Mahavir Tyagi
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Date of Birth |
: |
1899 |
Date of Death |
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1980 |
Place of Birth |
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Uttar Pradesh |
Mahavir Tyagi was an Indian freedom fighter and famous parliamentarian
from the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. Tyagi was educated in Meerut,
Uttar Pradesh. He joined the British Indian Army and was posted in
Persia but resigned after the Amritsar Massacre of April 13, 1919. He
was court martialled in Quetta (capital of Baluchistan, now in Pakistan)
and externed from Baluchistan with all pay deposits forfeited.
Returning to India, Tyagi became a staunch follower of Mahatma Gandhi.
In Uttar Pradesh politics he was known as a "Rafian",
that is, an associate of Rafi Ahmed Kidwai, the famous Indian
nationalist Muslim. Tyagi, who was active in the Kisan (peasant)
movement, remained a life-long member of the Indian National Congress.
He was imprisoned by the British several times. In 1921 he was tried at
Bulandshahr in Uttar Pradesh. Mahatma Gandhi wrote four articles on the
trial in the journal Young India. Mahavir Tyagi was close to, and had
been a jail companion of, the leading Indian nationalist, Motilal Nehru,
Jawaharlal Nehru's father. In the 1920s Tyagi helped resolve, with the
help of Maulana Mohammad Ali, a misunderstanding that had arisen between
Motilal Nehru and Jawaharlal Nehru. Tyagi became a legislator in the
United Provinces (later known as Uttar Pradesh) before Indian
independence. In this capacity, he was a member of a committee which
heralded social and land reform in the tribal area of Jaunsar Bawar in
Dehradun district of Uttar Pradesh (an area now forming part of
Uttaranchal state). While he himself adhered to Gandhian non-violence,
he had close contacts even among the "revolutionaries", that is those
who were not opposed to using violent means to overthrow the imperial
state. These included Sachindra Nath Sanyal, Prem Kishan Khanna and
Vishnu Sharan Dublish. When riots broke out in the Indian subcontinent
after its partition in 1947, Tyagi, taking inspiration from Gandhi,
staked his own life to help save Muslims in his home state and to bring
peace. Mahavir Tyagi was a member of the Constituent Assembly of India.
In this capacity he is known especially for his strong stand against
unsafeguarded Preventive Detention laws and against suspension of
fundamental rights in emergency situations.On India's becoming a
Republic in 1950, Tyagi remained a member of the Provisional Parliament
(1950-52),and the Lower House of the Indian Parliament, that is, the
First, Second and Third Lok Sabha (1952-67). Tyagi was Minister for
Revenue & Expenditure in the Nehru Council of Ministers (1951-53).
In this capacity he introduced the First Voluntary Disclosure Scheme,
known as the Tyagi Scheme, primarily, as he put it, to bring into the
open incomes which had not been revealed to the alien government prior
to independence. While in the Ministry of Finance, Tyagi earned a
reputation as a strict economiser. Later Mahavir Tyagi became Minister
for Defence Organisation (1953-57). General B M Kaul records in his "The
Untold Story" that as Minister of Defence Organisation, Tyagi opposed
policy proposals involving draconian measures in the tribal areas of
India's North-East. Tyagi also gave instructions for recruitment of
Muslims in large numbers in the Indian Army. The proportion of Muslims
in the Army had fallen after Partition of India in 1947. Known for his
independence, Tyagi opposed, even while he was a minister, the
reorganisation of Indian states in 1956. He also opposed the decision to
dismiss the Communist government led by E M S Namboodirapad in Kerala
state at the end of the fifties, saying that this would establish a
wrong precedent. Tyagi was Chairman of the Direct Taxes Administration
Enquiry Committee (1958-59) and in that capacity paved the way, along
with the Law Commission, for the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Tyagi famously criticized Nehru's statement in the Indian Parliament
in the prelude to the Sino-Indian War: Nehru commented that "Not a blade
of grass grows in Aksai Chin", attempting to explain that Aksai Chin
was a barren, inhospitable land and the nation had lost little by its
occupation by China. Tyagi retorted, pointing to his bald head: "Nothing
grows here ..should it be cut off or given away to somebody else?". A
tense situation that had been developing in the House on the subject of
the border conflict was averted as the House dissolved in laughter in
which Nehru also joined. Tyagi continued to enjoy an affectionate
relationship with Jawaharlal Nehru. He served as Chairman of the Public
Accounts Committee of Parliament (1962-64). In April 1964, a month
before Nehru's death, Tyagi rejoined the Government as Cabinet Minister
in charge of Rehabilitation. In the General Elections of 1967 which saw a
popular backlash against the Congress Party, Tyagi lost to an
independent candidate backed by an anti-Congress combination of parties.
In 1968 he became the Chairman of the Fifth Finance Commission.After
the split in the Congress in 1969, Tyagi stayed with the Congress(O),
the organisational wing of the party. In 1970 he was elected to the
Upper House of Parliament, the Rajya Sabha, from Uttar Pradesh and led
the Congress(O) in the House till he retired in 1976. Tyagi's being in
the Congress(O) did not prevent him from being critical of the movement
led by Jaya Prakash Narayan in 1974-75. He was equally critical of the
Emergency imposed by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1975. Mahavir Tyagi
passed away in New Delhi on May 22, 1980. A popular figure, he had
friends across political parties and was widely admired for his
integrity, outspokenness, ready wit and sense of humour.
His writings
Prior to independence, Mahavir Tyagi had written a booklet on
proportional representation. His memoirs in Hindustani were published in
the 1960s in two volumes : (i) Ve Kranti Ke Din and (ii) Meri Kaun
Sunega. These volumes have now been combined in one and, along with some
other unpublished articles by Tyagi, have been published under the
title Azadi Ka Andolan: Hanste Huye Aansu (Kitab Ghar, 24 Ansari Road,
Daryaganj, Delhi).