Gopal Krishna Gokhale

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Gopal Krishna Gokhale

Sketch of Gopal Krishna Gokhale
Place of birth: Kothluk, Ratnagiri Dist., Maharastra, India
Place of death: Bombay, India
Movement: Indian Independence movement
Major organizations: Indian National Congress, Deccan Education Society

Gopal Krishna Gokhale (गोपाल कृष्‍ण गोखले) (May 9, 1866 - February 19, 1915) was one of the founding social and political leaders during the Indian Independence Movement against the British Empire in India. Gokhale was a senior leader of the Indian National Congress and the Servants of India Society. The latter was committed to only social reform, whereas the Congress Party in Gokhale's time was the main vehicle for Indian political representation.

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[edit] Early life

Gopal Krishna Gokhale was born in Kolhat, Maharashtra, India. His father, Krishna Rao, worked as a clerk and his mother, Valubai Gokhale, was a homemaker. Krishna Rao Gokhale had farm land, but was forced to work as a clerk due to poor soil and inadequate irrigational facilities available at that time. Krishna Rao Gokhale was working from Tamhanala, another small village very near to Kothluk Village in Ratnagiri district of Maharastra.

Gopal Krishna Gokhale completed his secondary education from Rajaram High School in Kolhapur. After completion of high school he moved to Bombay for further studies at the Elphinstone College, where he graduated in 1888. Gokhale was a hardworking and talented student, who, in his last college year, was awarded a scholarship of Rs. 20.

After graduation he moved to Pune, where he joined the New English School as an Assistant Master. During this period he compiled a book of arithmetic in collabration with his colleague, N.J. Bapat. He actively participated in the academic and educational circles of Pune, including the Deccan Education Society. He was the founding member of Fergusson College at Pune in 1885. He worked for more than twenty years in this college. Because of his broad knowledge and facility for teaching a wide variety of subjects, he was known as "Professor to Order".

[edit] Education and social reform

Gokhale was an early Indian champion for public education. Being one of the first generations of Indians to receive a college education, and a teacher at Fergusson College, Pune,[1] Gokhale was respected widely both in the nascent Indian intellectual community and by the people of India. He was seen by the people as one of the least elitist of the educated community of India. Coming from a background of poverty, Gokhale was seen as a man of the people, and was a hero to young Indians of the early 20th century. He worked among the common people to encourage education and public development. He actively spoke against ignorance, casteism and untouchability in Indian society. He was also reputed for working towards trust and friendship between the Hindu and Muslim communities of India.

[edit] Indian National Congress

Along with other contemporary leaders like Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Dadabhai Naoroji, Bipin Chandra Pal, Lala Lajpat Rai and Annie Besant, Gokhale fought for decades to obtain greater political representation and power over public affairs for common Indians. He was moderate in his views and attitudes, and sought to petition the British authorities by cultivating a process of dialogue and discussion which would yield greater British respect for Indian rights. Gokhale had visited Ireland[2] and had arranged for an Irish nationalist, Alfred Webb, to serve as President of the Indian National Congress in 1894. In 1906, Gokhale and Tilak were the respective leaders of the moderates and the "extremists" (the latter now known by the more politically correct term, 'aggressive nationalists') in the Congress. Tilak was an advocate of civil agitation and direct revolution to overthrow the British Empire, whereas Gokhale was a moderate reformist. As a result, the Congress Party split into two wings. The two sides would later patch up in 1916.

[edit] Political convictions

STORU OF GOKHLE

Gokhale did not explicitly support Indian independence, for such an idea was not understood or expressed among Indians until after World War I. Historically, Gokhale is viewed as a teacher and nurturer of a whole new generation of leaders, including Mahatma Gandhi. Gokhale even criticised Tilak for his views on Swaraj. One such infamous view of Gokhale was "Swaraj is for the madman in lunatic asylum to think about". He was considered a moderate.

[edit] Mentor to both Jinnah and Gandhi

Gokhale was famously a mentor to Mahatma Gandhi in his formative years. In 1912, Gokhale visited South Africa at Gandhi's invitation. As a young barrister, Gandhi returned from his struggles against the Empire in South Africa and received personal guidance from Gokhale, including a knowledge and understanding of India and the issues confronting common Indians. By 1920, Gandhi would emerge as the leader of the Indian Independence Movement. In his autobiography, Gandhi calls Gokhale his mentor and guide. Gokhale was also the role model and mentor of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the future founder of Pakistan, who in 1912, aspired to become the "Muslim Gokhale". Gokhale famously praised Jinnah as an "ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity."

[edit] Gokhale Institute

The Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE), commonly known as Gokhale Institute, is one of the oldest research and training institutes in Economics in India. It is located on BMCC Road in the Deccan Gymkhana area of Pune, Maharashtra – the city often termed as the Oxford of the East. The Institute was founded with an endowment offered to the Servants of India Society by Shri R R Kale. The Servants of India Society are the trustees of the Institute.

He passed away on February 19, 1915 due to excessive exertion, diabetes and cardiac asthma.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Fergusson College Department of Mathematics web page. Retrieved on 2006-08-11.
  2. ^ Cited by John Hume in his acceptance speech for the 2001 Gandhi Peace Prize. Reported in Seminar Magazine No.511 March 2002, accessed at [1] July 26, 2006

[edit] Literature

[edit] External Links