Deendayal Upadhyaya

Former

Birthday September 25, 1916

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Nagla Chandraban, Mathura, United Provinces, British India (present-day Deendayal Dham, Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, India)

DEATH DATE 1968-2-11, Mughalsarai, Uttar Pradesh, India (51 years old)

Nationality India

#13228 Most Popular

1916

Deendayal Upadhyaya (25 September 1916 – 11 February 1968) was an Indian politician, a proponent of integral humanism ideology and leader of the political party Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS), the forerunner of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Upadhyaya was born in 1916 in the village of Nagla Chandraban, now called Deendayal Dham, near the town of Farah in Mathura District, 26 km from Mathura in a Brahmin family.

His father, Bhagwati Prasad Upadhyaya, was an astrologer and his mother, Rampyari Upadhyaya, was a homemaker and observant Hindu.

Both his parents died when he was eight years old and he was brought up by his maternal uncle.

His education, under the guardianship of his maternal uncle and aunt, saw him attend high school in Sikar.

The Maharaja of Sikar gave him a gold medal, Rs 250 to buy books and a monthly scholarship of Rs 10.

and did his Intermediate in Pilani, Rajasthan, (Now Birla School, Pilani).

He took a BA degree at the Sanatan Dharma College, Kanpur.

1937

Upadhyaya had come into contact with the RSS through a classmate, Baluji Mahashabde, while studying at Sanatan Dharma College in 1937.

He met the founder of the RSS, K. B. Hedgewar, who engaged with him in an intellectual discussion at one of the shakhas.

Sunder Singh Bhandari was also one of his classmates at Kanpur.

1939

In 1939 he moved over to Agra and joined St. John's College, Agra to pursue a master's degree in English literature but could not continue his studies.

He did not take up his MA exams due to some family and financial issues.

He was came to be known as Panditji for appearing in the civil services examination, wearing the traditional Indian dhoti-kurta and cap.

1940

Upadhyaya started the monthly publication Rashtra Dharma, broadly meaning 'National Faith', in the 1940s to spread the ideals of Hindutva revival.

Upadhyaya is known for drafting Jan Sangh's official political doctrine, Integral humanism, by including some cultural-nationalism values and his agreement with several Gandhian socialist principles such as sarvodaya (progress of all) and swadeshi (self-sufficiency).

Upadhyaya started the monthly Rashtra Dharma publication from Lucknow in the 1940s, using it to spread Hindutva ideology.

Later he started the weekly Panchjanya and the daily Swadesh.

1942

He started full-time work in the RSS from 1942.

He had attended the 40-day summer vacation RSS camp at Nagpur where he underwent training in Sangh Education.

After completing second-year training in the RSS Education Wing, Upadhyaya became a lifelong pracharak of the RSS.

1951

In 1951, when Syama Prasad Mookerjee founded the BJS, Deendayal was seconded to the party by the RSS, tasked with moulding it into a genuine member of the Sangh Parivar.

He was appointed as General Secretary of its Uttar Pradesh branch, and later the all-India general secretary.

For 15 years, he remained the outfit's general secretary.

1955

He worked as the pracharak for the Lakhimpur district and, from 1955, as the joint Prant Pracharak (regional organiser) for Uttar Pradesh.

He was regarded as an ideal swayamsevak of the RSS essentially because ‘his discourse reflected the pure thought-current of the Sangh’.

1963

He also contested by-poll for the Lok Sabha seat of Jaunpur from Uttar Pradesh in 1963 bi election when Jansangh MP Bramh Jeet Singh died, but failed to attract significant political traction and did not get elected.

1965

Integral humanism was a set of concepts drafted by Upadhyaya as a political program and adopted in 1965 as the official doctrine of the Jan Sangh.

1967

In the 1967 general elections, the Jana Sangh got 35 seats and became the 3rd largest party in the Lok Sabha.

The Jan Sangh also went onto be a part of the Samyukta Vidhayak Dal, an experiment of having non-Congress opposition parties as a coalition to form governments in multiple states This brought the right and the left of the Indian political spectrum on one single platform.

He became president of the Jana Sangh in December 1967 in the Calicut session of the party.

His presidential speech in that session focused on multiple aspects right from the formation of coalition government to language.

In December 1967, Upadhyaya was elected president of the BJS.

1968

No major events happened in the party during his tenure as the president that ended in 2 months in February 1968 due to his untimely death.

Upadhyaya edited Panchjanya (weekly) and Swadesh (daily) from Lucknow.

In Hindi, he wrote a drama on Chandragupta Maurya, and later wrote a biography of Shankaracharya.

He translated a Marathi biography of Hedgewar.

On February 10, 1968, Upadhyaya boarded a late-night train from Lucknow to Patna, which made several stops along the way.

Upadhyaya was confirmed to have been seen alive at Jaunpur, shortly after midnight.

The train briefly stopped at Varanasi around 01:40 am before proceeding on to Mughalsarai; on arrival at 2:10 am, Upadhyaya was not aboard.