Charismatic architect of modern India who championed secular democracy, nonalignment, and ambitious nation-building through planning and education.
對話開場白
人生歷程
Born to Motilal Nehru, a prominent lawyer, and Swarup Rani Nehru in an affluent Kashmiri Pandit household. His privileged upbringing in British India later contrasted sharply with the mass poverty he confronted in politics.
He entered Harrow School, where British public-school culture and imperial politics shaped his early worldview. The experience exposed him to Western liberal ideas while also sharpening his sense of India’s colonial subordination.
He enrolled at Trinity College, Cambridge, immersing himself in history, economics, and political debate. Cambridge broadened his international outlook and introduced him to currents of nationalism and Fabian-style reform.
After legal training at the Inner Temple, he was called to the Bar and prepared for a professional career. The law gave him tools for public argument, but he soon felt drawn more to politics than courtroom success.
Back in India, he began working within the Indian National Congress while observing rising nationalist agitation. He struggled initially to connect with popular politics, but his commitment deepened as repression intensified.
He married Kamala Kaul in a traditional ceremony, and the couple later had a daughter, Indira Priyadarshini. Family responsibilities and Kamala’s later ill health ran alongside his escalating political engagements.
The Amritsar massacre and the Rowlatt Act crackdown convinced him that constitutional gradualism had failed. He moved closer to mass politics, increasingly aligning with Mohandas K. Gandhi’s methods and moral authority.
He threw himself into the Non-Cooperation Movement, promoting swadeshi and boycott of colonial institutions across northern India. The campaign connected him to grassroots organizers and marked his transition into a national leader.
British authorities jailed him for defying colonial restrictions during the non-cooperation agitation. Prison life became a recurring feature of his career, giving him time for study, reflection, and political correspondence.
As Congress president at Lahore, he helped elevate the demand for complete independence, rejecting dominion status. The session set the stage for January 26 to be observed as Independence Day by nationalists before 1947.
Following Gandhi’s Salt March, he organized civil disobedience and spoke widely against colonial rule and economic exploitation. Arrests and police repression reinforced his belief that mass action was essential to break imperial power.
He served as Congress president again, emphasizing socialist-leaning economic ideas and anti-fascist internationalism. His leadership highlighted industrial development and a secular democratic vision while Europe drifted toward war.
After Congress launched Quit India, he and other leaders were arrested and detained for years. In prison he wrote extensively, shaping ideas later reflected in his major works on history, culture, and Indian nationalism.
He took charge of the Interim Government, navigating tense negotiations with the British and the Muslim League led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah. The period forced urgent decisions on administration, defense, and communal violence containment.
On August 15, he became Prime Minister of an independent India amid Partition’s massive displacement and bloodshed. His government worked to integrate princely states, build democratic institutions, and restore order at a historic rupture.
With the Constitution taking effect, India became a republic with Dr. Rajendra Prasad as President and a parliamentary system. He backed constitutionalism, civil liberties, and a secular state framework as the foundation of unity.
At Bandung, he collaborated with leaders like Sukarno, Gamal Abdel Nasser, and Zhou Enlai on Afro-Asian solidarity. The effort strengthened India’s nonaligned posture, seeking space between U.S. and Soviet blocs in the Cold War.
After prolonged diplomacy failed, India used military action to end Portuguese rule in Goa, Daman, and Diu. The operation sparked international criticism but was defended domestically as completing decolonization on the subcontinent.
Border disputes escalated into war with China, exposing weaknesses in intelligence and defense planning. The setback damaged his political standing and forced difficult reassessments of security policy and regional diplomacy.
He died after serving as Prime Minister for nearly seventeen years, leaving a vast institutional legacy in education, industry, and parliamentary governance. His passing prompted national mourning and succession by Lal Bahadur Shastri.
