My Years with Rajiv: Triumph and Tragedy

Availability: In stock
ISBN: 9789389648492
GTIN: 9789389648492
AuthorHabibullah, Wajahat
Pub Date26/10/2020
BindingHardback
Pages356
Country of OriginIndia
Ship to
*
*
Shipping Method
Name
Estimated Delivery
Price
No shipping options
£23.99
decrease increase
Share

Wise, witty and intensely moving, the book brings to vivid life not just the personality of Rajiv Gandhi as a man and a leader but a whole phase of modern India's political history. The author narrates with total honesty and the most becoming modesty the story of promise soaring into achievement only to be cut down by destiny's inscrutable hand. Habibullah is to Rajiv what Abul Fazl was to Akbar. -Gopalkrishna Gandhi If you want to know who Rajiv Gandhi was as a person, a friend and a leader, and what his contributions as prime minister were, Wajahat Habibullah's thoughtful book, written with the sure hand of one who knew him from childhood and also served him professionally, is an unputdownable must read. -Pavan K. Varma On 21 May 1991, Wajahat Habibullah, then the commissioner of Kashmir (constituting the valley and two districts of Ladakh), had returned home after inspecting a mysterious fire at Dalgate, Srinagar. Much to his dismay, there had been another fire, one that left him devastated: an RDX explosion in the south Indian town of Sriperumbudur had taken the life of India's sixth prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi. My Years with Rajiv is an endearing account of a friendship that turned into an administrative partnership, one that gave Habibullah an acute insight into Rajiv Gandhi's political life. But equally, in this lucid memoir, recounting his years in the Indian Administrative Services, particularly at the Prime Minister's Office, he walks us through the last three decades of the twentieth century in many ways, the most formative years of Indian history. Habibullah also seeks to demystify the workings of the Indian government and bureaucracy: the modernisation of the Nehruvian nation, the turbulence of the Khalistan years in Punjab, the introduction of grassroots policies aimed at poverty alleviation in rural India, the beginning of telecommunications services, the Shah Bano case, the opening of the locks at Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi, Indian interventions in Sri Lanka, and much else. In this, the author, a natural raconteur, is more than successful, telling the tale in his inimitably candid and self-effacing manner.

Filters
Sort
display