Dr.Shanker Dayal Sharma
|
Date of Birth |
: |
Aug 19, 1918 |
Date of Death |
: |
Dec 26, 1999 |
Place of Birth |
: |
India |
Tenure Order |
: |
9th President |
Took Office |
: |
Jul 25, 1992 |
Left Office |
: |
Jul 25, 1997 |
Successor |
: |
K.R.Narayanan |

Dr. Shankar Dayal Sharma was an Indian scholar and politician, most
notable for serving as President of India from 1992 until 1997. Sharma
studied in Britain as a young man. He attended Cambridge University and
Oxford University. He was a bar-at-law from Lincoln's Inn and taught law
at Cambridge University in 1946-47. He took his M.A. degrees in English
literature, Hindi and Sanskrit. Shankar Dayal Sharma was married to
Vimala Sharma. During the 1940s he was involved in the struggle for
Indian independence from Britain, and joined the Indian National
Congress, a party which he would remain loyal to for the rest of his
life. In 1952 he became the chief minister of Bhopal and served in that
position until the state reorganization of 1956, when Bhopal merged with
several other states to form the state of Madhya Pradesh. During the
1960s Sharma supported Indira Gandhi's quest for leadership of the
Congress Party. He served in her cabinet as the minister for
Communication from 1974-77. Later on, he was given a variety of
ceremonial posts. In 1984 he began serving as a governor of Indian
states, first in Andhra Pradesh. During this time, his daughter and
son-in-law were killed by Sikh militants.
In 1985 he left Andhra Pradesh and became governor of
Punjab during a time of violence between the Indian government and Sikh
militants, many of whom lived in Punjab. He left Punjab in 1986 and
took up his final governorship in Maharashtra. He remained governor of
that state until 1987 when he was elected for a 5-year term as
Vice-President of India and chairman of the Rajya Sabha. Dr Shankar
Dayal Sharma was known be a stickler for parliamentary norms. He is
known to have broken down in the Rajya Sabha while witnessing the
members of the house create a din on a political issue. His grief
brought back some order into the proceedings of the house. Sharma served
as Vice-President until 1992, when he was elected President. After a
difficult campaign, he received 66% of the votes in the electoral
college, defeating George Swell. During his five-year term, he was
active in ceremonial matters and was in charge of dismissing and
appointing governors. During his last year as President, it was his
responsibility to swear in three prime ministers. He did not run for a
second term as President. During the last five years of his life, Sharma
suffered from ill health. On October 9 1999, he suffered a massive
heart attack and was admitted to a hospital in New Delhi, where he died.
He was cremated near the Vijay Ghat.