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Syama Prasad Mukherjee

Syama Prasad Mukherjee (6 July 1901 – 23 June 1953) was an Indian politician, barrister and academician, who served as India's first Minister for Industry and Supply (currently known as Ministry of Commerce and Industry) in Jawaharlal Nehru's cabinet. After falling out with Nehru,[3] protesting against the Liaquat-Nehru Pact, Mukherjee resigned from Nehru's cabinet.[4] With the help of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, he founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the predecessor to the Bharatiya Janata Party, in 1951.[5]

Syama Prasad Mukherjee
Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
In office
17 April 1952 – 23 June 1953
Succeeded bySadhan Gupta
ConstituencyCalcutta South East
Minister of Commerce and Industry of India
In office
15 August 1947 – 6 April 1950
Prime MinisterJawaharlal Nehru
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byNityanand Kanungo
Member of the Constituent Assembly
In office
9 December 1946 – 24 January 1950
ConstituencyWest Bengal
Founder-President of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh
In office
1951 (1951)–1952 (1952)
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byMauli Chandra Sharma
Finance Minister of Bengal Province
In office
12 December 1941 – 20 November 1942
Prime MinisterA. K. Fazlul Haq
Member of the Bengal Legislative Council
In office
1929–1947[1]
ConstituencyCalcutta University
Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University
In office
8 August 1934 – 8 August 1938[2]
Preceded byHassan Suhrawardy
Succeeded byMuhammad Azizul Haque
President of Akhil Bhartiya Hindu Mahasabha
In office
1943–1947
Personal details
Born(1901-07-06)6 July 1901
Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, British India (present-day Kolkata, West Bengal, India)
Died23 June 1953(1953-06-23) (aged 51)
Jammu and Kashmir, India
Political partyBharatiya Jana Sangh
Other political
affiliations
Indian National Congress (1929-1935)
Hindu Mahasabha (1935-1951)
SpouseSudha Devi
Children5
Parent(s)Ashutosh Mukherjee (father)
Jogamaya Devi Mukherjee (mother)
RelativesChittatosh Mookerjee (nephew)
Alma materPresidency College (B.A., M.A., LLB, D.Litt.)
Lincoln's Inn (Barrister-at-Law)
Profession
Signature

He was also the president of Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha from 1943 to 1946. He was arrested by the Jammu and Kashmir Police in 1953 when he tried to cross the border of the state. He was provisionally diagnosed of a heart attack and shifted to a hospital but died a day later.[6][7] Since the Bharatiya Janata Party is the successor to the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, Mukherjee is also regarded as the founder of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) by its members.[8]

Early life and academic career

Syama Prasad Mukherjee was born in a Bengali Brahmin family on 6 July 1901 in Calcutta (Kolkata).[9][10][11] His family originally hailed from Jirat, Hooghly District, West Bengal.[12] His grandfather Ganga Prasad Mukherjee was born in Jirat and he was first in the family who came to Calcutta and settled here.[13]

Syama Prasad's father was Ashutosh Mukherjee, a judge of the High Court of Calcutta, Bengal, who was also Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta.[14][15] His mother was Jogamaya Devi Mukherjee.[10] He was a very meritorious student and he came to Kolkata to study in Medical College with the help of the wealthy people of Jirat. Later he settled down in Bhawanipore area of Kolkata.[16]

He enrolled in Bhawanipur's Mitra Institution in 1906 and his behaviour in school was later described favourably by his teachers. In 1914, he passed his matriculation examination and was admitted into Presidency College.[17][18] He stood seventeenth in the Inter Arts Examination in 1916[19] and graduated in English, securing the first position in first class in 1921.[10] He was married to Sudha Devi on 16 April 1922.[20] Mukherjee also completed an MA in Bengali, being graded as first class in 1923[21] and also became a fellow of the Senate[clarification needed] in 1923.[22] He completed his BL in 1924.[10]

He enrolled as an advocate in Calcutta High Court in 1924, the same year in which his father had died.[23] Subsequently, he left for England in 1926 to study at Lincoln's Inn and was called to the English Bar in the same year.[24] In 1934, at the age of 33, he became the youngest Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta; he held the office until 1938.[25] During his term as Vice-Chancellor, Rabindranath Tagore delivered the University Convocation Address in Bengali for the first time, and the Indian vernacular was introduced as a subject for the highest examination.[26][27] On 10 September 1938, the Senate of Calcutta university resolved to confer honorary D.Litt. on the Ex-Vice Chancellor in its opinion "by reason of eminent position and attainments, a fit and proper person to receive such a degree."[28] Mukherjee received the D.Litt from Calcutta University on 26 November 1938.[29] He was also the 15th President of the Association of Indian Universities during 1941-42.

Political career before independence

He started his political career in 1929, when he entered the Bengal Legislative Council as an Indian National Congress (INC) candidate representing Calcutta University.[30] However, he resigned the next year when the INC decided to boycott the legislature. Subsequently, he contested the election as an independent candidate and was elected in the same year.[31] In 1937, he was elected as an independent candidate in the elections which brought the Krishak Praja Party to power.[32][33][34]

He served as the Finance Minister of Bengal Province in 1941–42 under A.K. Fazlul Haq's Progressive Coalition government which was formed on 12 December 1941 after the resignations of the Congress government. During his tenure, his statements against the government were censored and his movements were restricted. He was also prevented from visiting the Midnapore district in 1942 when severe floods caused a heavy loss of life and property. He resigned on 20 November 1942 accusing the British government of trying to hold on to India under any cost and criticised its repressive policies against the Quit India Movement.[a] After resigning, he mobilised support and organised relief with the help of Mahabodhi Society, Ramakrishna Mission and Marwari Relief Society.[36][37][38] In 1946, he was again elected as an independent candidate from the Calcutta University.[32] He was elected as a member of the Constituent Assembly of India in the same year.[39]

Hindu Mahasabha and Bengali Hindu Homeland Movement

 

Mukherjee joined the Hindu Mahasabha in Bengal in 1939[39] and became its acting president that same year.[40] He was appointed as the working president of the organisation in 1940.[18] In February 1941, Mukherjee told a Hindu rally that if Muslims wanted to live in Pakistan they should "pack their bag and baggage and leave India ... [to] wherever they like".[41] Yet, the Hindu Mahasabha also formed provincial coalition governments with the All-India Muslim League in Sindh and the North-West Frontier Province while Mukherjee was its leader.[42] He was elected as the President of Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha in 1943.[39] He remained in this position till 1946, with Laxman Bhopatkar becoming the new president in the same year.[43][44]

Mukherjee demanded the partition of Bengal in 1946 to prevent the inclusion of its Hindu-majority areas in a Muslim-dominated East Pakistan.[10] A meeting held by the Mahasabha on 15 April 1947 in Tarakeswar authorised him to take steps for ensuring partition of Bengal. In May 1947, he wrote a letter to Lord Mountbatten telling him that Bengal must be partitioned even if India was not.[45] He also opposed a failed bid for a united but independent Bengal made in 1947 by Sarat Bose, the brother of Subhas Chandra Bose, and Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, a Bengali Muslim politician.[46][47] His views were strongly affected by the Noakhali genocide in East Bengal, where mobs belonging to the Muslim League massacred Hindus.[48] It was Mukherjee who launched the Bengali Hindu Homeland Movement. It refers to the movement of the Bengali Hindu people for the Partition of Bengal in 1947 to create a homeland aka West Bengal for themselves within the Indian Union, in the wake of Muslim League's proposal and campaign to include the entire province of Bengal within Pakistan, which was to be a homeland for the Muslims of British India.[49]

Opposition to Quit India Movement

Following the Hindu Mahasabha's official decision to boycott the Quit India movement[50] and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh's decision of non-participation in the movement.[51][52][53][54]

Mukherjee wrote a letter to Sir John Herbert, Governor of Bengal as to how they should respond to "Quit India" movement. In this letter, dated 26 July 1942 he wrote:

Let me now refer to the situation that may be created in the province as a result of any widespread movement launched by the Congress. Anybody, who during the war, plans to stir up mass feeling, resulting internal disturbances or insecurity, must be resisted by any Government that may function for the time being[55]

Mukherjee in this letter reiterated that the Fazlul Haq-led Bengal Government, along with its alliance partner Hindu Mahasabha would make every possible effort to defeat the Quit India Movement in the province of Bengal and made a concrete proposal in regard to this:

The question is how to combat this movement (Quit India) in Bengal? The administration of the province should be carried on in such a manner that in spite of the best efforts of the Congress, this movement will fail to take root in the province. It should be possible for us, especially responsible Ministers, to be able to tell the public that the freedom for which the Congress has started the movement, already belongs to the representatives of the people. In some spheres, it might be limited during the emergency. Indians have to trust the British, not for the sake for Britain, not for any advantage that the British might gain, but for the maintenance of the defense and freedom of the province itself. You, as Governor, will function as the constitutional head of the province and will be guided entirely on the advice of your Minister.[56]

The Indian historian R.C. Majumdar noted this fact and states:

Shyam Prasad ended the letter with a discussion of the mass movement organised by Congress. He expressed the apprehension that the movement would create internal disorder and will endanger internal security during the war by exciting popular feeling and he opined that any government in power has to suppress it, but that according to him could not be done only by persecution... In that letter he mentioned item-wise the steps to be taken for dealing with the situation...[57]

During Mukherjee's resignation speech, however, he characterised the policies of the British government towards the movement as "repressive".[58][36]

Political career after independence

 
B. R. Ambedkar and Syama Prasad Mukherjee talking on the Campus of Parliament, 1951

Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru inducted Mukherjee into the Interim Central Government as a Minister for Industry and Supply on 15 August 1947.[59]

Mukherjee condemned the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi as "most stunning blow that could fall on India"[60] and began to have differences with Hindu Mahasabha after the Gandhi's killing, in which the Mahasabha was blamed by Sardar Patel for creating the atmosphere that led to the killing. Mukherjee suggested the organisation suspend its political activities. Shortly after it did, in December 1948, he left. One of his reasons was the rejection of his proposal to allow non-Hindus to become members.[39][61][62] Mukherjee resigned along with K.C. Neogy from the Cabinet on 8 April 1950 over a disagreement about the 1950 Delhi Pact with Pakistani Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan.

Mukherjee was firmly against their joint pact to establish minority commissions and guarantee minority rights in both countries as he thought it left Hindus in East Bengal to the mercy of Pakistan. While addressing a rally in Calcutta on 21 May, he stated that an exchange of population and property at governmental level on regional basis between East Bengal and the states of Tripura, Assam, West Bengal and Bihar was the only option in the current situation.[61][63][64]

Mukherjee founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh on 21 October 1951 in Delhi,[65] becoming its first president. In the 1952 elections, the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS) won three seats in the Parliament of India, including Mukherjee's. He had formed the National Democratic Party within the Parliament. It consisted of 32 members of the Lok Sabha and 10 members of the Rajya Sabha; however, it was not recognised by the speaker as an opposition party.[66] The BJS was created with the objective of nation-building and nationalising all non-Hindus by "inculcating Indian Culture" in them. The party was ideologically close to the RSS and widely considered the proponent of Hindu nationalism.[67]

Opinion on special status of Jammu and Kashmir

Mukherjee was strongly opposed to Article 370, seeing it as a threat to national unity. He fought against it inside and outside the parliament with one of the goals of Bharatiya Jana Sangh being its abrogation. He raised his voice strongly against the provision in his Lok Sabha speech on 26 June 1952.[65] He termed the arrangements under the article as Balkanization of India and the three-nation theory of Sheikh Abdullah.[68][69] The state was granted its own flag along with a prime minister whose permission was required for anyone to enter the state. In opposition to this, Mukherjee once said "Ek desh mein do Vidhan, do Pradhan aur Do Nishan nahi chalenge" (A single country can't have two constitutions, two prime ministers, and two national emblems).[70] Bharatiya Jana Sangh along with Hindu Mahasabha and Jammu Praja Parishad launched a massive Satyagraha to get the provisions removed.[68][71] In his letter to Nehru dated 3 February 1953, he wrote that the issue of accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India should not be delayed, to which Nehru responded by referring to international complications the issue could create.[65]

Mukherjee went to visit Kashmir in 1953 and observed a hunger strike to protest the law that prohibited Indian citizens from settling within the state and mandating that they carry ID cards.[10] Mukherjee wanted to go to Jammu and Kashmir but, because of the prevailing permit system, he was not given permission. He was arrested on 11 May at Lakhanpur while crossing the border into Kashmir illegally.[72][73] Although the ID card rule was revoked owing to his efforts, he died as a detainee on 23 June 1953.[74][65]

On 5 August 2019, when Government of India proposed constitutional Amendment to repeal Article 370, many newspapers described the event as realization of Syama Prasad Mukherjee's dream.[75][76]

Personal life

Syama Prasad had three brothers who were: Rama Prasad who was born in 1896, Uma Prasad who was born in 1902 and Bama Prasad Mukherjee who was born in 1906. Rama Prasad became a judge in High Court of Calcutta while Uma became famed as a trekker and a travel writer. He also had three sisters who were: Kamala who was born in 1895, Amala who was born in 1905 and Ramala in 1908.[77] He was married to Sudha Devi for 11 years and had five children – the last one, a four-month-old son, died from diphtheria. His wife died of double pneumonia shortly afterwards in 1933 or 1934.[78][79][80] Syama Prasad refused to remarry after her death.[81] He had two sons, Anutosh and Debatosh, and two daughters, Sabita and Arati.[82] His grandniece Kamala Sinha served as the Minister of State for External affairs in the I. K. Gujral ministry.[83]

Syama Prasad was also affiliated with the Buddhist Mahabodhi Society. In 1942, he succeeded M.N. Mukherjee to become the president of the organisation. The relics of Gautam Buddha's two disciples Sariputra and Maudgalyayana, discovered in the Great Stupa at Sanchi by Sir Alexander Cunningham in 1851 and kept at the British Museum, were brought back to India by HMIS Tir. A ceremony attended by politicians and leaders of many foreign countries was held on the next day at Calcutta Maidan. They were handed over by Nehru to Mukherjee, who later took these relics to Cambodia, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam. Upon his return to India, he placed the relics inside the Sanchi Stupa in November 1952.[38][84][85]

Death

 
Syama Prasad Mukherjee on a 1978 stamp of India

Mukherjee was arrested upon entering Kashmir on 11 May 1953.[86] He and two of his arrested companions were first taken to Central Jail of Srinagar. Later they were transferred to a cottage outside the city. Mukherjee's condition started deteriorating and he started feeling pain in the back and high temperature on the night between 19 and 20 June. He was diagnosed with dry pleurisy from which he had also suffered in 1937 and 1944. The doctor prescribed him a streptomycin injection and powders, however, Mukherjee informed him that his family physician had told him that streptomycin did not suit his system. The doctor, however, told him that new information about the drug had come to light and assured him that he would be fine. On 22 June, he felt pain in the heart region, started perspiring and started feeling like he was fainting. He was later shifted to a hospital and provisionally diagnosed with a heart attack. He died a day later.[7][6][87] The state government declared that he had died on 23 June at 3:40 a.m. due to a heart attack.[88][89][90]

His death in custody raised wide suspicion across the country and demands for an independent inquiry were raised, including earnest requests from his mother, Jogamaya Devi, to Nehru. The prime minister declared that he had asked a number of persons who were privy to the facts and, according to him, there was no mystery behind Mukherjee's death. Devi did not accept Nehru's reply and requested an impartial inquiry. Nehru, however, ignored the letter and no inquiry commission was set up.[91]

Atal Bihari Vajpayee claimed in 2004 that the arrest of Mukherjee in Jammu and Kashmir was a "Nehru conspiracy" and that the death of Mukherjee has remained "even now an impervious mystery".[92][93] The BJP in 2011 called for an inquiry to probe Mukherjee's death.[94]

Legacy

 
 
 
Syama Prasad Mukherjee on Stamps of India

One of main thoroughfare in Calcutta was renamed Syama Prasad Mukherjee Road on 3 July 1953 a few days after his death.[95] Syamaprasad College founded by him in 1945 in Kolkata is named after him.[96] Shyama Prasad Mukherji College of University of Delhi was established in 1969 in his memory.[97] On 7 August 1998, the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation named a bridge after Mukherjee.[98] Delhi has a major road named after Mukherjee called Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Marg.[99] Kolkata, too, has a major road called Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Road.[100] In 2001, the main research funding institute of the Government of India, CSIR, instituted a new fellowship named after him.[101]

 
Shyam Prasad Mukherjee Civic Centre – Headquarters of Municipal Corporation of Delhi

On 22 April 2010, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi's (MCD) newly constructed Rs. 650-crore building, the tallest building in Delhi, was named the Doctor Syama Prasad Mukherjee Civic Centre. It was inaugurated by Home Minister P. Chidambaram. The building, which is estimated to cater to 20,000 visitors per day, will also house different wings and offices of the MCD.[102] The MCD also built the Syama Prasad Swimming Pool Complex which hosted aquatic events during the 2010 Commonwealth Games held at New Delhi.[103]

 
Portrait of Syama Prasad Mukherjee in Parliament of India

In 2012, a flyover at Mathikere in Bangalore City Limits was inaugurated and named the Dr Syama Prasad Mukherjee Flyover.[104] The International Institute of Information Technology, Naya Raipur is named after him.[105]

In 2014, a multipurpose indoor stadium built on the Goa University campus in Goa was named after Mukherjee.[106]

The government of India approved the Shyama Prasad Mukherji Rurban Mission (SPMRM) with an outlay of 51.42 billion (US$640 million) on 16 September 2015. The Mission was launched by the Prime Minister on 21 February 2016 at Kurubhata, Murmunda Rurban Cluster, Rajnandgaon, Chhattisgarh.[107][108] In April 2017, Ranchi College was upgraded to Shyama Prasad Mukherjee University.[109] In September 2017, Kolar, a town in Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, was renamed as Shyama Prasad Mukherji Nagar by the state's Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan.[110]

Mukherjee's role in fighting for Bengal was featured in the movie 1946 Calcutta Killings, in which Gajendra Chauhan played the role of Mukherjee.[111]

On 12 January 2020, the Kolkata Port Trust was renamed as Syama Prasad Mukherjee Port by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.[112][113]

The Chenani-Nashri Tunnel on NH44 in Jammu and Kashmir was renamed after Mukherjee by the Indian government in 2020.[114][115]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Quit India Movement or the India August Movement, was a movement launched at the Bombay session of the All-India Congress Committee by Mahatma Gandhi on 8 August 1942, during World War II, demanding an end to British Rule of India.[35]

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  113. ^ Loiwal, Manogya (12 January 2020). "PM Modi renames Kolkata Port Trust after Bharatiya Jana Sangh founder Shyama Prasad Mukherjee". India Today. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  114. ^ "India's longest tunnel, Chenani Nashri renamed! Check new name and other details". Times Now. 25 October 2019. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  115. ^ "Govt to rename Chenani-Nashri tunnel after Syama Prasad Mookerjee". The Indian Express. 18 October 2019. Retrieved 4 October 2020.

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Further reading

  • Graham, B. D. (1968). "Syama Prasad Mookerjee and the communalist alternative". In D. A. Low (ed.). Soundings in Modern South Asian History. University of California Press. ASIN B0000CO7K5.
  • Graham, B. D. (1990). Hindu Nationalism and Indian Politics: The Origins and Development of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-38348-X.

External links

    syama, prasad, mukherjee, indian, statistician, shyamaprasad, mukherjee, july, 1901, june, 1953, indian, politician, barrister, academician, served, india, first, minister, industry, supply, currently, known, ministry, commerce, industry, jawaharlal, nehru, ca. For the Indian statistician see Shyamaprasad Mukherjee Syama Prasad Mukherjee 6 July 1901 23 June 1953 was an Indian politician barrister and academician who served as India s first Minister for Industry and Supply currently known as Ministry of Commerce and Industry in Jawaharlal Nehru s cabinet After falling out with Nehru 3 protesting against the Liaquat Nehru Pact Mukherjee resigned from Nehru s cabinet 4 With the help of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh he founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh the predecessor to the Bharatiya Janata Party in 1951 5 Syama Prasad MukherjeeMember of Parliament Lok SabhaIn office 17 April 1952 23 June 1953Succeeded bySadhan GuptaConstituencyCalcutta South EastMinister of Commerce and Industry of IndiaIn office 15 August 1947 6 April 1950Prime MinisterJawaharlal NehruPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byNityanand KanungoMember of the Constituent AssemblyIn office 9 December 1946 24 January 1950ConstituencyWest BengalFounder President of the Bharatiya Jana SanghIn office 1951 1951 1952 1952 Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byMauli Chandra SharmaFinance Minister of Bengal ProvinceIn office 12 December 1941 20 November 1942Prime MinisterA K Fazlul HaqMember of the Bengal Legislative CouncilIn office 1929 1947 1 ConstituencyCalcutta UniversityVice Chancellor of Calcutta UniversityIn office 8 August 1934 8 August 1938 2 Preceded byHassan SuhrawardySucceeded byMuhammad Azizul HaquePresident of Akhil Bhartiya Hindu MahasabhaIn office 1943 1947Personal detailsBorn 1901 07 06 6 July 1901Calcutta Bengal Presidency British India present day Kolkata West Bengal India Died23 June 1953 1953 06 23 aged 51 Jammu and Kashmir IndiaPolitical partyBharatiya Jana SanghOther politicalaffiliationsIndian National Congress 1929 1935 Hindu Mahasabha 1935 1951 SpouseSudha DeviChildren5Parent s Ashutosh Mukherjee father Jogamaya Devi Mukherjee mother RelativesChittatosh Mookerjee nephew Alma materPresidency College B A M A LLB D Litt Lincoln s Inn Barrister at Law ProfessionAcademicianbarristerpoliticianactivistSignatureHe was also the president of Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha from 1943 to 1946 He was arrested by the Jammu and Kashmir Police in 1953 when he tried to cross the border of the state He was provisionally diagnosed of a heart attack and shifted to a hospital but died a day later 6 7 Since the Bharatiya Janata Party is the successor to the Bharatiya Jana Sangh Mukherjee is also regarded as the founder of the Bharatiya Janata Party BJP by its members 8 Contents 1 Early life and academic career 2 Political career before independence 2 1 Hindu Mahasabha and Bengali Hindu Homeland Movement 2 2 Opposition to Quit India Movement 3 Political career after independence 4 Opinion on special status of Jammu and Kashmir 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and academic career EditSyama Prasad Mukherjee was born in a Bengali Brahmin family on 6 July 1901 in Calcutta Kolkata 9 10 11 His family originally hailed from Jirat Hooghly District West Bengal 12 His grandfather Ganga Prasad Mukherjee was born in Jirat and he was first in the family who came to Calcutta and settled here 13 Syama Prasad s father was Ashutosh Mukherjee a judge of the High Court of Calcutta Bengal who was also Vice Chancellor of the University of Calcutta 14 15 His mother was Jogamaya Devi Mukherjee 10 He was a very meritorious student and he came to Kolkata to study in Medical College with the help of the wealthy people of Jirat Later he settled down in Bhawanipore area of Kolkata 16 He enrolled in Bhawanipur s Mitra Institution in 1906 and his behaviour in school was later described favourably by his teachers In 1914 he passed his matriculation examination and was admitted into Presidency College 17 18 He stood seventeenth in the Inter Arts Examination in 1916 19 and graduated in English securing the first position in first class in 1921 10 He was married to Sudha Devi on 16 April 1922 20 Mukherjee also completed an MA in Bengali being graded as first class in 1923 21 and also became a fellow of the Senate clarification needed in 1923 22 He completed his BL in 1924 10 He enrolled as an advocate in Calcutta High Court in 1924 the same year in which his father had died 23 Subsequently he left for England in 1926 to study at Lincoln s Inn and was called to the English Bar in the same year 24 In 1934 at the age of 33 he became the youngest Vice Chancellor of the University of Calcutta he held the office until 1938 25 During his term as Vice Chancellor Rabindranath Tagore delivered the University Convocation Address in Bengali for the first time and the Indian vernacular was introduced as a subject for the highest examination 26 27 On 10 September 1938 the Senate of Calcutta university resolved to confer honorary D Litt on the Ex Vice Chancellor in its opinion by reason of eminent position and attainments a fit and proper person to receive such a degree 28 Mukherjee received the D Litt from Calcutta University on 26 November 1938 29 He was also the 15th President of the Association of Indian Universities during 1941 42 Political career before independence EditHe started his political career in 1929 when he entered the Bengal Legislative Council as an Indian National Congress INC candidate representing Calcutta University 30 However he resigned the next year when the INC decided to boycott the legislature Subsequently he contested the election as an independent candidate and was elected in the same year 31 In 1937 he was elected as an independent candidate in the elections which brought the Krishak Praja Party to power 32 33 34 He served as the Finance Minister of Bengal Province in 1941 42 under A K Fazlul Haq s Progressive Coalition government which was formed on 12 December 1941 after the resignations of the Congress government During his tenure his statements against the government were censored and his movements were restricted He was also prevented from visiting the Midnapore district in 1942 when severe floods caused a heavy loss of life and property He resigned on 20 November 1942 accusing the British government of trying to hold on to India under any cost and criticised its repressive policies against the Quit India Movement a After resigning he mobilised support and organised relief with the help of Mahabodhi Society Ramakrishna Mission and Marwari Relief Society 36 37 38 In 1946 he was again elected as an independent candidate from the Calcutta University 32 He was elected as a member of the Constituent Assembly of India in the same year 39 Hindu Mahasabha and Bengali Hindu Homeland Movement Edit Mukherjee joined the Hindu Mahasabha in Bengal in 1939 39 and became its acting president that same year 40 He was appointed as the working president of the organisation in 1940 18 In February 1941 Mukherjee told a Hindu rally that if Muslims wanted to live in Pakistan they should pack their bag and baggage and leave India to wherever they like 41 Yet the Hindu Mahasabha also formed provincial coalition governments with the All India Muslim League in Sindh and the North West Frontier Province while Mukherjee was its leader 42 He was elected as the President of Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha in 1943 39 He remained in this position till 1946 with Laxman Bhopatkar becoming the new president in the same year 43 44 Mukherjee demanded the partition of Bengal in 1946 to prevent the inclusion of its Hindu majority areas in a Muslim dominated East Pakistan 10 A meeting held by the Mahasabha on 15 April 1947 in Tarakeswar authorised him to take steps for ensuring partition of Bengal In May 1947 he wrote a letter to Lord Mountbatten telling him that Bengal must be partitioned even if India was not 45 He also opposed a failed bid for a united but independent Bengal made in 1947 by Sarat Bose the brother of Subhas Chandra Bose and Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy a Bengali Muslim politician 46 47 His views were strongly affected by the Noakhali genocide in East Bengal where mobs belonging to the Muslim League massacred Hindus 48 It was Mukherjee who launched the Bengali Hindu Homeland Movement It refers to the movement of the Bengali Hindu people for the Partition of Bengal in 1947 to create a homeland aka West Bengal for themselves within the Indian Union in the wake of Muslim League s proposal and campaign to include the entire province of Bengal within Pakistan which was to be a homeland for the Muslims of British India 49 Opposition to Quit India Movement Edit Following the Hindu Mahasabha s official decision to boycott the Quit India movement 50 and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh s decision of non participation in the movement 51 52 53 54 Mukherjee wrote a letter to Sir John Herbert Governor of Bengal as to how they should respond to Quit India movement In this letter dated 26 July 1942 he wrote Let me now refer to the situation that may be created in the province as a result of any widespread movement launched by the Congress Anybody who during the war plans to stir up mass feeling resulting internal disturbances or insecurity must be resisted by any Government that may function for the time being 55 Mukherjee in this letter reiterated that the Fazlul Haq led Bengal Government along with its alliance partner Hindu Mahasabha would make every possible effort to defeat the Quit India Movement in the province of Bengal and made a concrete proposal in regard to this The question is how to combat this movement Quit India in Bengal The administration of the province should be carried on in such a manner that in spite of the best efforts of the Congress this movement will fail to take root in the province It should be possible for us especially responsible Ministers to be able to tell the public that the freedom for which the Congress has started the movement already belongs to the representatives of the people In some spheres it might be limited during the emergency Indians have to trust the British not for the sake for Britain not for any advantage that the British might gain but for the maintenance of the defense and freedom of the province itself You as Governor will function as the constitutional head of the province and will be guided entirely on the advice of your Minister 56 The Indian historian R C Majumdar noted this fact and states Shyam Prasad ended the letter with a discussion of the mass movement organised by Congress He expressed the apprehension that the movement would create internal disorder and will endanger internal security during the war by exciting popular feeling and he opined that any government in power has to suppress it but that according to him could not be done only by persecution In that letter he mentioned item wise the steps to be taken for dealing with the situation 57 During Mukherjee s resignation speech however he characterised the policies of the British government towards the movement as repressive 58 36 Political career after independence Edit L to R sitting B R Ambedkar Rafi Ahmed Kidwai Sardar Baldev Singh Maulana Abul Kalam Azad Jawaharlal Nehru Rajendra Prasad Sardar Patel John Mathai Jagjivan Ram Amrit Kaur and Syama Prasad Mukherjee L to R standing Khurshed Lal R R Diwakar Mohanlal Saksena N Gopalaswami Ayyangar N V Gadgil K C Neogy Jairamdas Daulatram K Santhanam Satya Narayan Sinha and B V Keskar B R Ambedkar and Syama Prasad Mukherjee talking on the Campus of Parliament 1951 Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru inducted Mukherjee into the Interim Central Government as a Minister for Industry and Supply on 15 August 1947 59 Mukherjee condemned the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi as most stunning blow that could fall on India 60 and began to have differences with Hindu Mahasabha after the Gandhi s killing in which the Mahasabha was blamed by Sardar Patel for creating the atmosphere that led to the killing Mukherjee suggested the organisation suspend its political activities Shortly after it did in December 1948 he left One of his reasons was the rejection of his proposal to allow non Hindus to become members 39 61 62 Mukherjee resigned along with K C Neogy from the Cabinet on 8 April 1950 over a disagreement about the 1950 Delhi Pact with Pakistani Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan Mukherjee was firmly against their joint pact to establish minority commissions and guarantee minority rights in both countries as he thought it left Hindus in East Bengal to the mercy of Pakistan While addressing a rally in Calcutta on 21 May he stated that an exchange of population and property at governmental level on regional basis between East Bengal and the states of Tripura Assam West Bengal and Bihar was the only option in the current situation 61 63 64 Mukherjee founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh on 21 October 1951 in Delhi 65 becoming its first president In the 1952 elections the Bharatiya Jana Sangh BJS won three seats in the Parliament of India including Mukherjee s He had formed the National Democratic Party within the Parliament It consisted of 32 members of the Lok Sabha and 10 members of the Rajya Sabha however it was not recognised by the speaker as an opposition party 66 The BJS was created with the objective of nation building and nationalising all non Hindus by inculcating Indian Culture in them The party was ideologically close to the RSS and widely considered the proponent of Hindu nationalism 67 Opinion on special status of Jammu and Kashmir EditMukherjee was strongly opposed to Article 370 seeing it as a threat to national unity He fought against it inside and outside the parliament with one of the goals of Bharatiya Jana Sangh being its abrogation He raised his voice strongly against the provision in his Lok Sabha speech on 26 June 1952 65 He termed the arrangements under the article as Balkanization of India and the three nation theory of Sheikh Abdullah 68 69 The state was granted its own flag along with a prime minister whose permission was required for anyone to enter the state In opposition to this Mukherjee once said Ek desh mein do Vidhan do Pradhan aur Do Nishan nahi chalenge A single country can t have two constitutions two prime ministers and two national emblems 70 Bharatiya Jana Sangh along with Hindu Mahasabha and Jammu Praja Parishad launched a massive Satyagraha to get the provisions removed 68 71 In his letter to Nehru dated 3 February 1953 he wrote that the issue of accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India should not be delayed to which Nehru responded by referring to international complications the issue could create 65 Mukherjee went to visit Kashmir in 1953 and observed a hunger strike to protest the law that prohibited Indian citizens from settling within the state and mandating that they carry ID cards 10 Mukherjee wanted to go to Jammu and Kashmir but because of the prevailing permit system he was not given permission He was arrested on 11 May at Lakhanpur while crossing the border into Kashmir illegally 72 73 Although the ID card rule was revoked owing to his efforts he died as a detainee on 23 June 1953 74 65 On 5 August 2019 when Government of India proposed constitutional Amendment to repeal Article 370 many newspapers described the event as realization of Syama Prasad Mukherjee s dream 75 76 Personal life EditSyama Prasad had three brothers who were Rama Prasad who was born in 1896 Uma Prasad who was born in 1902 and Bama Prasad Mukherjee who was born in 1906 Rama Prasad became a judge in High Court of Calcutta while Uma became famed as a trekker and a travel writer He also had three sisters who were Kamala who was born in 1895 Amala who was born in 1905 and Ramala in 1908 77 He was married to Sudha Devi for 11 years and had five children the last one a four month old son died from diphtheria His wife died of double pneumonia shortly afterwards in 1933 or 1934 78 79 80 Syama Prasad refused to remarry after her death 81 He had two sons Anutosh and Debatosh and two daughters Sabita and Arati 82 His grandniece Kamala Sinha served as the Minister of State for External affairs in the I K Gujral ministry 83 Syama Prasad was also affiliated with the Buddhist Mahabodhi Society In 1942 he succeeded M N Mukherjee to become the president of the organisation The relics of Gautam Buddha s two disciples Sariputra and Maudgalyayana discovered in the Great Stupa at Sanchi by Sir Alexander Cunningham in 1851 and kept at the British Museum were brought back to India by HMIS Tir A ceremony attended by politicians and leaders of many foreign countries was held on the next day at Calcutta Maidan They were handed over by Nehru to Mukherjee who later took these relics to Cambodia Burma Thailand and Vietnam Upon his return to India he placed the relics inside the Sanchi Stupa in November 1952 38 84 85 Death Edit Syama Prasad Mukherjee on a 1978 stamp of India Mukherjee was arrested upon entering Kashmir on 11 May 1953 86 He and two of his arrested companions were first taken to Central Jail of Srinagar Later they were transferred to a cottage outside the city Mukherjee s condition started deteriorating and he started feeling pain in the back and high temperature on the night between 19 and 20 June He was diagnosed with dry pleurisy from which he had also suffered in 1937 and 1944 The doctor prescribed him a streptomycin injection and powders however Mukherjee informed him that his family physician had told him that streptomycin did not suit his system The doctor however told him that new information about the drug had come to light and assured him that he would be fine On 22 June he felt pain in the heart region started perspiring and started feeling like he was fainting He was later shifted to a hospital and provisionally diagnosed with a heart attack He died a day later 7 6 87 The state government declared that he had died on 23 June at 3 40 a m due to a heart attack 88 89 90 His death in custody raised wide suspicion across the country and demands for an independent inquiry were raised including earnest requests from his mother Jogamaya Devi to Nehru The prime minister declared that he had asked a number of persons who were privy to the facts and according to him there was no mystery behind Mukherjee s death Devi did not accept Nehru s reply and requested an impartial inquiry Nehru however ignored the letter and no inquiry commission was set up 91 Atal Bihari Vajpayee claimed in 2004 that the arrest of Mukherjee in Jammu and Kashmir was a Nehru conspiracy and that the death of Mukherjee has remained even now an impervious mystery 92 93 The BJP in 2011 called for an inquiry to probe Mukherjee s death 94 Legacy Edit Syama Prasad Mukherjee on Stamps of India One of main thoroughfare in Calcutta was renamed Syama Prasad Mukherjee Road on 3 July 1953 a few days after his death 95 Syamaprasad College founded by him in 1945 in Kolkata is named after him 96 Shyama Prasad Mukherji College of University of Delhi was established in 1969 in his memory 97 On 7 August 1998 the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation named a bridge after Mukherjee 98 Delhi has a major road named after Mukherjee called Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Marg 99 Kolkata too has a major road called Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Road 100 In 2001 the main research funding institute of the Government of India CSIR instituted a new fellowship named after him 101 Shyam Prasad Mukherjee Civic Centre Headquarters of Municipal Corporation of Delhi On 22 April 2010 the Municipal Corporation of Delhi s MCD newly constructed Rs 650 crore building the tallest building in Delhi was named the Doctor Syama Prasad Mukherjee Civic Centre It was inaugurated by Home Minister P Chidambaram The building which is estimated to cater to 20 000 visitors per day will also house different wings and offices of the MCD 102 The MCD also built the Syama Prasad Swimming Pool Complex which hosted aquatic events during the 2010 Commonwealth Games held at New Delhi 103 Portrait of Syama Prasad Mukherjee in Parliament of India In 2012 a flyover at Mathikere in Bangalore City Limits was inaugurated and named the Dr Syama Prasad Mukherjee Flyover 104 The International Institute of Information Technology Naya Raipur is named after him 105 In 2014 a multipurpose indoor stadium built on the Goa University campus in Goa was named after Mukherjee 106 The government of India approved the Shyama Prasad Mukherji Rurban Mission SPMRM with an outlay of 51 42 billion US 640 million on 16 September 2015 The Mission was launched by the Prime Minister on 21 February 2016 at Kurubhata Murmunda Rurban Cluster Rajnandgaon Chhattisgarh 107 108 In April 2017 Ranchi College was upgraded to Shyama Prasad Mukherjee University 109 In September 2017 Kolar a town in Bhopal Madhya Pradesh was renamed as Shyama Prasad Mukherji Nagar by the state s Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan 110 Mukherjee s role in fighting for Bengal was featured in the movie 1946 Calcutta Killings in which Gajendra Chauhan played the role of Mukherjee 111 On 12 January 2020 the Kolkata Port Trust was renamed as Syama Prasad Mukherjee Port by Prime Minister Narendra Modi 112 113 The Chenani Nashri Tunnel on NH44 in Jammu and Kashmir was renamed after Mukherjee by the Indian government in 2020 114 115 See also Edit Biography portal India portal Politics portalList of unsolved deathsNotes Edit The Quit India Movement or the India August Movement was a movement launched at the Bombay session of the All India Congress Committee by Mahatma Gandhi on 8 August 1942 during World War II demanding an end to British Rule of India 35 References EditCitations Edit Mishra 2004 p 96 Our Vice Chancellors University of Calcutta Retrieved 1 December 2016 Kingshuk Nag 18 November 2015 Netaji Living Dangerously AuthorsUpFront Paranjoy pp 53 ISBN 978 93 84439 70 5 Dr Shyama Prasad Mookerjee www shyamaprasad org Retrieved 1 June 2019 Bharatiya Jana Sangh Indian political organization Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 1 June 2019 a b Bakshi 1991 pp 278 306 a b Smith 2015 p 87 History of the Party www bjp org Retrieved 6 August 2019 Chaturvedi 2010 p 25 a b c d e f MK Singh 2009 p 240 Buddhism Windhorse Publications April 2019 ISBN 978 1 911407 40 9 Ghatak Atulchandra Ashutosher Chatrajiban Ed 8th Bengali Ed 1954 p 1 Chakraborty Chatterjee amp Co Ltd Ghatak Atulchandra Ashutosher Chatrajiban Ed 8th Bengali Ed 1954 p 3 Chakraborty Chatterjee amp Co Ltd Dash 1968 p 566 Parliamentary Debates Official Report Rajya Sabha Volume 81 Issues 9 15 Council of States Secretariat 1972 p 216 Ghatak Atulchandra Ashutosher Chatrajiban Ed 8th 1954 p 1 Chakraborty Chatterjee amp Co Ltd Roy 2014 p 22 a b Trilochan Singh 1952 p 91 Calcutta Gazette 7 July 1916 part 1c page 639 sfn error no target CITEREFCalcutta Gazette 7 July 1916 part 1c page 639 help Chander 2000 p 75 KV Singh 2005 p 275 Mukhopadhyay 1993 p vii Bakshi 1991 p 1 Das 2000 p 22 Gandhi 2007 p 328 Sen 1970 p 225 Aich 1995 p 27 The Calcutta Review October 1938 Calcutta University Kolkata 1938 pp 1 Recipients of Hony Degrees caluniv ac in Retrieved 27 October 2017 Lal 2008 p 315 Bakshi 1991 p 4 a b Sengupta 2011 p 393 Harun or Rashid 2003 p 214 Mukherjee 2015 p 60 1942 Quit India Movement Making Britain www open ac uk a b Censorship A World Encyclopedia Routledge 2001 p 1623 ISBN 9781136798641 Sengupta 2011 p 407 a b Vishwanathan Sharma 2011 p 56 a b c d Urmila Sharma amp SK Sharma 2001 p 381 Mukherji Shyama Prasad Banglapedia en banglapedia org Retrieved 19 September 2020 Legislative Council Proceedings BLCP 1941 Vol LIX No 6 p 216 Savarkar Vinayak Damodar 1963 Collected Works of V D Savarkar Maharashtra Prantik Hindusabha pp 479 480 Sarkar amp Bhattacharya 2008 p 386 Christenson 1991 p 160 Amrik Singh 2000 p 219 Begum 1994 p 175 Chatterji 2002 p 264 Sinha amp Dasgupta 2011 pp 278 280 Sengupta Nitish 2007 Bengal Divided The Unmaking of a Nation 1905 1971 New Delhi Penguin Books India p 148 Bapu 2013 pp 103 Chandra 2008 pp 140 Andersen amp Damle 1987 p 44 Bandopadhyaya 2004 pp 422 Golwalkar 1974 Mookherjee 2000 p 179 Noorani 2000 pp 56 57 Majumdar 1978 p 179 Hashmi 1994 p 221 Council of Ministers 1947 2004 names and portfolios of the members of the Union Council of Ministers from 15 August 1947 to 25 May 2004 Lok Sabha Secretariat 2004 p 50 Dr Rajendra Prasad Correspondence and Select documents Vol 8 Volume 8 Allied Publishers p 415 a b Kedar Nath Kumar 1990 pp 20 21 Islam 2006b p 227 Das 2000 p 143 Roy 2007 p 227 a b c d Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Hindustan Times 9 September 2002 Bharatiya Jana Sangh Indian political organization Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica com Retrieved 8 June 2014 Dossani amp Rowen 2005 p 191 a b Ram 1983 p 115 Kedar Nath Kumar 1990 pp 78 79 A tribute to Mookerjee Daily Excelsior 23 August 2013 Yoga Raj Sharma 2003 p 152 Chander 2000 p 234 Kadian 2000 p 120 Bakshi 1991 p 274 Ek desh mein do vidhan nahi challenge BJP realises founder Shyama Prasad Mukherjee s dream India Today 8 August 2019 Article 370 Martyrdom of Dr Mukherjee for complete integration of J amp K honoured says Ram Madhav The Hindu 8 August 2019 Roy 2014 p 11 Roy 2014 p 34 Basu 1995 p 16 Baxter 1969 p 63 Raj Kumar 2014 p 173 Das 2000 p 20 Basu Rita 1 January 2015 Former MoS for External Affairs Kamala Sinha passes away Business Standard Ahir 1991 p 135 Narendra Kr Singh 1996 pp 1405 1407 Bhave 1995 p 49 Chander 2000 pp 22 23 33 39 42 117 Chakrabarty amp Roy 1974 p 227 Chander 2000 p 118 Das 2000 p 212 Vijay Tarun 27 March 2009 Family legacy and the Varun effect Rediff Retrieved 18 March 2021 Das 2000 p 217 PTI 7 July 2004 Nehru conspiracy led to Shyama Prasad s death Atal The Times of India Retrieved 18 March 2021 BJP demands inquiry into SP Mukherjee s death claims murder conspiracy by Sheikh Abdullah Hindustan Times 24 September 2011 The Brown Struggler Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Road Past And Present greenjaydeep tumblr com Retrieved 8 June 2021 College History Syamaprasad College Kolkata Retrieved 8 June 2021 About the college spm du ac in Terrorism Advani accuses USA of double standards The Tribune India 28 August 1998 Retrieved 15 September 2018 Shyama Prasad Mukherji Marg is a commuter s nightmare DNA India 9 November 2015 Ray Saikat 22 August 2016 Kolkata roads and greenery damaged by storms Times of India Archana Gupta Inderpal Mallick Sukumar Mallick 2004 Are bright students coming back to science A study PDF Journal of Scientific and Industrial Research 63 248 Sharma Milan 22 June 2010 Delhi gets its tallest building NDTV Delhi CM inaugurates Swimming Complex NDTV 18 July 2010 Fly over named after Dr Shyama Prasad The New Indian Express 16 January 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2016 Piyush Goyal launches IIIT at Naya Raipur Raman declares 2 term fee waiver The Times of India 23 June 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2017 Indoor stadium at Taleigao named after S P Mukherjee iGoa Navhindtimes in 17 January 2014 Archived from the original on 16 April 2014 Retrieved 8 June 2014 Shyama Prasad Mukherji Rurban Mission SPMRM Arthapedia www arthapedia in Retrieved 13 October 2016 National Rurban Mission rurban gov in Retrieved 13 October 2016 र च क ल ज अब श य म प रस द म खर ज व श वव द य लय Jagran 12 April 2017 Kolar renamed as Shyama Prasad Mukherji Nagar The Pioneer 19 September 2017 After Four Cuts Movie on Syama Prasad Mookerjee s Life Set to Hit the Screens News 18 13 October 2017 Bhasin Swati 12 January 2020 Kolkata Port Trust Renamed As Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port PM Modi NDTV com Retrieved 12 January 2020 Loiwal Manogya 12 January 2020 PM Modi renames Kolkata Port Trust after Bharatiya Jana Sangh founder Shyama Prasad Mukherjee India Today Retrieved 12 January 2020 India s longest tunnel Chenani Nashri renamed Check new name and other details Times Now 25 October 2019 Retrieved 4 October 2020 Govt to rename Chenani Nashri tunnel after Syama Prasad Mookerjee The Indian Express 18 October 2019 Retrieved 4 October 2020 Sources Edit Ahir D C 1991 Buddhism in modern India Sri Datguru Publications Aich Dipak Kumar 1995 Emergence of Modern Bengali Elite A Study of Progress in Education 1854 1917 Minerva Associates Andersen Walter K Damle Shridhar D 1987 Originally published by Westview Press The Brotherhood in Saffron The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and Hindu Revivalism Delhi Vistaar Publications via archive org Bakshi Shiri Ram 1991 Struggle for Independence Syama Prasad Mookerjee Anmol Publications Bandyopadhyaẏa Sekhara 1 January 2004 From Plassey to Partition A History of Modern India Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 81 250 2596 2 Bapu Prabhu 2013 Hindu Mahasabha in Colonial North India 1915 1930 Constructing Nation and History Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 67165 1 Basu Rita 1995 Dr Shyama Prasad Mookherjee amp an alternate politics in Bengal Progressive Publishers Baxter Craig 1969 The Jana Sangh a biography of an Indian political party University of Pennsylvania Press via archive org Begum Jahanara 1994 The last decade of undivided Bengal parties politics amp personalities Minerva Associates Bhave Y G 1 January 1995 The First Prime Minister of India Northern Book Centre ISBN 978 81 7211 061 1 Chakrabarty Saroj Roy Bidhan C 1974 With Dr B C Roy and Other Chief Ministers A Record Upto 1962 Benson s Chander Harish 2000 Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee a contemporary study Noida News Chandra Bipan 2008 Communalism in Modern India Har Anand ISBN 978 81 241 1416 2 Chatterji Joya 2002 Bengal Divided Hindu Communalism and Partition 1932 1947 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521523288 Chaturvedi R P 2010 Great Personalities Upkar Prakashan ISBN 9788174820617 Christenson Ron 1991 Political Trials in History From Antiquity to the Present Transactions Publishers ISBN 9781412831253 Das S C 2000 The Biography of Bharat Kesri Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee with Modern Implications Abhinav Publications ISBN 9788170173878 Dash Shreeram Chandra 1968 The Constitution of India A Comparative Study Chaitanya Publishing Dossani Rafiq Rowen Henry S 2005 Prospects for Peace in South Asia Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804750851 Gandhi Gopal 2007 A Frank Friendship Gandhi and Bengal A Descriptive Chronology Seagull Publications Golwalkar M S 1974 Shri Guruji Samagra Darshan Volume 4 Bharatiya Vichar Sadhana Harun or Rashid 2003 The Foreshadowing of Bangladesh Bengal Muslim League and Muslim Politics 1906 1947 The University Press Limited Hashmi Taj ul Islam 1994 Peasant utopia the communalization of class politics in East Bengal 1920 1947 The University Press Limited Islam Shamsul 2006b Savarkar Myths and Facts Anamaika Publishing amp Distributors Islam Shamsul 2006a Religious Dimensions of Indian Nationalism A Study of RSS Media House ISBN 978 81 7495 236 3 Kadian Rajesh 2000 The Kashmir tangle issues amp options Vision Books Kumar Kedar Nath 1990 Political Parties in India Their Ideology and Organisation Mittal Publications ISBN 9788170992059 Kumar Raj 2014 Essays on Indian Freedom Movement Discovery Publishing House ISBN 9788171417056 Lal Makkhan 2008 Secular Politics Communal Agenda 1860 1953 Pragun Publication Majumdar Ramesh Chandra 1978 History of Modern Bengal Oxford University Press Mishra Basanta Kumar 2004 The Cripps Mission A Reappraisal Concept Publishing Company Mookherjee Shyama Prasad 2000 Leaves from a Dairy Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195631197 Mukherjee Janam 2015 Hungry Bengal War Famine and the End of Empire HarperCollins India ISBN 9789351775836 Mukhopadhyay Shyamaprasad 1993 Leaves from a diary Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195631197 Noorani Abdul Gafoor Abdul Majeed 2000 The RSS and the BJP A Division of Labour LeftWord Books ISBN 978 81 87496 13 7 Puniyani Ram 21 July 2005 Religion Power and Violence Expression of Politics in Contemporary Times SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0 7619 3338 0 Ram Hari 1983 Special Status in Indian Federalism Jammu and Kashmir Seema Publications Roy Tathagata 2007 A suppressed chapter in history the exodus of Hindus from East Pakistan and Bangladesh 1947 2006 Bookwell Roy Tathagata 2014 The Life amp Times of Shyama Prasad Mookerjee Prabhat Prakashan ISBN 9789350488812 Sarkar Sumit Bhattacharya Sabyasachi 2008 Towards freedom documents on the movement for independence in India 1946 Part 1 Oxford University Press Sen Khagendra Nath 1970 Education and the nation An Indian perspective University of Calcutta ISBN 9780195692457 Sengupta Nitish K 2011 Land of Two Rivers A History of Bengal from the Mahabharata to Mujib Penguin Books India ISBN 9780143416784 Sharma Urmila Sharma S K 2001 Indian Political Thought Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 9788171566785 Sharma Vishwanathan 2011 Famous Indians of the 20th Century V amp S Publishers ISBN 9788192079684 Sharma Yoga Raj 2003 Special Status in Indian Federalism Jammu and Kashmir Radha Krishna Anand amp Company Singh Amrik 2000 The Partition in Retrospect Anamika Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 9788186565650 Singh K V 2005 Political profiles of modern India Vista International Publishing House Singh M K 2009 Encyclopaedia Of Indian War Of Independence 1857 1947 Set Of 19 Vols Anmol Publications Singh Narendra Kr 1996 International encyclopaedia of Buddhism France Volume 15 Anmol Publications Singh Trilochan 1952 Personalities A Comprehensive and Authentic Biographical Dictionary of Men who Matter in India Northern India and Parliament Arunam amp Sheel Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity Smith Donald Eugene 2015 South Asian Politics and Religion Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400879083Further reading EditGraham B D 1968 Syama Prasad Mookerjee and the communalist alternative In D A Low ed Soundings in Modern South Asian History University of California Press ASIN B0000CO7K5 Graham B D 1990 Hindu Nationalism and Indian Politics The Origins and Development of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 38348 X External links EditExcerpts from convocation address at Benares Hindu University 1 December 1940 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Syama Prasad Mukherjee Wikiquote has quotations related to Syama Prasad Mukherjee Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syama Prasad Mukherjee amp oldid 1136092528, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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