Rajagopal P. V.

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Rajagopal P. V.
Rajagopal October 2007
Born
Rajagopalan Puthan Veetil

1948
Thillenkery, Madras Province, Dominion of India
(present-day Kerala, India)
NationalityIndian
EducationDiploma in Engineering
Occupation(s)Activist, president of Ekta Parishad
PartnerJill Carr-Harris

Rajagopal P. V. is an Indian Gandhian activist, a former Vice Chairman of the New Delhi Gandhi Peace Foundation,[1] and the president and founding member of Ekta Parishad.[2][3] In 1972, Rajagopal started working alongside Gandhian activists J.P. Narayan and Subba Rao to disarm 578 bandits in the Chambal region of India.[4] Thereafter, he stayed away from dealing with direct violence and focused on the people of Adivasis, bonded labourers, and other landless communities affected by poverty and exploitation.[citation needed]

From 1989 to 2018, Rajagopal trained thousands of rural young people to serve in villages as trainer-leaders to build up community leadership and popular action.[citation needed] This culminated in many efforts of state and national activism.[citation needed] An example of the latter occurred in 2007 when 25,000 landless poor, mainly Adivasis, marched a 350-kilometre pilgrimage from Gwalior to Delhi to demand the land reforms promised upon independence.[citation needed] The Union government agreed to the demands made, leading to the implementation of the Forest Rights Act.[citation needed]

A second effort of national activism occurred in 2012 when Rajagopal led a march of 100,000 people to the capital to demand popular control over land and resources for livelihood. The effort resulted in the signing of a ten point agreement with the Union government.[4]

In 2018, Rajagopal embarked on a more ambitious agenda of mobilizing one million people to nonviolently address their livelihood rights.[4] For Mohandas Gandhi's 150th birthday in 2019, Rajagopal planned to take his message worldwide as a way to spread peace and nonviolence.[citation needed]

Rajagopal's main contributions to Indian society are the method of a nonviolent approach for the addressing of grievances shared by millions of Indians and the enhancement of dialogue with the government.[citation needed]

Biography

Rajagopal was born in 1948, the fourth of five children, in Thillenkery, a village in the modern-day state of Kerala in southern India. His full name is Rajagopal Puthan Veetil, but he now chooses to use only his first name in public in order to avoid any caste-related stereotyping that might be associated with his full name.[citation needed] Rajagopal's father was an activist fighting for India's independence and therefore was frequently separated from his family.[citation needed] Rajagopal attended the grade school at Seva Mandir, being taught in Malayalam language.[citation needed] The school followed Gandhi's philosophical principles with regard to life and work in a community.[citation needed] He later studied classical Indian dance and music, prior to completing his education at Sevagram, Gandhi's Ashram in Maharashtra, with a degree in agricultural engineering. This is also where Rajagopal learned to speak English.

In the early 1970s, he worked in the violence-ridden area of Chambal in Madhya Pradesh to help rehabilitate dacoits.[5]

Since 2001, Rajagopal is married to Jill Carr-Harris, a Canadian fellow social activist.[6]

1981-1990

1991-2000

2001-2010

2011-present

Janadesh 2007

Rajagopal speaking to the crowd in Janadesh 2007

After consolidating a membership of 200,000 people (the majority are women) across six states, Rajagopal began using the Gandhian technique of foot-march or padayatra to galvanize greater support among the poor. With a track record of ten state level foot-marches, he led a national march to Delhi in October 2007. In the march, Janadesh 2007 25,000 people marched 340 kilometers from Gwalior to Delhi and compelled the Government to take action in land reforms and forest rights.[7]

Jan Satyagraha 2012

Rajgopal addressing in Jan Satyagraha 2012

The Jan Satyagraha 2012 Yatra, which started from Gwalior Oct 2, had intended to reach Delhi on Oct 28 if no agreement was reached with the government. Nearly 35,000 people were part of the protest march.[8]

Though the Land Reform Commission has issued its report, the government has not yet accepted it.

Jan Andolan 2018

In October 2018, Rajagopal led a march from Gwalior to Morena with around 25,000 people asking for land rights and tribal rights. Initially the march was planned from Haryana to New Delhi.[9] The march took place in the context of the 2018 Madhya Pradesh Legislative election and some months ahead of 2019 national elections. Political leaders such as Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan addressed the marchers in Gwalior before their departure, promising to create a committee to address land rights issues.[10] According to Ekta Parishad, the marchers were not satisfied with the proposals and decided to go ahead with the march.[11] In Morena, leaders from Indian National Congress, the main opposition party addressed the marchers and promised if elected to satisfy their demands.[12][13] Ekta Parishad indicated that they were satisfied with these commitments and decided to stop marching and not to continue to New Delhi, as initially planned.[11]

Jai Jagat 2020

In 2015, Rajagopal launched, with Ekta Parishad, the extraordinary challenge of Jai Jagat, building upon existing groups, mainly in India and Europe. The core vision of Jai Jagat is to create a space where groups and movements can come together to make change nonviolently and address issues related to justice and peace. The urgency of having such convergence is to change global public opinion to enhance the emergence of an alternative development process that is pro-people, pro-poor and pro-nature. The 2019-2020 Global Peace March (Delhi-Geneva) reached individuals, groups and organizations outside those historical Ekta circles and created a dynamic in many countries. The March had to overcome many hurdles and was suspended halfway in Armenia in March 2020, because of COVID-19. A few marches to Geneva at the end of September 2020 marked the last significant mobilization, at least outside India, under the umbrella of Jai Jagat. Since then, initiatives have been taken, such as the organization of marches or a cartoon exhibition, by local and regional groups.

Land reform through nonviolent action

In the context of the continuing growth of Naxalism in central rural India, Rajagopal's organization of Ekta Parishad with its mobilization of tribal peoples, women and youth as well as its advocacy of land reform, is one of the most successful nonviolent alternatives.

New land reforms, 2014 and conflicts

The Modi government has proposed two major changes in the land acquisition act:

  1. It seeks to dilute provisions such as the mandatory consent of 70 percent of those affected in case of public-private partnership (PPP) projects.
  2. It removes the provision of mandatory requirement for a time-bound Social Impact Assessment for land acquisitions.

Rajagopal accuses Modi of being pro-corporate and claims that it will further aggravate the difference between the rich and poor in the country.[14]

Documentation

Articles:

Audio-Visual

Awards

In 2014, he received the Indira Gandhi Award for National Integration, an award granted annually by the Indian National Congress party. [15][16][17]

Year Award Presenter
2008 Friend of the Poor award Orissa Culture & Youth organization
K. Janardhanan Pillai Endowment award Gandhi Bhawan, Trivadrum, Kerala
2010 Swaraj Millenium Award Swadeshi, Kerala
2011 Shri. Kumarapilla Velayudhan Master Award for achievements in the social field Purnodaya Trust in Trissur, Kerala
2012 Krishi Gaurav Award Patanjali Pratishthan, Uttarakhand
Gareeb Bandhu Award Orissa Culture & Youth organization
Human Rights Award Human Rights Chapter of Geneva, Switzerland
2013 Professor N.A. Karim Award for outstanding Public Service – 2012 Vakkom Moulavi Foundation Trust, Trivandrum, Kerala
2014 Anuvrat Ahimsa Award for International Peace for the year 2013 Anuvrat Global (ANUVIBHA), New Delhi
2015 Spirit of Assisi National Award Assisi Shanti Kendra, Angamally, Kerala
Indira Gandhi Award for National Integration Indian National Congress
2016 Honored Jeewan Rakshak Award for his life in service of humanity Jeewan Rakshak Trust, Rajasthan
2017 Krishi Yoddha Award Indian Students Parliament
2023 Niwano Peace Prize Niwano Peace Foundation

References

  1. ^ "Gandhi Peace Foundation". Retrieved 18 January 2008.
  2. ^ Bablu, J. S. (20 November 2007). "Waging a battle for the landless". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 1 December 2007. Retrieved 18 January 2008.
  3. ^ "Ekta Parishad: Discourse on Land and the Landless". ARCADE. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Jagat, Jai. "Rajagopal PV, India – Jai Jagat International". Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  5. ^ Subramaniam Vincent (December 2001). "Interview". India Together. Civil Society Information Exchange Pvt. Ltd. Retrieved 18 January 2008.
  6. ^ "Rose | Le webzine du Féminin Sacré". rosewebzine.com (in French). Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  7. ^ Bouver, Emeline (2013). Ekta Parishad, the landless people's movement in India , In A Planet for Life 2013. New Delhi : Teri Press. pp. 250–254.
  8. ^ Awais, Muhammad (3 January 2023). "Rajagopal P V – Walk of Hope 2015-16 Flag off and Jan satyagraha 2012". Ghazi Empire. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  9. ^ "Ahead of Jana Andolan movement, a documentary on padayatra for land reforms - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  10. ^ Dutta, Anup (5 October 2018). "27,000-strong march heads for Delhi from Gwalior". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  11. ^ a b "CPR Land Rights on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  12. ^ "BJP disempowering the tribals & farmers, says Rahul Gandhi at Morena rally". Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  13. ^ "BJP works for the interest of a few rich people, alleges Rahul Gandhi". The Hindu. PTI. 6 October 2018. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  14. ^ "Land Acquisition Act: Activists say Modi govt's proposals are pro-corporate". Firstpost. 16 July 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  15. ^ Vinod Kumar (15 October 2015). ""Indira Gandhi Award for National Integration" to Shri. Rajagopal P.V. "Founder of Ekta Parishad"". Ektaparishad.com. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  16. ^ "Indira Gandhi Award for National Integration for p v rajagopal പി.വി. രാജഗോപാലിന് ഇന്ദിരാഗാന്ധി ദേശീയോദ്ഗ്രഥന പുരസ്‌കാരം". Mathrubhumi.com. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  17. ^ "padayathra gandhi,p.v rajagopal പദയാത്രാഗാന്ധി". Mathrubhumi.com. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
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