Opposition parties was higher than that of the BJP winners. These were seats besides the 17 won by the Congress and five won by the AAP. The AAP took the electoral plunge in Gujarat in 2017. Though it did not secure a single seat, it dug its heels in. Subsequently, the party's only strategy was to be visible on the ground and be seen helping people get work done from the local government offices. AAP activists unearthed as many as 170 local scams of varying values in the Surat Municipal Corporation (SMC). Later, they exposed a State-level multi-crore government exam paper leak racket, which forced the government to cancel the test. Against this, the Congress has generally been absent and has not posed any challenge to the government. It was no surprise then that the AAP emerged as the Opposition party in the SMC elections in 2020. It secured 27 seats against 93 of the BJP in the 120-member SMC; the Congress did not win any. In all, the AAP bagged 69 seats in elections to various local municipal bodies that year, which was quite an accomplishment as this was an alien electoral land for the party. Also Read | AAP severs ties with Congress, to contest Gujarat elections independently The Congress put up its best performance in decades in the 2017 elections but could not build on it for the future. Following a no-bolds-barred campaign by Congress leader Rahul Gandhi who then became the president of the party, the Congress won 77 seats and the BJP 99. Mr. Gandhi spent at least three days in all the four regions of Gujarat. His campaign was unprecedented because it was the first time that anyone from the Gandhi family had spent so many days here. Mr. Gandhi raised several burning issues — unemployment, demonetisation, the pangs of the newly introduced Goods and Services Tax, crony capitalism, and the deteriorating state of agriculture. The Congress had the support of young turks such as Hardik Patel (Patidar), Alpesh Thakore (Other Backward Classes member) and Jignesh Mevani (a Dalit). It was an unprecedented situation as members of all the three castes came together on one platform. But the Congress could not retain them with the due importance they deserved and so, Mr. Patel and Mr. Thakore quit the party to join the BJP; they are now MLAs. Many leaders have since deserted the Congress, but the party does not seem to have tried hard to stop anyone nor applied any corrective measures to halt this trend. Mr. Gandhi visited Gujarat after the 2024 general elections and announced in a spirited vein that his party would form the government in 2027. In another visit, he mocked his own party leaders saying, 'Congress has two types of horses: those used in weddings and those in battles. But we assign the wrong duties to them.' He added that there were Trojan horses in his party who were hand in glove with the BJP and asserted that they would be purged. He promised to infuse fresh young blood in the party's Gujarat leadership. No such thing has happened yet. In fact, Gujarat Congress president Shaktisinh Gohil resigned after the by-election results. Also Read | Assembly bypolls: Gujarat Congress chief Shaktisinh Gohil resigns after party loses both seats A common argument is that a third front has not succeeded in Gujarat, but the Congress seldom notices that this was only because there was always a proper Opposition party in place all these decades. All the major third fronts have been splinters of the Congress and the BJP and were seen as opportunistic groupings. As against this, the AAP is an independent political dispensation looking to spread its tentacles and has announced that it will contest the next Assembly polls on its own. Darshan Desai is Professor-in-Practice, Journalism and Mass Communication, Navrachana University, Vadodara, and a senior Gujarat-based journalist


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Pakistan honours 'Kargil hero' whose body it refused to accept
NEW DELHI: Pakistan army chief Asim Munir and other senior officers on Saturday paid "heartfelt tribute" to Captain Karnal Sher Khan Shaheed on the occasion of his 26th "martyrdom" anniversary for what Islamabad describes as his unwavering courage and patriotism during the 1999 Kargil war. However, it's learnt that Pakistan had refused to accept his body that was found on Tiger Hill in the Dras sub-sector. According to a press release issued by the Indian embassy in Washington on July 15, 1999, Pakistan authorities adamantly refused to acknowledge the involvement of Pakistan army regulars in the misadventure in Kargil and as a part of that process did not initially acknowledge Khan's identification by India through correspondence found on him. "It is clear that Pakistan is fully aware of the identities of these bodies but they do not wish to acknowledge this fact as it would immediately expose their army's involvement in Kargil. Hence, their persistent and callous refusal to do so, they are doing great disservice to the families of their soldiers and to the traditions of armed forces everywhere," the embassy had said in its statement. India had approached Pakistan on July 12, saying it would like to hand over the body to the Pakistan army. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Top 5 Books Warren Buffett Wants You to Read In 2025 Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo Subsequently, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) approached India on July 13, stating that the Pakistan govt had requested them to contact India for handing over the bodies of the two officers about which they had heard. "The Pakistani request did not specify the names and identities of the two officers, despite the information being available to them. The reason is obvious. The Pakistan authorities realised that if they conceded the identities of these two officers, it would demolish the myth that the Pakistan army was not involved in Kargil," said the embassy.


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
PUCL alleges inaction by authorities over ‘boycott of Muslims' in Pune villages
The People's Union for Civil Liberties in Pune wrote to the Maharashtra chief secretary alleging inaction by authorities over several villages in Mulshi taluka allegedly boycotting people from the Muslim community. In April and May, gram panchayats of villages like Paud, Pirangut, Kolvan, Suatarwadi passed resolutions banning Muslims from outside from offering namaz in the mosques in their villages. Posters were also found at these villages, boycotting people from the Muslim community. In its letter, the PUCL asked how can a local body 'take away the rights of any Indian citizen and one's freedom of religion'. The letter, by PUCL Pune retired District Judge G.D. Parekh, Vice-President Anwar Rajan, General Secretary Milind Champanerkar, and other members, alleged that three major bakeries established in Paud for decades have been forced to shut down due to this situation and their complaints with the police have not been acted on. The group also alleged that four scrap shops belonging to Muslims have been forced to shut down with one of the shops even being burnt down by a mob. PUCL says that groups of locals and 'outsiders' have been threatening people in the villages to not employ any person from the Muslim community in their business. Landlords have also been threatened to not rent out flats to Muslim tenants. 'Only in response to the Nivedan to SP Rural, boards were removed after a few days,' said Champanerkar, alleging that no other action had been taken by the authorities. In May, desecration of a goddess idol in Paud allegedly by a Muslim youth had added to the tensions. However, many of the gram sabha resolutions had been passed before this incident, the letter said. Superintendent of Police Pune (Rural) Sandeep Singh Gill said, 'Some resolutions were passed by some gram sabhas in early May. There are three villages in the jurisdiction of Pune Rural where these kinds of posters had come up — Paud, Urawade and Ghotawade. We had a meeting with the sarpanch and all these boards which had unconstitutional matter on them were removed. Many people have begun their businesses again as well. Now the tension has come down. If there are any specifics, they should come up with a complaint and the departments concerned will take action.' PUCL has stated that it gave similar representations to Police Commissioner, Pimpri Chinchwad, Vinoy Kumar Choubey, however, there has been no action. Commissioner Choubey could not be reached for comments despite multiple attempts. The letter, written on June 30, was also sent to Pune District Collector, Divisional Commissioner, Guardian Minister of Pune Ajit Pawar and Baramati MP Supriya Sule. Soham is a Correspondent with the Indian Express in Pune. A journalism graduate, he was a fact-checker before joining the Express. Soham currently covers education and is also interested in civic issues, health, human rights, and politics. ... Read More