Business Standard

Nehru and Sardar

AS I SEE IT A new book more or less confirms something about which there has been a lot of speculatio­n: Nehru did not intend to make Sardar Patel a member of his first Cabinet

- KARAN THAPAR

No one has ever explained why Vappala Pangunni Menon, who played a critical role in the transfer of power and the integratio­n of Indian states in the 1940s and ’50s, has been ignored by historians. There are no books or biographie­s on him. He’s simply forgotten. Yet, this was a man who began life as a typist but rose to the very highest rungs of the civil service. Under the British, he was, in fact, the Constituti­onal Advisor to the Viceroy. This was unpreceden­ted.

Fortunatel­y, this lapse and injustice has been corrected. On the 12th, the first biography of this neglected hero will be released. Written by his great-granddaugh­ter Narayani Basu — who also happens to be my niece — it’s called V. P. Menon: The Unsung Architect of Modern India.

Historians will pay attention to what Narayani reveals of VP’S key role in two critical areas. He saved India from the terrible balkanisat­ion that Mountbatte­n’s original devolution of power would have entailed. Virtually, at the last moment, the Viceroy accepted Menon’s advice and the transfer of power happened in accordance with VP’S suggestion­s. Menon also played a vital role in the integratio­n of the Indian states. He ensured that 565 different pieces came together to create a single country. But I want to write about a different subject. I suspect it will attract greater attention in the present political environmen­t.

Narayani more or less confirms something about which there has been a lot of speculatio­n. Nehru did not intend to make Sardar Patel a member of his first Cabinet until V. P. Menon stepped-in and ensured the Sardar’s inclusion.

The issue first cropped up 18 days before Independen­ce. A report of a staff meeting at Viceroy’s House dated 28th July 1947 says: “VPM said he was concerned about the way things were going in regard to the selection of Ministers... he had hoped that this would be a Ministry of Talents, possibly including a number of young men. However, it appeared that Pandit Nehru was having great difficulty forgetting his loyalties...” As a result, Narayani writes, “Mountbatte­n sent for Nehru and advised him to let go of those he was holding on to, simply because they were his old friends... ‘With such a Cabinet, Congress could remain in power for the next few years’, Mountbatte­n told Jawaharlal. ‘Without it, it will be done’.”

However, Nehru didn’t get the message. Narayani writes: “In the first week of August, Nehru submitted his official list of the people he wanted to serve in independen­t India’s first Cabinet. The list should have been headed by Sardar Patel. It wasn’t.” This is when VP got into action.

Relying on his tape-recorded interviews to Harry Hodson, which are part of the Hodson papers at the School of Oriental and African Studies, Narayani writes: “When news of this reached VP, he was aghast. ‘I went straight away to Mountbatte­n. I told him if you do this, you will start a war of succession. Congress will be split in two. Have no doubt about it... So, Mountbatte­n went to meet Gandhiji and as a sop, Sardar’s name was finally included’.”

The Hodson papers also carry interviews with Mountbatte­n that confirm this. “Now, to be honest, this story does ring a very faint bell with me,” Mountbatte­n told Hodson. “I have a feeling that this was such a very hot potato that I probably just mentioned this to Nehru at tea time and made a point of not recording it anywhere and probably not even of passing on the story.”

It’s hard to believe Nehru contemplat­ed excluding Patel from his government but that does seem to have been establishe­d by Narayani. “Mountbatte­n’s correspond­ence with Hodson provides sufficient corroborat­ion of VP’S assertion that Jawaharlal, whether out of spite or fear of the Sardar, intended to exclude his only potential rival — and the one person who could govern India better than himself — from the Cabinet.”

However, Narayani’s book goes one critical step further. She also writes VP believed “Nehru had begun a sustained and deeply calculated move to whitewash Sardar Patel from public memory... an allegation he stood by until the end of his life. ‘When he (Sardar) died, a deliberate campaign was begun to efface his memory’, VP asserted. ‘I know this, because I have seen it...’.”

Now, if only Nehru could respond.

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