Remembering India’s First PM on his 55th Death Anniv

| | Dehradun
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Remembering India’s First PM on his 55th Death Anniv

Monday, 27 May 2019 | JASKIRAN CHOPRA | Dehradun

Memories of our country’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru come to mind on this day –his 55th death anniversary. Nehru was also a great writer and a keen nature lover. All his life, he remained in love with the mighty Himalayas. And the Doon valley was his favourite place for a holiday.

More than half a century after his death, his memories linger on in the Doon valley and Mussoorie where he spent a lot of time. These places reminded him of Kashmir and he felt at home here. He was deeply in love with Doon and Mussoorie. On this day in 1964-May 26-Nehru left the Doon valley for New Delhi after a brief vacation.

 The next afternoon, he passed away. Nehru liked to describe himself as “a child of the Himalayas” and never missed an opportunity to be in close contact with the hills. He had a great love for this valley and spent many holidays here in the 1950s and 1960s. These memories have been handed down from one generation of Doonites to the next.

The Circuit House in Dehradun cantonment (now the Raj Bhawan) was where he stayed, usually accompanied by his daughter Indira.

The last four days of his life were spent with his daughter Indira, visiting old friends and taking leisurely walks in the tranquil gardens of the picturesque Circuit House. Nehru had suffered a minor stroke in January 1964 but soon got back to work. On May 24, Nehru flew to Dehradun for a short holiday.

On May 25, Nehru visited his old friend, Sri Prakasa, former minister and governor, at Kothalgaon, eight miles uphill on the Doon-Mussoorie route, and returned to Circuit House. It was on the same day that Nehru and Indira visited Sahastradhara late in the afternoon and enjoyed the views of the mountains from the newly constructed PWD guest house.

It was on May 26 that Nehru and Indira were seen off at the cantonment helipad near the Circuit House by a farewell group of 30 people. Commissioner BD Semwal, District Magistrate AP Dikshit, police chief RS Sharma, civil surgeon GP Srivastava and Doon’s veteran journalist  and writer Raj Kanwar (who was then a young correspondent) were among those who came to see him off.   Talking to The Pioneer, Raj Kanwar said about Tuesday, May 26, 1964, “The scene of action was the Cantonment Polo Grounds in Dehradun. Jawaharlal Nehru haltingly climbed the few steps of the helicopter stairway, his usual brisk gait missing. Indira followed him very close as if she feared her Papu might stumble. That was the end of his four-day visit to Dehradun for rest and recuperation after the stroke that he had suffered on January 8.”

Coming to the moment when Nehru was leaving Doon on May 26, Kanwar says about him, “A pale, faint smile appeared on his otherwise rosy countenance.

In retrospect and ruminating over my impressions of that evening, I realised that his left hand was less active than his right. Nehru’s left knee appeared somewhat stiff, hampering his brisk trademark gait.

 Nehru did not appear his usual cheerful self. There was a strange expression on his face. Did he have a premonition about his death? District Magistrate AP Dikshit, during whose tenure Nehru visited Dehradun on five occasions, had written a book on those visits in 1965 titled Antim Charan. My impressions tallied with those of Dikshit,” recalls Kanwar.Even during his days of imprisonment in the Dehradun jail during the freedom struggle, Nehru loved to watch the Himalayas from the small window in his prison cell.

He was kept at Dehradun jail three times in 1932-33, for about four months in 1934 and then for 14 months during 1940-41. He was allowed to receive food from outside. It was brought to him by the well-known Kashmiri family-the Tankhas- of the Doon valley.

It was here that the great leader began writing his autobiography in 1934. During his third and last term here, he wrote parts of Discovery of India. One of the family’s visit to Mussoorie was    in October, 1930 when Nehru with his wife Kamala reached Mussoorie to spend three days with     Motilal Nehru, who was then recouping in the hill town.

Writes Nehru, “He was looking just a little better, and I was happy to think that he had turned the corner and was getting well; it was good to be back in the family.

 I remember those quiet and delightful three days well. Indira, my daughter, was there; and my three little nieces,my sister’s daughters.

And these three days were the last I was to have with my father before his fatal illness came to snatch him away from me”.

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