Dr.
Ambedkar: A Brave Fighter
-
Lord Mountbatten
I became interested in
Dr. Ambedkar in 1943 when I was appointed Supreme Allied Commander, South East
Asia, and setup my operational Headquarters in Delhi. He was the Labour Member
of Viceroy’s Council. He was fighting for Liberty, Equality and Fraternity and
fair conditions of life. He clearly understood that this new order could never
be established if the Nazis and the Fascists won the war, he and the Indian
Labour had been actively cooperating in the prosecution of the war.
At a time when so many
Indian leaders opposed war, the knowledge of his support was greatly heartening
to me, since India was my base and a million Indian Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen
were fighting under my control in Burma.
When I became the last
Viceroy of India in March 1947 I had extremely interesting and valuable talks
with him, and strongly backed my Prime Minister, Jawahar Lal Nehru’s proposal to appoint him as Minister for Law
in the first Independent Cabinet.
I was even more pleased
to agree to his appointment as Chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee,
and watched with admiration the very efficient way in which he piloted the new
constitution of India through the Constituent Assembly. That was a magnificent
achievement.
But his continuous
championing of the Untouchable Scheduled Castes is what remains the strongest
in my mind. At the time of the transfer of power there were sixty millions of
them, far more than the population of the British Isles. Babasaheb, as they
affectionately called their leader, had personal experience of the fearful
disabilities under which his people suffered. He stood up for them against all
opponents. He disagreed violently with Mahatma Gandhi’s solution for their
representation in the Assembly in the Poona Pact which he felt tied them to the
Congress Party. He had the courage, and it required tremendous courage in the
climate of India, to stand up to him.
All in all, it was a
refreshing experience to know this clear seeing brave fighter who has an
immortal niche in the history of India .
(Extracted from Bheem
Patrika, edited by Bhagwan Das, Vol 3, No. 21, July 1974.)
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