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Vidyaben Shah | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1922-11-07)7 November 1922[1] |
| Died | 19 June 2020(2020-06-19) (aged 97) Delhi, India |
| Occupations | Economist, social activist |
| Spouse | Manubhai Shah[2] |
| Website | Official website |
Vidyaben Shah (7 November 1922 – 19 June 2020) was an Indiansocial worker and activist known for her work withchildren,women and theelderly in India. While she was already serving as Vice-President, she was appointed the first non-officio President of theNew Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC)[3] by Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi in 1975. She has held several leading positions in the field ofsocial welfare since the 1940s.[4] Vidyaben Shah died at the age of 97 on 19 June 2020 at her residence in Delhi, her son Mihir Shah confirmed the news of Vidyaben Shah death.[5]
Vidyaben was born in the town ofJetpur, Gujarat, to educationist Vrajlal Mehta and Champaben Modi. Vrajlal was a school teacher at the time, later becoming principal of ateacher training college, and subsequently Director of Education inSaurashtra Government. Supported by her parents and brothers, Vidyaben always excelled in higher studies. At a young age when she was a university student she participated in theQuit India Movement under the guidance ofMohandas K. Gandhi. Already as a high school student she was influenced by Gandhi, and had created a stir in her school by bringing the message ofnonviolence to her fellow students. After completing B.A. in Economics in 1942, as there was no postgraduate college in her parents' town, she left home to study for an M.A.. Since 1942, she has been one of India's leadingactivists in the field ofchild welfare andwomen's rights. She has been associated with a large number of organisations working for child welfare, education,Women and Family Welfare,Civic Administration, Fine Arts and Culture,Welfare of the Disabled,Senior Citizens and many other social andrelief work activities. She has also received numerous awards for her distinguished work, including thePadma Shri by theGovernment of India in1992.
In 1940 at a social function she met her would be husbandManubhai Shah[2] who went on to become aUnion Cabinet Minister in thegovernments ofJawaharlal Nehru,Lal Bahadur Shastri andIndira Gandhi. Manubhai was also an activeFreedom Fighter in theIndian Independence Movement in the 1940s. In a simple ceremony Manubhai married Vidyaben in 1945. Their marriage was delayed by five years due to their active involvement in the Indian Freedom Movement and also Manubhai was imprisoned by theBritish Colonial Authority being released from jail in 1945. The marriage ceremony was so simple that the bride and groom wore plain cottonkhadi clothes and for wedding gift Manubhai gave Vidyaben only one khadisaree which he had himself woven on ahandloom using cotton yarn which he had himself handspun on acharkha (spinning wheel) while in prison during the Freedom Movement. Manubhai died in 2000.[6] They have one daughter, three sons, three granddaughters and one grandson.
A pioneer in the field ofchild welfare, Behnji or Vidyaben, as she is affectionately known, laid the foundation of the Bal Bhavan[7] movement by establishing the first ever Bal Bhavan[8] inRajkot, which was to become a harbinger of the entire Bal Bhavan Movement in India.[9] In 1948, she was appointed the first HonoraryMagistrate forJuvenile Courts inRajkot, a post she held for 8 years. In 1956, when her husband transferred to New Delhi to join theCouncil of Ministers in the Cabinet ofPandit Nehru, she brought her activism toDelhi. Since 1956, she was actively associated for four decades in New Delhi with Bal Sahyog,[10] a unique institution established byIndira Gandhi for therehabilitation ofvagrant children. Vidyaben became President of Bal Sahyog in 1966 and remained its President for the next ten years. During this time with the help of her husband she started many innovative workshops for the children providing them with skills to make furniture and other handmade items. Having run a boat club at the Rajkot Bal Bhavan, she brought over a boat from Bal Bhavan in Rajkot all the way to the Bal Sahyog in Delhi and with it she started the first ever boat ride at Delhi's India Gate which now entertains thousands of people every week from all over Delhi and beyond.
Vidyaben was President of the Indian Council for Child Welfare (ICCW)[11] for twelve years from 1976 to 1979, and 1985 to 1994; ICCW is the single largest institution in India working for the welfare of children. Vidyaben represented India at the United NationsInternational Year of the Child[12][13][14] conference atTashkent in 1979. She also attended International Conferences on children held atTehran, Geneva andBirmingham, USA. She attended the 6thSAARC Summit[15] inColombo in 1991. She was the Chairperson of theChristian Children's FundAdvisory Board for five years.
Her involvement with women's issues dates back to her college days, where she set up the firstcraft centre for underprivileged women inSaurashtra. The Government of India appointed her as the chairman of the Central Social Welfare Board (CSWB)[16] in 1995 for three years, during which time she initiated many path-breaking programmes to revive this premier institution to its old glory. A brainchild ofPandit Jawaharlal Nehru andDurgabai Deshmukh, CSWB was set up by anAct ofIndian Parliament in August 1953. CSWB has been implementing various programmes for the welfare of women and children through its network of over 20,000NGOs spread all over the country. During her tenure, Vidyaben expanded the programmes of Family Counselling Centres (FCC), Working Women's Hostels (WWH),Vocational Training Programmes andCreches. She set targets of providing support for at least one FCC and one WWH perdistrict in the country. In 1995, as a member of the official Indian delegation, she attended the Fourth World Conference on Women held at Beijing, China. She also represented India at the 42nd Meeting of theUnited Nations Commission on the Status of Women held in New York in 1998.
She was President and active Trustee of Delhi Gujarati Samaj[17] for over 40 years since 1958, playing a formative role in developing the multifarious social, cultural and educational activities for theGujaratis ofDelhi. Under her Presidency, the Gujarati Samaj started aHigher Secondary School in Delhi, where over 1000 students pay very nominal fees.Jawaharlal Nehru laid the foundation of the school. One of the most popular initiatives of the Samaj under Vidyaben's leadership was the development of the Sardar Vallabhbhai Bhavan[18] (a hospitable guest house for economically weaker sections and students coming from outside Delhi). Vidyaben also pioneered the setting up of the Mahatma Gandhi Sanskrutik Kendra[19] in the 1970s for facilitating cultural exchange between the people of Delhi. From the experience of the Delhi Gujarati Samaj, with support from eminent Gujaratis across India, in 1968 Vidyaben set up the Akhil Bharat Gujarati Samaj of which she was the founder President. Drawing guidance from the Akhil Bharat movement, many cities in India now have Gujarati Samaj spreading the traditions and culture of Gujarat and encouraging Gujaratis to mix with other peoples and creating an ethos of unity in diversity. Vidyaben continued to guide and support them.
Vidyaben played a leading role in the establishment of one of Delhi's most renowned schools,Sardar Patel Vidyalaya.[20] For many years, she was President of the Gujarat Education Society which runs the school. For several years, she was also a member of the Managing Committees ofModern School Barakhamba Road[21] and Vasant Vihar,[22] and of theBharatiya Vidya Bhavan.[23] She has been singly instrumental in establishing Sardar Patel Vidyaniketan, a school in the rural village of Mandi near Delhi. The school is run by Gujarat Education Society and caters to the economically weaker sections of society and especially encourages education of girls. Against all odds, over many years Vidyaben continued her efforts with all the relevant authorities to finally get official recognition of the school.
Vidyaben played the most pioneering role in the establishment of theTriveni Kala Sangam,[24] a premier institution for imparting training in dance, music and painting. She did a significant proportion of the fund raising for the construction of this renowned institution and has been the President of Triveni Kala Sangam for over five decades, while the institution has been very ably run by its distinguished and creative Founder Director Sundari Krishnalal Shridharani.[25]
As Vice-President and President of theNew Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC),[3] Vidyaben was instrumental in starting a large number of projects for the amelioration of the economically weaker sections of the Delhi society, particularlyslum children and women. These projects include home for destitute children, home forabandoned children,hostels for working women, and therehabilitation centre for thementally challenged among others. She was responsible for initiating the concept ofNavyug Schools that has proved a landmark in the educational field forgifted children from the economically weaker sections of the society. She also worked to improve the civic amenities and essential services of a rapidly growingmetropolitan area of Delhi, to beautify it and make life comfortable for the citizens of Delhi. At the same time, she took up modernisation initiatives such as establishing a new office complex for the NDMC, housing blocks for its employees, and many commercial andshopping complexes.
Vidyaben used her fundraising skills in providing relief in many national calamities, such asBihar floods andAndhra Pradeshcyclone of the 1970s andGujarat floods of the early 1980s. She also ledpeace marches from area to area at the outbreak of arson and riots inDelhi following theassassination of Indira Gandhi. After theGodhra riots in Gujarat, disregarding her advancing years, at the request ofSonia Gandhi, she went fromdistrict to district, to spread the message of peace and communal harmony inGujarat.
Vidyaben continued to be atrustee of theHelen Keller Trust (Blind and Deaf) in India. In 1985, during the United Nations "International Youth Year: Participation, Development and Peace",[12][14][26] she provided remarkable leadership and the various organizations which she was heading or was connected with carried out outstanding reconstructive work under her able guidance. Between 1990–93, she was the President of the Delhi State Branch ofthe Bharat Scouts and Guides, an organization devoted to the cause of national reconstruction. In 2005, she was nominated for theEthics Committee[27] for Research onCardiac Disorders by the Indian Council for Medical Research.
Since the 1990s, she continued to be an active President of the Senior Citizens Service Forum[28] which is a member of the State Council forSenior Citizens as well as a member of the National Council for Older Persons[29] set up by the Indian Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.[30] Among other activities, the Forum runs a daycare center for senior citizens and conducts adult education classes for women. In 2007 Vidyaben was invited to the ParliamentaryStanding Committee on Social Justice and Empowerment to examine the "Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Bill 2007".[31] She was also Chairperson of the Bhagidari Scheme[32] of Delhi Government and a Sahayogi of an Electricity Board in Delhi. She was President Emeritus of the All India Kitchen Garden Association which encourages the growing of vegetables and flowers using organic methods and following of healthy lifestyle and eating habits across Delhi and other states.