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Prof. Rajendra Singh
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Sarsanghchalak of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh | |
In office 1994–2000 | |
Preceded by | Madhukar Dattatraya Deoras |
Succeeded by | K. S. Sudarshan |
Personal details | |
Born | 29 January 1922 Bulandshahar, United Provinces, British India |
Died | 14 July 2003 (aged 81) Pune, Maharashtra, India |
Alma mater | Allahabad University |
He worked as a professor and head of the Department of Physics at Allahabad University but left to devote his life to the RSS in the mid-1960s.
Early life
Rajendra Singh was born to Jwala Devi and Balbir Pratap Singh on 29 January in either 1921[3] or 1922 in village banail district buladshahar city of state Uttar Pradesh, when his father was posted there as an engineer.[4] Originally his father Balbir Pratap Singh belonged to village Banail Pahasu of Bulandshahr district.[3] He was a Rajput by caste.[3]
Singh matriculated from Unnao.[5] After that he was enrolled at the Modern School (New Delhi) for a brief period before moving to St Joseph's College, Nainital. Progressing to Allahabad University, he obtained B.Sc.,M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees.[3]
Academic career
Singh was acknowledged as an exceptionally brilliant student by Sir C. V. Raman, the physicist and Nobel Prize-winner, when he was his examiner in M.Sc. He also offered Singh a fellowship for advanced research in nuclear physics.[5][6]
He joined Allahabad University after majoring in Physics to teach Spectroscopy.[7] He taught at the university for several years, where later he was appointed head of the Physics Department.[5]
Singh was also considered an expert in nuclear physics which was very rare those days in India.[8] He was a very popular teacher of the subject, using simple and clear concepts.[5]
Association with RSS
Singh was active in the Quit India Movement of 1942 and it was during this time that he came in contact with the RSS.[5][9]
The Sangh influenced his life thereafter. He resigned from his
university post in 1966 and offered full-time services to the RSS as a pracharak.[5][10]
Beginning in Uttar Pradesh, Singh progressed to be the Sar-karyavaha (General Secretary) in the 1980s.[5] In March 1994, Madhukar Dattatraya Deoras,
the third chief of RSS, decided to retire on health grounds, becoming
the first RSS chief ever to relinquish the post. He appointed Singh as
his successor.[11] Sheshadri was appointed second-in-charge, as Sarkaryawah.
Arguably Rajju Bhaiya’s term of six years was one of the most
crucial for both Sangh and India. Singh shared an excellent rapport with
political leaders, cutting across ideological lines, as well as with academics, social workers and intellectuals.[5]
1998 saw the pragmatic shift of Indian politics when the main opposition party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) emerged as the largest party in the ruling National Democratic Alliance
(NDA) coalition at the Centre. This was a crucial period for the RSS
and its political wing BJP. The BJP and the RSS shared many common
ideologies.[citation needed]
He gave up the post of Sarsanghchalak on account of his failing health in February 2000 and nominated K. S. Sudarshan as his successor.[5]
During emergency he went underground and toured whole India.
Singh was also responsible for organizing human rights convention
presided by Justice VM Tarkunde in Delhi in 1976. He was also responsible for setting up friends of India Society International.[12]
Ideology
One
of the most important beliefs of Singh was: "All people are basically
nice. One should deal with every person by believing in his goodness.
Anger, jealousy, etc. are the offshoots of his past experiences, which
affect his behavior. Primarily every person is nice and everyone is
reliable."[13]
Like other Sarsanghchalaks he was a firm believer in the concept of swadeshi and empowering rural economy.
Initiating the rural developmental activities, he had declared in 1995
that the utmost priority should be given in making the villages
hunger-free, disease-free and educative. Today, there are over 100
villages where the rural development work done by swayamsevaks has
inspired the people of surrounding villages and their experiments are
being emulated by those people.[14]
Last days
Singh wanted to establish a memorial named after Bismil in Delhi, the capital of India.[15] He died on 14 July 2003 at Kaushik Ashram in Pune, Maharashtra.[5]
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