POLITICS
Relevance of Ambedkar
From Editor's Column in the April 27, 1991, issue, assessing Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's role in Indian politics, in his birth centenary year.
THE HINDU PHOTO LIBRARY
Dr B.R. Ambedkar. No other national figure in Indian politics in the 20th century matched his scholarly orientation.
IN the centenary year of his birth, Babasaheb Ambedkar stands taller than he ever did before – his role in the struggle for a modern, new India gaining steadily in weight, stature and centrality at the expense of various other outstanding national figures who were contemporaries and opponents in the great battles of the freedom movement era. This is essentially because the deep-seated and central problems spotlighted by his life, struggles, studies and experimentation in ideas remain alive and kicking while the big socio-political questions he raised about the state, well-being and future of India remain basically unanswered.
He was born Bhimrao on April 14, 1891, at Mhow in Central India in an austere and religious Mahar family with a military service background and considerable respect for education. In school (Satara and Bombay), college (Bombay), service under the Maharaja of Baroda (briefly in 1913 and again between July and November 1917) and study abroad (Columbia University, the London School of Economics, Gray’s Inn, the University of Bonn), he displayed a scholarly orientation, a commitment to the life of the mind and trained intellectual gifts that no other national figure in Indian politics could match over this century.
He benefited from opportunities which had just opened up, which none in his family (or, for that matter, in the recorded history of his people) had access to over the centuries; yet every one of his academic, intellectual and professional achievements was hard earned, in social battle, against entrenched oppression, discrimination and anti-human prejudice. By the time he was finished with his formal studies in the early 1920s, Dr Ambedkar had acquired qualifications that surpassed the M.A., Ph.D., M.Sc. (Econ), D.Sc. (Econ), Barrister-at-law he had added, by right, to his name and title; the young man had been through a real life educational experience which most people (including the most renowned scholars) do not manage to acquire in a lifetime.
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Dr.Ambedkar
ReplyDeleteB.A.,M.A.,M.Sc.,D.Sc.,Ph.D.,L.L.D.,D.Litt.,Barrister-at-Law.
B.A.(Bombay University), Bachelor of Arts
M.A.(Columbia university), Master Of Arts
M.Sc.( London School of Economics), Master Of Science
D.Sc.( London School of Economics), Doctor of Science
Ph.D. (Columbia University), Doctor of philosophy
L.L.D.(Columbia University), Doctor of Laws
D.Litt.( Osmania University).Doctor of Literature
Barrister-at-Law (Gray’s Inn, London), Highest law qualification in England (At that time)
valid info
ReplyDeletegood information B R ambedkar
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