Ram Chandra Kak

Ram Chandra Kak
Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir
In office
June 1945  10 August 1947
Preceded by Sir Benegal Narsing Rau
Succeeded by Janak Singh
Personal details
Born 5 June 1893
Died 10 February 1983

Ram Chandra Kak (5 June 1893 – 10 February 1983) was Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir[1][2] during 1945-47. He was also a pioneering archaeologist who excavated the leading sites of antiquities in Kashmir Valley and wrote the definitive text on them.

Career

Politics

He served at various keys positions in Maharaja Hari Singh's administration. Beginning as the superintendent of archaeology,[3] he was appointed to the post of chief secretary in 1937. He was the minister of military affairs in 1941 and held the role of "minister-in-waiting" for the Maharaja Hari Singh during 1942–1945. He was appointed as the Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir from June 1945 – 11 August 1947 during the key transitional period when the British prepared for departure from India.[4]

In 1946, the National Conference party began the Quit Kashmir movement against the Maharaja. Its leader Sheikh Abdullah was arrested on 15 May. Jawaharlal Nehru attempted to come to Kashmir as his defence counsel. Nehru's entry into the state was blocked by Kak. Nehru was arrested on 22 June and kept at the dak bungalow in Domel, close to Muzaffarabad. Nehru returned to Delhi after two days following a summon from Gandhi. Later, Kak met Congress leaders in India in July and Nehru was permitted to revisit Srinagar. He met Abdullah in jail.[5]

Kak was ill-disposed to the Congress party because it allied itself with Sheikh Abdullah and lent its "great weight of authority" to Abdullah's agitation against the State government. After Abdullah's arrest in 1946, Congress leaders sent telegrams to Kak as well as the Maharaja demanding Abdullah's release. Kak held that "highly coloured, inaccurate and vituperative statements" were published by Congress, resolutions passed against the Maharaja's government, and commissions of enquiry appointed. For these reasons both Kak and the Maharaja decided against acceding to India in 1946 (even before the partition was decided).[6]

In 1947, after the Partition of India was decided, the decision on accession became imminent. Lord Mountbatten visited Kashmir in June for five days (19–23 June) and pressured the Maharaja as well as Kak to make a decision. As to which Dominion to accede, Mountbatten said that it was the State government's decision, but strongly hinted that Pakistan was the right choice. Accession to Pakistan did not appeal to the Maharaja. Kak wrote that `since Kashmir would not accede to Pakistan it could not accede to India' (emphasis in the original). His advice to the Maharaja was that Kashmir remain independent for at least a year, after which the issue of accession could be considered. Jinnah told him that Kashmir could hope to get far better terms if it acceded immediately rather than later. But Kak's position was that the State's decision on non-accession was final. Jinnah is reported to have said that he did not mind the State not acceding as long as it did not accede to India.[6][1]

The British Indian government returned Gilgit, leased to it in 1934, to the Maharaja.

Brigadier Henry Lawrence Scott, the Chief of Staff of the State forces,[4] credits Kak for maintaining friendly relations with Pakistan and the Muslim League. During Kak's tenure, the West Pakistan states are said to have stationed troops along the two main roads leading to the State and protected it from raiding. However, Kak was inimical to the Congress party. Scott believes that the Congress leaders including Mahatma Gandhi "intrigued in the State" for the dismissal of Kak from Premiership.[7]

Kak was dismissed as Prime Minister on 11 August 1947. The dismissal was followed by the "decapitation" of the State administration, according to Kak. All senior officials such as the Chief Secretary, the Chief of the Army Staff, the Inspector General of Police were also replaced by less experienced people from the Maharaja's own community.[6] According to Henry Lawrence Scott, the Maharaja came under the influence of the Deputy Prime Minister M L. Batra, a Hindu swami, and the Maharani's brother Chand, all of whom wanted Kashmir to join India and whose intrigues were responsible for the dismissal and public humiliation of Kak.[7]

When Sheikh Abdullah became Prime Minister of Kashmir, Kak was imprisoned on 12 August 1947,[8] and then he was externed. After this, Kak retired from public life.

Academic and historian

Ram Chandra Kak was believed to be in possession of the Sharada script copy of the Nilamata Purana.[3] Kak's pioneering book Ancient monuments of Kashmir was published in 1933 and Francis Younghusband wrote the foreword to the book.[9]

Books

References

  1. 1 2 Noorani, A.G. (30 January 2010). "Myths & Reality" 27. Frontline. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  2. Varenya, Varad (17 May 2011). "No big fuss over the win". Center Right India. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  3. 1 2 "Nilamatapurana - The Leiden Edition". Kashmir Bhavan Center, Luton, UK. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  4. 1 2 Ankit, Rajesh (February 2010). "Forgotten men of Kashmir". Himal South Asian. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  5. Madhok, Bal Raj (1992), "Political Rumblings: Quit Kashmir Movement", Kashmir: The Storm Centre of the World, Houston, Texas: A. Ghosh, ISBN 9780961161491
  6. 1 2 3 Ankit, Rajesh, "Pandit Ramchandra Kak: The Forgotten Premier of Kashmir", Epilogue, Vol 4, Issue 4, Epilogue -Jammu Kashmir, pp. 36–39
  7. 1 2 Rakesh Ankit (May 2010). "Henry Scott: The forgotten soldier of Kashmir". Epilogue 4 (5): 47.
  8. Ganjoo, Pt Ramesh Chander. "Kashmir: Truth behind Politics". Boloji.com. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  9. Bhatt, Saligram; Kaul, Padamshree JN (2008). Kashmiri Scholars contributions to knowledge and World Peace. A.P.H. Publishing House. ISBN 9788131304020. Retrieved 13 August 2012.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Sir Benegal Narsing Rau
Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir
1945 1947
Succeeded by
Janak Singh
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.