The Right Honourable Valangaiman Sankaranarayana Srinivasa Sastri CH PC |
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V. S. Srinivasa Sastri in 1940 | |
India's Agent to the Republic of South Africa | |
In office June 1927 – January 1929 |
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Monarch | George V of the United Kingdom |
Governor General | E. F. L. Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax |
Preceded by | None |
Succeeded by | Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu |
Member of the Council of State | |
In office 1920–1925 |
|
Monarch | George V of the United Kingdom |
Governor General | Rufus Isaacs, 1st Marquess of Reading |
Member of the Imperial Legislative Council of India | |
In office 1916–1919 |
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Monarch | George V of the United Kingdom |
Governor General | Frederic Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford |
Personal details | |
Born | September 22, 1869 Valangaiman, Tanjore district |
Died | April 17, 1946 Mylapore, Madras |
(aged 76)
Nationality | Indian |
Political party | Indian National Congress (1908 - 1922), Indian Liberal Party (1922 - 1946) |
Spouse(s) | Parvathi |
Alma mater | Native High School, Kumbakonam Government College, Kumbakonam |
Occupation | headmaster |
Profession | educationist, orator, writer, politician, diplomat |
Religion | Hindu |
Valangaiman Sankaranarayana Srinivasa Sastri (Tamil: வலங்கைமான் சங்கரநாராயண ஸ்ரீநிவாஸ சாஸ்திரி) CH PC (22 September 1869 – 17 April 1946) was an Indian politician, administrator, educator, orator and Indian independence activist. He was acclaimed for his oratory and command over the English language. Srinivasa Sastri was born to a poor temple priest in the village of Valangaiman near Kumbakonam, India. He completed his education at Kumbakonam and worked as a school teacher and later, headmaster in Triplicane, Madras. He entered politics in 1905 when he joined the Servants of India Society. Srinivasa Sastri served as a member of the Indian National Congress from 1908 to 1922, but later resigned in protest against the Non-Cooperation movement. Sastri was one of the founding members of the Indian Liberal Party. In his later days, Srinivasa Sastri was strongly opposed to the partition of India.
Srinivasa Sastri served as a member of the Madras Legislative Council from 1913 to 1916, Imperial Legislative Council of India from 1916 to 1919 and the Council of State from 1920 to 1925. Sastri also functioned as India's delegate to the League of Nations, as member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom and agent to the Republic of South Africa.
He gained worldwide fame for his prowess in the English language. Sastri was a close follower of Gopal Krishna Gokhale. He was also a close friend and associate of Mahatma Gandhi who addressed Sastri as his "elder brother" in writings. Sastri was made a "Companion of Honour" in 1930. In 1921, the Freedom of the City of London was conferred on Srinivasa Sastri followed by the Freedom of the City of Edinburgh in 1931.
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Srinivasa Sastri was born in the town of Valangaiman, Madras Presidency, India[1] on 22 September 1869.[2] His father, Vaidik Sankaranarayana Sastri, was a poor Hindu priest.[2] Srinivasa Sastri did his schooling at the Native High School, Kumbakonam and in 1887, graduated from Government Arts College, Kumbakonam with a first class degree in English and Sanskrit.[1][2] On graduation, he found employment as a teacher at Municipal College, Salem.[1][2]
Srinivasa Sastri married Parvathi in 1885.[3] His grand-daughter Kausalya is the wife of renowned Indian scientist and nephew of Sir C. V. Raman, S. Ramaseshan.[4]
In 1894, Srinivasa Sastri was appointed headmaster of Hindu High School, Triplicane and served for a period of eight years, till 1902.[2][5] During this period, he achieved fame for his proficiency in English and his good administrative skills.[2] In his late years, he also served as Vice-Chancellor of the Annamalai University.[1][2] He delivered the Kamala lectures in Calcutta University which are widely cherished and remembered.[1][2]
Srinivasa Sastri established the Madras Teachers Guild during his term as headmaster of Triplicane High School.[6] He was one of the pioneers of the Co-operative movement and started India's first co-operative society, the Triplicane Urban Co-operative Society (TUCS) in 1904.[6][7]
Srinivasa Sastri met Indian independence activist Gopal Krishna Gokhale for the first time in 1906.[1] He was drawn towards Gokhale's Servants of India Society and joined the organization becoming its President in 1915.[1][8] He joined the Indian National Congress in 1908 and became the Secretary of the Madras District Congress Committee in 1911.[1][9] As a member of the Congress, he was instrumental in bringing about a pact between the Congress and the Muslim League.[8]
Srinivasa Sastri was nominated to the Madras Legislative Council in 1913 and to the Imperial Legislative Council of India in 1916.[1][8] He opposed the Rowlatt Act which empowered the Government of India to imprison anyone without trial and delivered a well-appreciated speech in the Imperial Legislative Council denouncing the bill.[1] In 1919, he was appointed a member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom.[1]
In 1922, Sastri resigned his membership of the Indian National Congress after disagreeing with its leadership on the issue of non-cooperation and established the Indian Liberal Party along with Tej Bahadur Sapru.[8] He consequently served as a President of the Indian Liberal Federation. In 1924, he accompanied Annie Besant on a visit to England demanding Home Rule for India.[1] He also participated in the first and second round table conferences.[1]
Srinivasa Sastri was a part of the delegation of Indian moderates who visited England in 1919.[1] He was also a part of the Indian delegation to the Imperial Conference (1921) and the Second session of the League of Nations in 1921.[1][10] As a member of the Viceregal council, Srinivasa Sastri was also a part of the British delegation which participated in the Washington Council of Limitation of Disarmament.[11] During one of his speeches on "The Political Situation in India", he was accused of being a British agent and attacked by a mob and had to be hastily escorted away by mounted police.[12]
In 1922, the Government of India sent Sastri on delegations to Australia, New Zealand and Canada in order to investigate the conditions of Indians living in those countries.[13] Due to his efforts, the Government of Australia passed the Commonwealth Electoral Act enlarging the franchise to include "natives of British India".[13]
In 1919, Srinivasa Sastri visited the Republic of South Africa along with Sir Benjamin Robertson as a part of the delegation which signed the Cape Town Agreement with the Government of South Africa.[8] As a result of this agreement, South Africa gave up its Class Area Bill intended to segregate Indians in South Africa.[8] Initially, Jan Smuts, the Prime Minister of the Republic of South Africa, refused to treat Srinivasa Sastri on par with the European delegate.[14] However, on Srinivasa Sastri's departure from South Africa as India's Agent in 1928, Smuts recognized Sastri as the "most respected man in South Africa".[14]
Srinivasa Sastri was sent to the Federated Malay States in 1937, to report on the conditions of the Indian labourers in the country.[15] The delegation submitted a controversial report titled Conditions of Indian labour in Malaya which was published in Madras and Kuala Lumpur, the very same year.[15] Srinivasa Sastri, being the author of the report, was criticized by Indian nationalists for "his reluctance to comment at length on the political and social status of Indians in Malaya".[15]
On 27 May 1927, at the behest of Mahatma Gandhi, Lord Irwin, the Viceroy of India, appointed Srinivasa Sastri as India's first Agent to the Republic of South Africa. Srinivasa Sastri arrived in South Africa in June 1927 and served as Agent till January 1929.[16]
Soon after taking over, Srinivasa Sastri successfully pressurized the South African government to withdraw Section 5 of the Immigration and Indian Relief (Further Provision) Bill which empowered South African immigration officers and boards to cancel registration certificates.[16] Through his efforts, the Natal Commission for Indian Education was appointed on 17 November 1927.[16] With Sastri's support and encouragement, dissidents of the Transvaal British Indian Association (TBIA) founded the Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC) on December 18, 1927.[16] The TBIA later merged with the South African Indian Congress. Section 104 of the Liquor Bill prohibiting Indians from entering licensed premises was withdrawn.[16] The Thornton Committee was established in 1928 to investigate the sanitary conditions of Indians in and around Durban.[16]
During the early part of Sastri's tenure, a number of segregationary laws were passed targeting Indians and Indian immigrants in South Africa.[16] The period also witnessed the establishment of a number of trade unions.[16] Sastri campaigned against racial segregation of Indians and got the Class Area Bill segregating Indians withdrawn.[8]
Sastri returned to India in January 1929 and was succeeded by Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu.[16]
In 1930, Sastri was appointed a member of the Royal Commission on Labour in India.[17] During 1930–31, he participated in the Round Table Conferences in London to discuss India's future and was instrumental in bringing about the Gandhi-Irwin Pact.[18] In 1935, Sastri was appointed Vice-Chancellor of Annamalai University, in Tamil Nadu, and served from 1935 to 1940.[19] At the peak of the Second World War, he participated in a 15-member Indian delegation which appealed to the British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill to provide dominion status to India.[20] He strongly opposed Muslim League demands for the partition of India.[8]
In June 1940, the Government of Madras appointed a committee headed by Srinivasa Sastri to frame a set of general principles for coining words for scientific and technical terms in vernacular languages.[21][22] The constitution of the committee was strongly condemned by the Madras Presidency Tamil Sangam and its Secretary E. M. Subramania Pillai who felt that Srinivasa Sastri was biased in favour of Sanskrit and hence, Anti-Tamil.[22] The committee submitted its report after three months recommending the retention of the existing Sanskrit loanwords in Tamil and rejecting the need for them to be replaced.[23] The deliberations of the Sastri Committee provoked widespread agitations in Madras Presidency. The committee was eventually reshuffled by Provincial Education Minister T. S. Avinashilingam Chettiar soon after the demise of Srinivasa Sastri and balanced with the introduction of more members supporting the replacement of Sanskrit loan words.[24]
Srinivasa Sastri's health began to deteriorate in early 1946.[25] In January, Srinivasa Sastri was admitted to the General Hospital, Madras.[25] He eventually died on 17 April 1946 at the age of 76.[2]
Srinivasa Sastri was known for his mastery over the English language and his oratory.[2] As a student, he once corrected a few passages in J. C. Nesfield's "English Grammar".[2] Whenever he was on visit to the United Kingdom, Sastri was often consulted over spellings and pronunciations.[2] His mastery over the English language was recognized by King George V, Winston Churchill, Lady Lytton and Lord Balfour[2] who rated him amongst the five best English-language orators of the century.[5][26] The Master of Balliol, Arthur Lionel Smith swore that he had never realized the beauty of the English language until he heard Sastri.[26] while Lord Balfour remarked that listening to Srinivasa Sastri made him realize the heights to which the English language could rise.[2] Thomas Smart conferred upon Sastri the appellation "Silver Tongued Orator of the British Empire"[27] and he was so called all over the United Kingdom.[5] Srinivasa Sastri's inspirations were William Shakespeare, Sir Walter Scott, George Eliot, John Stuart Mill, Thomas Harvey, Victor Hugo and Valmiki - Indian sage and the author of the Hindu epic Ramayana.[2]
"Your criticism soothes me. Your silence makes me feel nervous."
During his tenure in the Servants of India Society, Sastri developed a close attachment with Mahatma Gandhi.[2] Gandhi often addressed Srinivasa Sastri as his "elder brother" in all their correspondences.[6] However, despite their friendship, during his tenure as President, Srinivasa Sastri opposed Gandhi's presence in the Servants of India Society.[28] When Gandhi sought Sastri's advice before launching his non-cooperation movement, he counselled him against it.[29] In his later years, Sastri sternly advised Mahatma Gandhi against accepting the Muslim League demand for partition.[8]
Srinivasa Sastri corrected mistakes in the manuscript of The Story of My Experiments with Truth, the English translation of Gandhi's autobiography and also successive issues of the magazine Harijan that was edited by Mahatma Gandhi.[2]
On Sastri's death, Gandhi paid a tribute to Sastri in a condolence message in the Harijan.
Death has removed not only from us but from the world one of India's best sons.[30]
Srinivasa Sastri was made a member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom in 1921.[1] On 1 January 1930, he was made a "Companion of Honour".[31] The then Viceroy offered to make Sastri Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India in 1928, but he declined the offer.[1]
In 1937, the then Governor of Madras offered to make Sastri the Acting Chief Minister of Madras Presidency but Sastri declined the offer.[2] He also declined an offer of membership in the council of the Secretary of State for India.[2] In 1921, the Freedom of the City of London was conferred on Srinivasa Sastri.[32] This was followed by the Freedom of the City of Edinburgh on 9 January 1931.[33]
Preceded by Gopal Krishna Gokhale |
President of the Servants of India Society 1915 - 1927 |
Succeeded by H. N. Kunzru |
Preceded by None |
Agent to the Republic of South Africa 1927 - 1929 |
Succeeded by Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu |