Karpoori Thakur

Politician

Birthday January 24, 1924

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Pitaunjhia, Bihar and Orissa Province, British India

DEATH DATE 1988-2-17, Patna, Bihar, India (64 years old)

Nationality India

#12936 Most Popular

1924

Karpoori Thakur (24 January 1924 – 17 February 1988) was an Indian politician who served two terms as the 11th Chief Minister of Bihar, first from December 1970 to June 1971, and then from June 1977 to April 1979.

He was popularly known as Jan Nayak.

On 26 January 2024, he was posthumously awarded India's highest civilian honour, the Bharat Ratna, by the Government of India.

This was announced by the President of India Draupadi Murmu on 23 January 2024.

Karpoori Thakur was born to Gokul Thakur and Ramdulari Devi at Pitaunjhia (now Karpuri Gram) village in Samastipur District of Bihar.

He belonged to the Nai community.

He was influenced by Mahatma Gandhi and Satyanarayan Sinha.

He joined the All India Students Federation.

As a student activist, he left his graduate college to join the Quit India Movement.

For his participation in the Indian independence movement, he spent 26 months in prison.

After India gained independence, Thakur worked as a teacher in his village's school.

1952

He became a member of the Bihar Vidhan Sabha in 1952 from Tajpur constituency as a Socialist Party candidate.

1960

He was arrested for leading P & T employees during the general strike of the Central Government employees in 1960.

1970

In 1970, he undertook a fast unto death for 28 days to promote the cause of Telco labourers.

Thakur was a votary of Hindi language, and as the education minister of Bihar, he removed English as the compulsory subject for the matriculation curriculum.

It is alleged that the Bihar's students suffered due to the resulting low standards of English-medium education in the state.

Thakur served as a minister and Deputy Chief Minister of Bihar, before becoming the first non-Congress socialist Chief Minister of Bihar in 1970.

He also enforced total prohibition of alcohol in Bihar.

During his reign, many schools and colleges were established in his name in the backward areas of Bihar.

Academic S.N. Malakar, who belongs to one of the Most Backward Classes (MBCs)

of Bihar and had participated in the agitation supporting

Karpoori Thakur’s reservation policy in the 1970s as a student

activist belonging to the All India Students Federation (AISF)

contends that the subaltern classes of Bihar – MBCs, dalits and upper OBCs had already gained confidence during the time of the Janata Party government.

Chet Ram Tomar of Bulandshahr was his close ally.

A socialist leader, Thakur was close to Jaya Prakash Narayan.

1975

During the emergency in India (1975–77), he and other prominent leaders of Janata Party led the "Total Revolution" movement aimed at non-violent transformation of the Indian society.

1977

In the 1977 Bihar Legislative Assembly election, the ruling Indian National Congress suffered a heavy defeat at the hands of Janata Party.

Janata Party was a recent amalgam of disparate groups including Indian National Congress (Organisation), Charan Singh's Bharatiya Lok Dal (BLD), Socialists and Hindu Nationalists of Jana Sangh.

The sole purpose of these groups joining together was to defeat Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, who had imposed a nationwide emergency and curtailed many freedoms.

There were also social cleavages with Socialists and BLD representing backward castes and Congress(O) and Jana Sangh the upper castes.

After the Janata Party came to power, Thakur became Chief Minister of Bihar for the second time by winning the legislative party election against Bihar Janata Party President Satyendra Narayan Sinha, formerly of Congress [O], by a vote of 144 to 84.

Infighting in the party broke over the question of Thakur's decision to implement the Mungeri Lal Commission report, that recommended the institution of reservations for Backward Castes in government jobs.

Upper caste members of the Janata Party tried to water down the reservation policy by unseating Thakur as Chief Minister.

To wean away Dalit MLAs, Ram Sundar Das, a Dalit himself, was nominated as the candidate.

Though both Das and Thakur were socialists, Das was considered more moderate and accommodating than the Chief Minister.

1979

Thakur resigned and Das became the Chief Minister of Bihar on 21 April 1979.

The reservation law was weakened by allowing upper castes to obtain a greater percentage of government jobs.

However, he could not last his full term because he lost the leadership battle in 1979 from Ram Sundar Das whom his adversaries placed against him and was replaced as chief minister.

1980

The internal tensions in the Janata Party caused it to split into multiple factions which led to Congress to return to power in 1980.