Jawaharlal Nehru
, Pronunciation: / /) (
November 14,
1889 –
May 27,
1964), also called
Pandit (
Scholar or
Teacher)
Nehru, was one of the most important leaders of the
Indian Independence Movement and, as the head of the
Indian National Congress, became the first
Prime Minister of India when India won its independence on August 15, 1947.
Jawaharlal Nehru was born in
Allahabad on November 14, 1889, to Swarupani, the wife of
Motilal Nehru, a wealthy Allahabad-based barrister prominent in the Indian National Congress. He was Motilal Nehru's only son; he had three younger sisters including
Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit. The Nehru family is of
Kashmiri lineage and of the Saraswat
Brahmin caste.
Educated in the finest schools in India and abroad, Nehru returned from education in England at
Harrow,
Trinity College, Cambridge and the
Inner Temple to practice law before following his father into politics.
By his parents' arrangement, Nehru married
Kamala Nehru, then seventeen in 1916. At the time of his wedding on 8 February 1916, Jawaharlal was twenty-six, a British-educated barrister. Kamala came from a well-known business family of Kashmiris in Delhi.
His father Motilal Nehru was already a prominent figure in the
Indian National Congress and had served as its
president. Thus when a young and glamorous Jawaharlal entered the Congress, much was expected of him.
It soon became clear that the younger Nehru did not share his father's moderate-liberal line. He began to grow closer to the rising leadership of
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, a former barrister who had won battles for equality and political rights for Indians in
South Africa, and had emerged a national hero with the successful struggles in
Champaran,
Bihar and
Kheda in
Gujarat. Nehru was instantly attracted to Gandhi's commitment to active, but peaceful,
civil disobedience. Gandhi himself saw promise in the young man.
The Nehru family transformed their lifestyle according to Gandhi's teachings. Jawaharlal and Motilal Nehru abandoned western clothes and tastes for expensive possessions and pastimes, and adopted
Hindustani as their common language of use. Young Jawaharlal now wore a
khadi kurta and a
Gandhi cap, all in white - the new uniform of the Indian nationalist. Nehru was first arrested by the British during the
Non-Cooperation Movement of 1920-1922, but released after a few months.
After Gandhi suspended civil resistance in 1922 as a result of the killing of policemen in
Chauri Chaura, thousands of Congressmen were disillusioned. When Gandhi opposed participation in the newly created legislative councils, many followed
Chittaranjan Das and
Motilal Nehru into the
Swaraj Party, which advocated entry but only to sabotage government from within, as a tool to extracting concessions from the British to ensure stability. But Nehru did not join his father and stayed with Gandhi and the Congress.
Jawaharlal was elected President of the
Allahabad Municipal Corporation in 1924, and served for two years as the city's chief executive. This would be valuable but the only administrative experience Nehru would have before taking on India's whole government in 1947. He used his tenure to expand public education, health care and sanitation. He resigned citing lack of cooperation from civil servants and obstruction from British authorities.
From 1926 to 1928, Jawaharlal served as the General Secretary of the
All India Congress Committee, an important step in his rise to Congress national leadership.
Political Attitudes
Jawaharlal's break with his father cemented his position as the leader of a new generation of Congressmen, with political beliefs that were more radical than those held by their fathers. He, like many others, had been exposed to
socialism in England and Europe; following freedom struggles in
Ireland and the revolution in
Russia, Nehru became one of the first major Indian political figures to embrace the idea of full political independence from the
British Empire, an idea first proposed by
Bhagat Singh and the revolutionaries. Even Gandhi and Motilal Nehru had not yet committed to this, but Nehru's vision was shared by many among the younger generation, including
Subhas Chandra Bose, and a growing number of Indians not in public life.
Upon his release from prison in 1924, Gandhi succeeded in re-uniting the Congress Party. He chose to increase the internal discipline of the party by expanding its activities that promoted social reform and the alleviation of India's poor.
In 1928-29, the Congress's annual session under the
presidency of Motilal Nehru considered the next step. Nehru and
Subhas Chandra Bose backed a call for full political independence or
swaraj, while Motilal Nehru and others wanted
dominion status within the British Empire. To resolve the point, Gandhi said that the British would be given two years to grant India dominion status. If they did not, the Congress would launch a national struggle for full, political independence. Nehru and Bose reduced the time of opportunity to one year. The Government in
Whitehall did not respond.
When the Congress convened its session in 1929, Gandhi backed the young Jawaharlal for the Congress presidency. Although confessing embarrassment at his hurried ascent, President Nehru declared India's independence on January 26, 1930 in
Lahore, raised free India's flag in a large public convention on the banks of the
Ravi and inaugurated the struggle. Nehru was arrested in 1930, and during the
Salt Satyagraha of 1931; he was interned for a number of years.
The movement was an astounding national success. Millions of Indians had participated, and the government was ultimately forced to acknowledge that there was a need for major political reform, which the British Parliament attempted in the form of the
Government of India Act 1935. The Act set up a
bicameral structure of authority, with provision for popular elections. The Congress Party decided to contest elections, but Nehru personally did not stand. He, however, campaigned vigorously nationwide for the party, further raising his profile with the Indian public. The Congress formed governments in 7 of the 11 provinces, and won the largest number of seats in the Central Assembly, which the Congress had denounced as powerless. But it was able to exercise control of provincial affairs, giving India its first taste of democratic self-government.
Nehru was elected again to the Congress Presidency in 1936 and 1937. In his famous speech to the session in
Lucknow in 1936, he pushed the passage of the
Avadi Resolution which committed the Congress to
socialism as the basis of the future agenda of a free India's government. In this matter he successfully overcame the opposition of major Congress leaders, including Gandhi and
Sardar Patel, who opposed it for different reasons. To gain support, Nehru transformed his position to commit that the resolution did not in fact bind Congress to socialism, and that the Congress Party's main goal was independence, not socialism. However, Nehru had grown politically closer to Congress socialists like
Jaya Prakash Narayan,
Narendra Dev and the liberal-socialist
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. Nehru's victory over the right wing of Congress in 1936 and the chaos of the Tripura session of
1939, following which his only serious rival on the left of Congress,
Subhash Chandra Bose, left the party to form the
Forward Bloc, ensured his pre-eminence among the nationalist leaders of his generation.
When
World War II broke out, Nehru and the Congress condemned the Government of India's decision to enter the war; they were angered that the decision had been taken by the Viceregal Council without consulting the nationalist leadership, but were divided as to what to do about it. Nehru and Patel made an offer of cooperation with the British, promising whole-hearted support if after the war, the British would deliver India's political freedom. This was opposed by Gandhi, but marked the first occasion when a majority of Congress leaders went against his advice. Several British politicians and British officials backed the offer, considering Indian support valuable, but the bid failed when a new government under a hostile
Winston Churchill ruled out any political reform.
The Congress Party ordered all of its elected members in the Central and provincial assemblies to resign, and another national struggle seemed inevitable. Nehru and
Maulana Azad were lukewarm to Gandhi's call for revolt, still considering it a good possibility that the British would ultimately concede independence for Indian support, and concerned about the timing of the initiative. Although many other Indian political parties opposed the call, Gandhi and Sardar Patel convinced Nehru and Azad, and the entire Indian National Congress towards what they believed would be a final confrontation with a weakened British Empire.
The
Quit India Movement was launched on August 13, 1942. The Congress made an open call for complete independence immediately. Only an independent India, they said, should decide whether India would participate in the war. The Congress asked all Indians to boycott British goods, the institutions and factories run by the British, public services and government programs. Major strikes, protests and demonstrations broke out all over India, and although other political parties did not participate, it proved to be the most forceful revolt in the history of British rule.This was in spite of the fact that Gandhi and the entire
Congress Working Committee were arrested practically immediately. The Committee was imprisoned in a fort-turned-prison in
Ahmednagar,
Maharashtra, separate from Gandhi, who was imprisoned in
Pune. The British had made arrangements to deport the leaders if necessary, but felt that then any chance of regaining order would be lost due to public outrage. Outside, hundreds of thousands of Indian freedom fighters were imprisoned, and thousands were killed in police firing.
Incarcerated for 32 months with his fellow Congress leaders, Nehru focused on writing the
Discovery of India, a tour through Indian history and culture.
Upon the end of the war, Nehru and the Congress leadership were released. In the landmark
1945 General Elections in Britain
Winston Churchill, a long-time opponent of Indian independence, was defeated by the
Labour Party of
Clement Attlee; the new government began preparing plans for India's independence.
In 1946, the Congress convened its session for a presidential election, knowing fully that this leader would become the head of India's government.
Nehru, unlike Patel, was nominated by no state unit, but the Working Committee made a tentative nomination. It is believed that Gandhi asked Patel to withdraw himself from the election, allowing Nehru's election, and that Patel promptly did so. This relatively undocumented episode is deeply controversial to contemporary historians.
Elections were held in 1946 to the
Constituent Assembly of India. The Congress swept the vote at the central level and most of British India's provinces.
The
All India Muslim League, led by
Muhammad Ali Jinnah had become the prime political opponent of the Congress. The League demanded a separate Muslim state, and enjoyed the support of many of India's Muslims.
Nehru and the Congress Party strongly opposed India's partition, or any excessive political concessions to the League to prevent this. The party accepted the May 16 Plan proposed by the Cabinet Mission led by
Sir Stafford Cripps as the only resort to preventing India's division as proposed in the June 16 plan. Although the May 16 plan envisioned communal grouping of India's provinces, the Congress accepted to keep the League from usurping control of the new interim government. When the League pulled out from the process, Congress was left in complete control of the new government. Nehru became the Vice President of the Viceroy's Executive Council, de facto head of government.
But Jinnah's
Direct Action Day to protest this left over 10,000 Hindus and Muslims dead in the following months. Fearing communal chaos, the Congress decided to allow the League to enter the council. However, Nehru's leadership was rejected by the new League ministers, and the council stalled over every policy decision.
Considering a political coalition unworkable and the communal situation dangerous enough to lead to full civil war between Hindus and Muslims, Nehru and
Sardar Patel backed the plan of Lord
Louis Mountbatten, India's last viceroy to partition the country into India and
Pakistan. Nehru and Patel managed to convince Gandhi, who was fearful about partition but even more fearful of civil war. The AICC adopted the resolution in June, 1947. Nehru served on the
Partition Council that finalized the separation of government institutions and provincial resources between the two new dominions.
On August 15th, 1947,
India became an independent nation. At the age of 58, Jawaharlal Nehru became the
Prime Minister of India. Lord
Louis Mountbatten became the Governor General of the Dominion, and the Constituent Assembly began work to draft the
Constitution of India and transition to a sovereign Republic.
Jawaharlal Nehru served as India's Prime Minister from August 15, 1947, to May 27, 1964 - the day he died.
1947 to 1952
Prime Minister Nehru headed a Cabinet that included leaders from across the political spectrum like
Syama Prasad Mookerjee and
B.R. Ambedkar.
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel was the
Deputy Prime Minister of India and the Union Home Minister. Although Patel was powerful in the Congress Party and enjoyed far more of the respect and support of party bureaucrats than Nehru did, he could not match Nehru's popularity with the masses, his youth and dynamism. But India's first administration was a duumvirate, and Nehru did not dominate. Whenever the two faced a dispute, they would ask Gandhi to arbitrate and decide the matter.
Nehru and Patel spent their first weeks in strenuous efforts to restore peace to
Punjab and
Bengal after partition, and rehabilitating over 10 million incoming refugees from Pakistan. When Pakistani raiders attacked the princely state of
Jammu and Kashmir, Nehru insisted upon the state's immediate accession before the aiding of military assistance. While the state complied, in December 1947 Nehru declared a unilateral cease-fire and asked the UN to arbitrate the Kashmir dispute. This move is today largely criticised for the failure to evict Pakistani militants from Kashmir, 3 successive wars and the continuation of this dispute till present day.
Gandhi's assassination on January 30, 1948 was a major blow to India. Nehru wept as did many millions of Indians, and he and Patel embraced together. Many called for Patel's resignation following the murder, blaming his Home Ministry for failing to protect Gandhi, but Nehru rejected Patel's resignation, and gave an unusual and personal vote of confidence, and a commitment to work together. Patel was also bound by a promise to Gandhi to stay in government, but was prepared to resign if Nehru did not desire for his continuance.
However, Nehru and Patel still disagreed on the issue of
Hyderabad, which had resisted annexation. Nehru and Mountbatten engaged in strenuous diplomacy in the months when Patel was recuperating from a heart attack, but with their failure Nehru was forced to concede the need for military action. Patel undertook
Operation Polo as Acting Prime Minister while Nehru was in Europe, and Hyderabad was merged into the Union. But Nehru resisted similar action on
Goa, occupied by the
Portuguese and resisted sending military aid to
Tibet, which was invaded by Communist
China in 1950.
More than 900,000 Hindu refugees had flooded out of
East Pakistan, fearing intimidation and violence from Muslims. There were many allegations of government-forced evictions, and since over 1 million people had died since partition, it was a political firestorm. Nehru invited Pakistan's Prime Minister
Liaquat Ali Khan to
Delhi to discuss the matter, against the advice of
Sardar Patel and many other Indian politicians. Although aware of military options, Nehru wanted to make his best effort for peace.
The Delhi Pact of 1949 guaranteed minority rights in both countries, creating minority commissions in the
Punjab and
Bengal provinces of both countries. It was strongly condemned as
appeasement in
West Bengal by Hindus, and several Cabinet ministers resigned in protest. Nehru became a hated figure overnight. Although Patel had firmly criticized it, he now publicly defended it. Visiting West Bengal, he talked to the common people and a variety of Hindu and Muslim citizen groups, asking the people to give peace a last try. As a result of Patel's efforts, the pact was approved and around 800,000 Hindus returned to East Pakistan.
Nehru was embarrassed when he tried to impose his preference on the Congress presidential election of 1950, lobbying against conservative
Purushottam Das Tandon and again trying to approve Governor General
Chakravarti Rajgopalachari as the first President of the forthcoming Indian Republic. Going against the will of the majority of Congressmen and rejecting Patel's aid, Nehru was strongly criticized within the party. Tandon won his election, and the party backed its favorite Dr.
Rajendra Prasad, who became the first
President of India.
At this point, Nehru considered resignation, believing his support in the party fragile. Patel rebuked him for ignoring the party membership but assured him there was no need to resign. With Patel's support, Nehru continued in office.
The
Constitution of India was signed on January 26, 1949, and came into effect the next year. In 1952, India held its first democratic national elections, and Nehru led the Congress Party to a sweeping majority in the
Parliament of India.
Sardar Patel had died at the end of 1950, and the real Nehru era was about to begin.
In 1946, Nehru had moved into the former residence of the British Commander in Chief of the Indian Army on York Road, in
Delhi. With independence, this became known as Teen Murti House, the official residence of the PM, and after Nehru's death in 1964, the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library.
Nehru lived alone initially, but was later joined by his daughter
Indira Gandhi, who despite having a young family of her own felt a need to take care of her father's personal needs. Over the years she became his virtual chief of staff - managing his schedule and appointments, instructing the staff of the residence and often accompanying him on foreign trips and in meetings with world leaders.
The iconic image of Nehru with a rose in the breast pocket of his
achkan arose from a daily act of remembrance; his wife gave him a rose on her death-bed and, after her passing, he began picking a fresh rose every morning in her memory.
Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's administration created the doctrines that formed the backbone of India's social and economic development, national defense and foreign policy for decades; they remain controversial to this day.
Economic policy
Nehru was fascinated by the
Soviet Union's
Piatiletka or
5-year plans. But he wrote after a visit there in the
1920s that 'the human costs are unpayable'. A believer in the 'mixed economy' of
Harold Laski and influenced by the
Fabian Society, Nehru wished the
economy of India to be partially capitalist, but with the state occupying a large role, especially in the
commanding heights of the economy.
In setting a path for the economic policy after Independence, he chose from a set of options considerably more limited than those available today, and followed to a large degree the conventional wisdom at the time among academic economists, both in India and the West. India's growth rate in
GDP stayed moderately above 4% during all the years that Nehru was Prime Minister. It is hard to say definitively how much growth there
might have been with different economic policies: predominantly capitalist Western Europe grew slightly faster than India during the Nehru years (especially during the decade after World War II); but so did the command economies of communist China and the Soviet Union. The strongly capitalist USA grew somewhat more slowly, as did most of the newly independent nations that followed WWII (with the exception of oil-producing nations).
Some recent (but isolated) studies influenced by
Chicago School economists—such as one by
Goldman Sachs—have claimed that India had the potential to grow faster than it did in the post-Nehru 1960-1980 timeframe. According to this thinking, that opportunity was wasted out of a misplaced faith in the power of economic planning. Economist
Jagdish Bhagwati, who spoke consistently for three decades in favour of market reform, has remarked that India's problem has been that it has too many brilliant economists; Bhagwati believes the stalwarts of Nehru's Planning Commissions began to believe in their own infallibility, to the detriment of the Indian nation. Other opponents at the time included the Bombay Club, a group of industrialists headed by
J.R.D. Tata who had an alternative development approach mapped out, and the former Governor-General and prominent anti-socialist
C. Rajagopalachari, who left the Congress for the
Swatantra Party over the issue.
In hindsight, the Nehruvian model failed in many of its objectives; however, many Indian economists—particularly among Nehru's contemporaries—believe Nehru's emphasis on central planning was the right policy for India of that time.
Some critics of Indian economic development believe that Indian economy prior to reform in 1991, with inefficient public sector entities on the one hand, and crony-capitalist private sector entities that used the so-called
license raj to carve out lucrative niches for themselves on the other, was a product of economic policy foundations laid during Nehru's tenure.
Nehru's economic policies are sometimes confused by critics with those of his daughter,
Indira Gandhi, which were more
statist and
dirigiste in orientation. Nehru's economics of state intervention and investment were conceived at a time when transfers of capital and technology important to India were not easily forthcoming from the developed world (which at the time also had plenty of state-sponsored capital controls.)
Foreign Policy
Nehru's foreign policy was strongly
idealist as opposed to the
realism favoured by his opponents.Central to this idealism was Nehru's doctrine of
Panchshila, the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence). The basis of the 1954 Sino-Indian treaty over Tibet, it was taken by the Chinese as a statement of Indian pacifism. As conceived by Nehru, Panchshila was based upon mutual respect among nations, peaceful coexistence, and non-interference in the internal affairs of others. He had offered it to the Afro-Asian Solidarity Movement and Non-Aligned Movement at the
Bandung Conference in 1955 as the guiding philosophy for an emerging Third World power bloc, an alternative to Moscow and Washington. He was strongly supportive of anti-colonialism, and the freedom movements in
Tanzania,
Algeria,
Indochina and the abolition of
apartheid in
South Africa. Nehru was also one of the founding statesmen of the
Non Aligned Movement, of Asian and African nations seeking to stay away from the pressures of the alliances created by the
USA and
USSR. Nehru also condemned the invasion of
Suez in 1956 by
Israel, the
United Kingdom and
France.
Nehru's leadership of the newly independent nations of the Third World was taken as assumed throughout the 1950s, and thus India's stature in foreign affairs was assured, until at least the Chinese war of 1962.
The Soviet Union was the only major power during Nehru's tenure to aid India in developing independent capabilities areas of heavy industry, engineering, and technology. This political fact, combined with Nehru's preference for state-led development, promoted suspicion about the sincerity of India's
non-aligned foreign policy positions. However, Nehru's
neutrality was strongly criticized when he failed to condemn the USSR's invasion of
Hungary in 1956-58.
On
November 27,
1946, Nehru appealed to the
United States and the
Soviet Union to end
nuclear testing and to start
nuclear disarmament, stating that such an action would "save humanity".
Chinese Miscalculation
The Panchshila was the basis of the 1954 Sino-Indian treaty over
Tibet; unfortunately, it was taken by the Chinese as a statement of Indian pacifism. The conference at Bandung at which the Panchshila was declared was also where Nehru introduced the newly independent Chinese leaders to the world. He assumed that as former colonies they shared a sense of solidarity, as expressed in the phrase
Hindi-Chini bhai bhai (Indians and Chinese are brothers). But much to China's chagrin, Nehru and India, as heir apparent to the
British Empire in Asia, assumed the mantle of leadership of the movement. Mao was infuriated. His sense of cultural superiority and unquestioned revolutionary credentials dictated that China was the rightful leader. This made the subsequent border issue more than territorial; it was an opportunity to assert China's pre-eminence as an Asian power and to humiliate India. Unfortunately, Nehru never understood this aspect of the equation. He was dedicated to the ideals of brotherhood and solidarity among Third World nations, while China was dedicated to a realist vision of itself as the hegemon of Asia.
Nehru did not believe that one fellow Socialist country would attack another; and in any event, he felt secure behind the impregnable wall of ice that is the
Himalayas. Both proved to be tragic miscalculations of China's determination and military capabilities. Nehru tried to engage China in a prolonged strategy of diplomatic foot-dragging, while on the ground Indian troops moved to outflank Chinese positions. Frustrated by India's duplicity, China took direct action in 1962, starting the
Sino-Indian War.
China was encouraged by its perception of India as a "weak" target. After all, Nehru had taken no action in 1951 when China invaded and occupied Tibet, eliminating the traditional buffer between the two; and, except to grant asylum to the
Dalai Lama, he, again, did nothing in 1959, when China ruthlessly put down the uprising in Tibet.
Forty years later, few know the real story of what happened, what went wrong. The India was vanquished by the Chinese
People's Liberation Army in a bitter and cold battle in the Northeast. India has repaired its relationship with the Chinese to some extent, but those wounds have not been forgotten. The military debacle against China in 1962 was thoroughly investigated in the Henderson-Brooks Report
http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/oct/08max1.htm which successive Indian governments have refused to release.
It was a revelation (if not shock) to most when in an interview on the BBC,
George Fernandes (former Indian Defence Minister), said that the Coco island was part of India until it was donated to
Burma (
Myanmar) by Nehru. The Coco island is located at 18 km from the Indian Nicobar island. At present, China has an intelligence gathering station on the Coco Island to monitor Indian naval activity as well as
ISRO &
DRDO missile and space launch activities.
His daughter
Indira Gandhi would become Prime Minister within two years of his death in 1966, and would serve for 15 years and 3 terms. His grandson
Rajiv Gandhi would hold that office from 1984 to 1989. Today, Rajiv's widow
Sonia Gandhi, is the Congress Party's president, though not Prime Minister. Her son
Rahul Gandhi entered Parliament in the
2004 General Elections.
*Nehru's letters to his daughter
Indira during successive periods of imprisonment in
1930-
1934 were later compiled into a book called
Glimpses of World History.
*His
1942-
1945 incarceration produced
The Discovery of India, a history of India with digressions.
*Subsequently, while in prison following the
Quit India Movement, he wrote
An Autobiography (ISBN 014303104X), which was a
New York Times best seller.
*The words of Nehru's famous
Tryst with Destiny speech on the eve of Indian Independence is as familiar, and indeed significant, to Indian ears as the
Gettysburg Address is to Americans.
* Nehru had a golden bronze statue of
Mahatma Gandhi and a hand of
Abraham Lincoln on his office desk.
* In
1937,
Modern Review of
Calcutta carried a letter, under the pen-name
Chanakya, that warned members of the Congress Party against Nehru, then party president, declaring that he had "tendencies towards autocracy" and needed to be firmly checked before he "turns into Caesar". It emerged many years later that the letter was written by Nehru himself.
* Nehru popularized the
Nehru jacket.
* Nehru's birthday,
14 November, is celebrated as
Children's Day in India, in memory of his love of children.
* "The spectacle of what is called religion, or at any rate organized religion, in India and elsewhere, has filled us with horror, and I have frequently condemned it and wished to make a clean sweep of it," from James A. Haught, ed.,
2000 Years of Disbelief.* "I want nothing to do with any religion concerned with keeping the masses satisfied to live in hunger, filth, and ignorance... To attain this I would put priests to work, also, and turn the temples into schools," from James A. Haught, ed.,
2000 Years of Disbelief*
Nehru-Gandhi family*
A Tryst With Destiny historic speech made by Jawaharlal Nehru on August 14th, 1947 Speech in the Constituent Assembly of India, on the eve of India's Independence
Nehru: A Biography by Shashi Tharoor (November 2003) Arcade Books ISBN 155970697X
Jawaharlal Nehru (Edited by S. Gopal and Uma Iyengar) (July 2003)
The Essential Writings of Jawaharlal Nehru Oxford University Press ISBN 019565324X
Autobiography:Toward freedom,
Oxford University PressJawaharlal Nehru: Life and work by
M. Chalapathi Rau, National Book Club (January 1, 1966)
Jawaharlal Nehru by M. Chalapathi Rau. [New Delhi] Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India [1973]
*
Motilal Nehru*
Indira Gandhi*
Feroze Gandhi*
Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit*
Kamala Nehru*
Nayantara Sehgal*
Rajiv Gandhi*
Sonia Gandhi*
Maneka Gandhi*
Sanjay Gandhi*
Arun Nehru*
Varun Gandhi*
Rahul Gandhi*
Priyanka Gandhi*
Jawaharlal Nehru