Birender Singh (politician, born 1921)

Rao Birender Singh (20 February 1921 – 30 September 2009) was an Indian politician. He served first as a minister in the state government of Punjab. He served as Chief Minister of Haryana for a few months (March to November) in 1967, and also served as a minister in Punjab state, Haryana state and the Union cabinet. He also served as the first speaker of Haryana state assembly in 1966-67.

Rao Birender Singh
2nd Chief Minister of Haryana
In office
24 March 1967 – 2 November 1967
Preceded byBhagwat Dayal Sharma
Succeeded byPresident's rule
Personal details
Born(1921-02-20)20 February 1921
Rewari, Punjab, British India
Died30 September 2009(2009-09-30) (aged 88)
Gurgaon, Haryana, India
Political partyVishal Haryana Party
Spouse(s)Chandra Prabha
ChildrenRao Inderjit Singh, Rao Yadavendra Singh and Rao Ajit Singh
ParentsRao Balbir Singh

Early Life

Rao was born in 1921 and hails from affluent Ahir Family of Rewari, Punjab Province (British India), [now Haryana] in British India.[1][2] He was adopted by Ahir personality, Rao Balbir Singh.[3] His Family is Direct descendent of Ruler and Freedom Fighter, Rao Tula Ram.[4]

Career

East Punjab

The years that Birendra Singh spent at St. Stephan's college were the early years of India's independence. The college was situated in New Delhi, the very hub of political activity, and Birendra Singh was drawn to politics by the environment. The first elections in free India were held in 1952 and Birendra Singh contested as an independent candidate from his native Ahirwal region, of which the city of Rewari is the urban center. He lost that election because there were many twists and turns of the politics in the Ahirwal region.

Birendra Singh then joined the Congress Party. Rather than contest elections to the State Legislative Assembly, he managed to get himself nominated to the State Legislative Council, which is the upper house of the state legislature. He managed this feat by ingratiating himself with Nehru on the basis of his clipped accent and very 'progressive' views on any subject, all of which resonated with Nehru. His royal background could also prove useful to Nehru while dealing with more recalcitrant royals from the princely states. Thus, Birendra Singh became a member of the State Legislature of the Indian state of undivided Punjab, known informally as East Punjab, without winning an election. He would serve as a nominated member for two successive terms (a total of 12 years) until 1966. During these years, he was made a minister in the Pratap Singh Kairon government and held charge, at various times, of several important ministries like PWD, Irrigation, Power, Revenue and Consolidation, etc.

Creation of Haryana

When India became independent in 1947, the old province of Punjab was partitioned and East Punjab was retained by India. Several Princely states located on the plains of East Punjab were merged to create the state of PEPSU. Several other princely states in the hills of East Punjab were similarly merged to create the Chief Commissioners' Province of Himachal. The portion which had been directly ruled by the British (rather than by the Maharajas of various princely states) became a third, separate state and received the name Punjab. The Ahirwal region and Rewari lay within this state of Punjab (India), and Birendra Singh was a minister in this state. In the period 1956-66, the three political entities described above were merged and de-merged so that finally, in 1966, the political map of the region as it stands today emerged.

The final step in this process of re-organization was the separation of the Hindi-speaking areas of Punjab into the new state of Haryana, and the creation of the Union Territory of Chandigarh to serve as the common capital of both states. This was accomplished after some acrimony and political maneuvering. Rao Birendra Singh played a prominent role in this process of division. He did so because Ahirwal/Rewari was a Hindi-speaking area in the near vicinity of Delhi and he felt that the Hindi-speaking people of undivided Punjab were not getting their just due in the political dispensation. Therefore, beginning 1962, he spearheaded the campaign for division and achieved success when the state of Haryana was born in November 1966.

Defection from Congress

After the formation of Haryana in November 1966, Bhagwat Dayal Sharma became Haryana's first Chief Minister, and Birendra Singh was elected the first speaker of the Haryana assembly which was a spin-off from the Punjab Assembly. The first-ever poll to Haryana Vidhan Sabha was held in March 1967. Birender Singh was elected a member of the Haryana Legislative Assembly from the Pataudi assembly constituency as Congress Party's candidate. However, he established the Vishal Haryana Party immediately by defecting from Congress with many MLAs. He was appointed Chief Minister of Haryana on 24 March 1967, replacing Bhagwat Dayal Sharma[5] with his newly formed VHP assuming power.

But the assembly was dissolved, and Haryana placed under President's rule, in November 1967. Congress won the Vidhan Sabha election in 1968 and Bansi Lal became Chief Minister. Birender Singh's VHP came creditable second to Congress in the election.

He was elected to the 5th Lok Sabha in 1971 from the Mahendragarh on the Vishal Haryana Party ticket.

Later career

In September 1978 he merged this party with the Congress. In 1980, he was re-elected to the 7th Lok Sabha and he played a prominent role in the formation of the Congress Government in the centre. He served in Ninth Cabinet of India as Cabinet Minister of Agriculture (India), Food, Rural development, Irrigation, and Civil supply. In 1984, he was re-elected to the 8th Lok Sabha from Mahendragarh(Lok Sabha constituency) and became a part of the 10th ministry of India under prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. He later resigned from both the Congress party and the Lok Sabha in 1989 on the issue of Bofors scandal. He joined Janata Dal and was elected to 9th Loksabha in 1989, and became Cabinet minister in the Chander Shekhar's Govt. He left active politics after 1996. Rao Birender Singh died on 30 September 2009 in the age of 89.

Army career

Rao Birender Singh also enrolled in the Territorial Army during the Second World War.

  • In 1947, he resigned from the Army as a Captain. He came to Rampura and took all the movable and immovable property of Rao Balbir Singh in his possession.
  • In the batch of 1949-50, he was selected for Indian Police Service but he did not join that service.
  • Again in 1950 to 1951, he joined the Territorial Army as a Commissioned Officer.

Contribution to Rewari

By his efforts, Rewari was made a separate district in 1989. The ruling government was of Chaudhary Om Prakash Chautala who was the Chief Minister

Education and welfare of Ahirwal areas

Apart from his political service to the Nation Rao Birender Singh also served the backward areas of Ahirwal by establishing many educational institutions like Ahir College Rewari, RBS School-Rewari, Rao Tularam School- Rewari, Rao Tularam Technical College- Delhi. He is the founder of RBS College of Education- Rampura, Rewari.

Death

He died of cardiac arrest in Gurgaon on 30 September 2009.[6]

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See also

References

  1. http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/jspui/bitstream/10603/114827/16/16_chapter%209.pdf Ahirwal Region dominated by Ahirs and Rao family.
  2. http://14.139.116.20:8080/jspui/bitstream/10603/114827/11/11_chapter%204.pdf The Ahir personality of Haryana.
  3. Service, Tribune News. "Dynastic politics reigns in Ahirwal". Tribuneindia News Service. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  4. Oct 14, Rao Jaswant Singh | TNN | Updated:; 2019; Ist, 09:32. "3 familes, 3 generations, 70 years: The battle for Rewari continues | Gurgaon News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 26 July 2020.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. Khanna, S.K. (1999). Contemporary Indian Politics. Discovery Publishing House. pp. 112–3. ISBN 978-81-7141-445-1.
  6. "Birender Singh, second CM of Haryana, passes away". Indian Express. 1 October 2009. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  • Dr. Ravindra Singh Yadav & Vijaypal, 1857 ki kranti k purodha: Rao Raja Tularam, 2013, Punit Publication Jaipur, ISBN 978-81-88559-54-1
  • Krantidoot Rao Raja Tularam , 1999, Engg. Anil Yadav , Sarita Book House , Delhi .
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