Had Sardar Patel been the first prime minister
Material type:
- 954.0420924 AGG
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Gandhi Smriti Library | BR 954.0420924 AGG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 177803 | ||
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Gandhi Smriti Library | SVP 954.0420924 AGG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 176343 |
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BR 954.042 AGG Nehru's himalayan blunders: The accession of Jammu & Kashmir | BR 954.042 ALI Jawaharlal Nehru: maker of modern India | BR 954.042 NEH Discovery of India | BR 954.0420924 AGG Had Sardar Patel been the first prime minister | BR 954.0420924 AGG V.1 Sardar Patel: The supreme architect in unification of India (Volume 1-2) | BR 954.0420924 AGG V.2 Sardar Patel: The supreme architect in unification of India (Volume 1-2) | BR 954.0420924 MUR Rajendra Prasad: First President of India |
When a nation begins to pine for a person from its past, wishing he remained at the helm for longer, it indicates that the path taken by that nation is not the correct one. With Sardar Patel, especially vis-a-vis Nehru, the Indian nation still mourns the fact that the former did not become the first Prime Minister of India. This book, written by Justice (retd.) S N Aggarwal, author of “Nehru’s Himalayan Blunders”, establishes the real reasons why we still pine for Patel’s longer presence at the horizon of our national leadership. The book, quoting from authentic sources, also gives ample insight into the views and understanding of the affairs of the nation, which Sardar not only preached but also practiced. Usually, Sardar Patel, the “Iron Man” that he was, is lauded for his role in the unification of post-independent India. With Nehru botching up the only princely state he handled – namely, Jammu and Kashmir – Patel’s contribution in unifying more than 500 princely states in the Indian union becomes all the more laudable. However, this book goes beyond. “Had Sardar Patel been the first Prime Minister, the country would have been fully armed to defend herself, there could have been no danger from outside. By following the principles of patriotism, moral values and high character and discipline, there would have been no internal problem,” writes the author. And, like the case of Kashmir, in these matters too, Nehru’s conduct makes one wish all the more strongly that Sardar should have been the first Prime Minister of India.
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