About
the Book
Twenty years after her death, study on Indira Gandhi still exercises
an interest. A chronicle of the years between 1966 and 1984 during
which, except for two or three years, Indira Gandhi was India's
Prime Minister. The book is a historical study of the tumultuous
events in which Indira Gandhi played a dominant role. The author
has tried to piece together these momentous events into an integral
narrative so that it reads like a story.
Father Benny Aguiar delves into his memory to write about the period
when Indira Gandhi dominated the Indian politics. Indira became
the Prime Minister of India in 1966 and remained so, barring the
period 1977-79, till her assassination in 1984. She had a colossal
presence and the history of India of this period got closely interwoven
with her story.
It
is in this sense that the book is important. It is not a historical
record of events, which many other books have already done. Father
Aguiar recounts from his experiences of the period to produce
an emotional history that helps understand the situation as it
existed then. It is a close brush with reality and tries to make
an assessment about the various feelings that shaped Indira’s
decision-making.
He
does not justify the Emergency but tries to understand why Indira
Gandhi, who was a democrat, imposed a system that she was going
to denounce when she came to power again in 1980. She spoke about
the country needing a healing touch. Not in a thousand years,
she said, would the need arise for another Emergency.
Indira
Gandhi was an enigma for most of her colleagues. She was politically
smarter and could see through the events. This is why she upstaged
most of them during her struggle for political survival. In doing
so, she kept losing friends one after the other. Gradually her
son Sanjay Gandhi was the only one she could rely on. The mother
and son duo used to coordinate their activities for running the
affairs of the country. But fate snatched away Sanjay from her
and left her crest-fallen. She gathered the loose strings and
began the task of governance.
Indira
Gandhi took tough and controversial decisions during her premiership.
It is natural for people to dissect them post facto. A real understanding,
however, will emerge only if the situation of that time is simulated.
Father Aguiar tries to do that.
This
is probably for the fist time that a book tries to highlight the
role played by various Christian organisations during the numerous
crises facing the nation during this period—whether it was
the Emergency, riots, relief or rehabilitation. The book also
talks of the meeting between Vatican chief Pope John Paul II and
Indira Gandhi.
About
the Author
Besides studies in philosophy and theology, Benny Aguiar graduated
in Economics from St. Xavier’s College, Bombay (now Mumbai)
and in Education from St. Xavier’s Institute of Education,
Bombay.
After
a short stint of teaching English and History, he was appointed
Assistant Editor and later, in 1961, as Editor of the 154-year-old
Catholic weekly. The Examiner of Bombay. Form 1967 to 2000, he
was Indian correspondent for the international Catholic weekly.
The Tablet of London. In 1994, he served as the Editor of the
Indian Currents, Delhi.
In
1965, he covered the three months long, epoch-making last session
of the Catholic Church’s Second Vatican Council, and later,
three synods of Bishop in Rome for The Examiner, in 1991, he wrote
a chapter “The Impact of the Council of India and Sri Lanka”
for Modern Catholicism, edited by Adrian Hastings and published
by Oxford University Press.
He
also wrote for the The Month (England), The National Catholic
Register (USA), 30 Giorni (Rome) and The Times of India, Bombay.
He was the President of the Indian Catholic press Association
and the South Asia Catholic Press Association.