The AI Revolution: Promise and Peril for India’s Future

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming societies, economies,...

Book on war in the Himalayas goes beyond India-China binary

Reed Chevrin offers a comprehensive narrative that...

ISLAM: God-realization A divine gift

Man is in need of countless things,...

Of biographies and autobiographies

opinionOf biographies and autobiographies

S. Gopal’s biography of his father Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan was published in 1989.

The art and craft of writing autobiographies and biographies arrived in India in the first decade of the twentieth century.
Dilip Hiro, in his Preface to Babar Nama, writes, “While numerous rulers in the world established dynasties, Zahir Uddin Babar has the distinction of being the only known founder of a leading dynasty who kept a journal.” Babar wrote in Turkish. His grandson, Akbar (1556-1605) had it translated into Persian.
The manuscript fortunately survived. Those of Kalidas did not. Kabir was, broadly speaking, illiterate, but most of his dohas and “poems” survive. For centuries the oral preceded the written in India.
Alas! Very few Indians have private libraries. I implored my IFS colleagues and friends to do so. All in vain. Exceptions no doubt exist. That is not good enough.
From my early teens I have been a voracious reader and buyer of books. Today I have a library of six thousand books. Autobiographies and biographies fill many shelves.
Jawaharlal Nehru, in one of his books, wrote, “For me the absence of books would be the greatest deprivation.” I could say the same about myself.
Many of my literary friends were eminent authors. E.M. Forster, Mulk Raj Anand, R.K. Narayan, Raja Rao, Ahmed Ali (Twilight in Delhi), Thakazi Sivesenkare Pillai, Santha Rama Rau, Han Suyin, Amrit Rai, Nirad C. Choudhary. They have all passed away. I am myself in my 94th year.
I got to know C. Rajagopalachari (Rajaji) well. I kept pestering him to write his autobiography, but he did not agree. It would have in several ways a gem—what a life. Besides, he wrote superb English. Politically, he was very near to Gandhiji and close colleagues of Sardar Patel, Nehru, Rajendra Prasad, Abul Kalam Azad, Sarojini Naidu.
It is a thousand pities that Sardar Patel did not write his autobiography.
Gandhiji’s autobiography, “The Story of My Experiments with Truth”, came out in 1927. The original was in Gujarati. His secretary and close confidant, Mahadev Desai translated it into English. I do not have the exact figures, but the book sold in lakhs and was translated into many languages. I bought my copy in August 1945.
In the last chapter, “farewell” he wrote, “The time has now come to bring these chapters to a close.
“My life from this point onward has been public that there is hardly anything about it that people do not know….In bidding farewell to the reader, for the time being at any rate, I ask him to join with me in prayer to the God of Truth that He grant me the boon of Ahimsa in mind, word and deed.”
In my judgement, between 1936 and 2023, three outstanding autobiographies, written in English are: “An Autobiography” by Jawaharlal Nehru, published in London in 1936. It is still selling.
In the summer of 1912, Nehru was called to the Bar. In the early winter of the year he left for India: “…But now I returned for good, and I am afraid, as I landed in Bombay, I was a bit of a prig with little to command me.”
The next is Nirad C. Chaudhary’s “The Autobiography of An Unknown Indian”, published in London in 1951. It created a sensation. Its dedication caused the author no end of trouble. It reads, “To the memory of the British Empire in India which conformed subjecthood on us but without citizenship; to which yet every one of us throughout the challenge. ‘Civics Britannicus Sum’, because all that was gone and living within us was made, shaped and quickened the same British Empire.”
The Indian edition was published by Jaico. The 32nd in 2013. Nirad C. Chaudhary died in Oxford in 1999 having been born in 1897.
The third is S. Gopal’s biography of his father, Dr S. Radhakrishnan. Gopal was an eminent historian, educated at Oxford. For over a decade he was Director of the Historical Division in the Ministry of External Affairs.
Gopal’s biography of his father was published in 1989, by University Press, Oxford. Paragraph one of chapter one is staggering.
“The future President of India was born on 20th September 1887. His parents, Sarvapalli Veeraswamy and Sitmma were a poor Brahmin couple. There is doubt if Veeraswamy was his father… Intellectual endowment and physical appearance both suggested that Radhakrishnan belonged to a different stock. Radhakrishnan himself accepted this version, and critical of his mother’s conduct, always, throughout her long life, kept her at a distance. But he was attached to the man who passed for his father.”
Dr S. Radhakrishnan passed on 17th April 1975, in Madras.
S. Gopal died in 2002.

- Advertisement -

Check out our other content

Check out other tags:

Most Popular Articles