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kerala.com
> K.R.Narayanan > A salute
to Citizen Narayanan |
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K.R.
Narayanan |
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"Nation lost a true nationalist,
democrat and a messiah of the downtrodden''
on Nov, 10th 2005
- During
his tenure as President he joined other citizens
at a polling booth to cast his vote
- He
used his discretionary powers to innovate and
improvise
- Broke
diplomatic ice with China at a difficult time
- He
twice returned for reconsideration questionable
Union Cabinet decisions
- The
President never allowed concerns of propriety
to divert him from what he saw as his social mission
- He
made a case for giving a sense of economic liberation
to
the masses ... that of land reform
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Kocheril
Raman Narayanan inherited the presidential
office at a time the Head of State was firmly imprinted
in the public perception as a "rubber stamp"
figure. The occupant of the Rashtrapati Bhavan unfailingly
acted on the aid and advice of the Union Cabinet,
rarely if at all went public with his opinion. It
was unthinkable that the first citizen could admit
to a political vision that was at variance with that
of the government of the day. President Narayanan
defied the stereotype, pushing the envelope in areas
that were previously unexplored but without ever becoming
activist in a way that would have undermined his constitutional
role. In his own words, he was "not an executive
President but a working President, and working within
four corners of the Constitution"
President Narayanan was a brilliant
example of a man who made his office rather than has
his office make him. On February 16, 1998, he joined
other citizens at a polling booth to cast his vote.
This was unprecedented and naturally the question
arose whether this did not amount to a partisan act.
In fact, this long overdue gesture corrected the erroneous
impression that Presidents had to be apolitical in
order to be impartial; in asking to be seen to be
exercising his franchise, Mr. Narayanan
underlined that he was the President of a democratic
nation.
Mr.Narayanan used his discretionary
powers to innovate and improvise. In the tricky area
of Prime Ministerial appointment in a hung Parliament
situation, he established procedures and principles
that were based on sound reasoning. Up until 1996,
Presidents followed the practice of calling the leader
of the single largest party in the Lok Sabha to form
a government. This mechanical approach led in 1996
to the farce of Atal Bihari Vajpayee being invited
to a form a government that collapsed in 13 days.
Mr. Narayanan rejected the notion that the single
largest party or coalition necessarily had the first
claim to office. Instead, the competence of the Prime
Ministerial claimant had to be judged by whether or
not the person enjoyed the confidence of the House.
Thus he set a new precedent whereby it became mandatory
for a person staking a claim to the Prime Minister's
office to produce letters of support from alliance
partners.
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President Narayanan twice returned for reconsideration
questionable Union Cabinet decisions. In October 1997,
the Inder Kumar Gujral Government was forced to reconsider
its decision to dismiss Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister
Kalyan Singh, and in September 1998, deferring to
the President, the Vajpayee Government went back on
its decision to dismiss the Rabri Devi Government
in Bihar.
Yet,Presidency was more than a constitutional office
for Mr.Narayanan. It was a means
to remind the rulers of the country that progress
without a social conscience amounted to very little.
The poor Dalit boy who had seen and suffered gross
social prejudice may have reached the zenith of constitutional
office but the elder first citizen in his place still
impatiently waited for the dawn of a new era of economic
equality and social justice, of an India without communal
tensions. Perhaps it was this restlessness that caused
President Narayanan often to speak from his heart,
without allowing concerns of propriety to divert him
from what he saw as his social mission. As India completed
51 years of Independence, Mr. Narayanan departed from
convention to speak to N. Ram.
The televised conversation saw President Narayanan
engage the questions frontally, with candor. He was
emphatic that India's parliamentary system could function
"only in an atmosphere of social and economic
progress, and great equality." There had been
achievements "but the march of society, of social
change, has not been fast enough, nor fundamental
enough so far." India's liberalization was irreversible,
he said, but cautioned that "in a vast country
with millions of people and poverty rampant, we cannot
liberalize recklessly, in such a way that the balance
of society is upset and while some sections would
flourish, make profits, the rest of the people would
be left without employment and be helpless."
Mr. Narayanan made a case for giving a sense of economic
liberation to the masses, "and for that, I think
the basic thing we have done or we attempted to do,
in the beginning - and we have not yet completed that
process - is that of land reform."
The President spoke at length on issues of the time.
"I don't think nuclear weapons are necessary
for the world," he said even as he distanced
himself from the hawkish anti-China rhetoric of the
Vajpayee Government, describing as "temporary"
the problems between the two countries: "There
has been no change in India's need for living in harmony
and in cooperation with all our neighbors including
Pakistan, and of course our big neighbor China, and
others." Mr.Narayanan's remarks
had the important consequence of breaking diplomatic
ice with China at a difficult time.
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Mr.Narayanan was at the end of his Presidency
when communal riots broke out in Gujarat in March
2002. He went on record to call it a "grave
crisis of society and the nation." The full
extent of his anguish was revealed much later when,
in an interview given on the third anniversary of
the riots in March 2005, he said he had written
to Prime Minister Vajpayee seeking immediate deployment
of the Army to control the situation but to no avail.
He went so far as to suggest a conspiracy behind
the pogrom involving the BJP Governments in the
State and at the Centre.
Born into a Dalit family in Uzhavoor
village in the erstwhile princely state of Travancore,
Narayanan was the fourth of seven children in the
household of Kocheril Raman Vaidyar, an ayurvedic
physician. Though he was born on February 4, 1921,
an uncle who accompanied him to the local primary
school on his first day did not know his actual
date of birth and chose October 27, 1920 - a date
which has remained on the records ever since. He
was later enrolled in an English medium high school
at Kuravilangad, some eight km away, and often he
covered the distance to and from school on foot.
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Those
days, there were no education concessions for Dalits
and it was with great difficulty that his father paid
the fees for him. However, while in high school, Narayanan
occasionally received financial help from Gandhiji's
Harijan Sevak Sangh. As his brother, K.R. Bhaskaran,
once said, though Narayanan had the fortune to attend
some of the best academic institutions in the world
later, his real education was at home, under the tutelage
of his elder brother, Neelakantan, who died at the
young age of 34. Too poor to pay the fees or even
buy textbooks, Narayanan was helped out by his elder
brother who would borrow texts from others and copy
them down for him. "The idea that liberation
could be achieved only through education was instilled
in him at an early age," said Mr. Bhaskaran.
At the University of Travancore, Narayanan
read English Literature and received a first class
in B.A. and M.A. Presumably due to caste considerations,
he was denied a permanent teaching job in the university
as was the norm for toppers at the time. Hurt and
agitated, the young Narayanan boycotted the convocation
ceremony and refused to accept his degree certificate.
Fifty years later, when he was President of India,
his certificate was handed over to him at a special
function.
After a number of inconsequential jobs, Narayanan
was offered a studentship in journalism by The Hindu
in Madras. Around the same time, he received a favorable
response from the J.N. Tata Endowment to his application
for a scholarship to pursue higher studies abroad.
Admission to the London School of Economics was arranged
for the academic year commencing 1945, following which
Narayanan returned to Madras to work for The Hindu.
The following year, he worked briefly with The Times
of India in Bombay where he had occasion to meet and
interview Mahatma Gandhi. In the summer of 1945, Narayanan
set sail for London. While his ship halted at Port
Said, news came that the war in Europe had ended.
At the London School of Economics, Narayanan
plunged into his academic work and also had time to
take part in the activities of V.K. Krishna Menon's
India League. He developed a close rapport with Professor
Harold J. Laski and was also taught by distinguished
professors Lionel Robbins, Karl Popper and Friedrich
Hayek. Among his friends at the LSE was Pierre Trudeau,
who later became the Prime Minister of Canada. |
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| A
distinguished career |
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After
securing the LSE's prized B.Sc. (Econ.) with a rare
first division, Mr.Narayanan returned to India armed
with a letter of introduction from Laski to Jawaharlal
Nehru. The Prime Minister gave him an audience that
lasted 20 minutes and asked him to leave his curriculum
vitae behind. Soon after, Narayanan received an offer
to join the Indian Foreign Service, which he did in
1949. As a young diplomat, Mr.Narayanan's
first posting was in Rangoon, where he met his future
wife, a Burmese woman named Tint Tint who subsequently
took on the name Usha. They married in 1950 in New
Delhi after Nehru granted special permission for an
IFS officer to marry a foreign national.
After postings in Tokyo, London, Canberra and Hanoi,
Mr.Narayanan served as India's Ambassador
to Thailand (1967-69), Turkey (1973-75), and most
importantly, the People's Republic of China (1976-78),
where he was the first Indian Ambassador posted since
the 1962 war. It was during Mr. Narayanan's time in
Beijing that political, economic and trade normalization
was established between India and China.
In 1978, Mr.Narayanan retired from
the Foreign Service, but was quickly drafted as Vice-Chancellor
of Jawaharlal Nehru University. In 1980, he was sent
by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi as India's Ambassador
to the United States, where he helped arrange Ms.
Gandhi's landmark 1982 visit to Washington during
the Reagan presidency. Upon returning from the U.S.,
he entered parliamentary politics, contesting from
Ottapalam in Kerala in the 1984 Lok Sabha elections.
In his first term as a Member of Parliament, Mr.Narayanan
was inducted into the Rajiv Gandhi Cabinet as Minister
of State for Planning. He later became Minister of
State in the Ministry of External Affairs and then
in the Ministry of Science and Technology. Though
the Congress lost the 1989 elections, Mr. Narayanan
held on to his seat. In August 1992, as an ordinary
sitting MP, his name was proposed by the Congress
for Vice-President. His nomination received all-party
support and on August 21, he was sworn in to the country's
second-highest constitutional post. On July 25, 1997,
Mr. Narayanan took office as the 10th President.
He is survived by his wife Usha,
and two daughters, Chitra and Amrita.
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Courtesy
: The Hindu |
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