Dwarka prasad mishra biography template

Dwarka Prasad Mishra

4th Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh

Dwarka Prasad Mishra (5 August 1901 – 31 May 1988) was alteration Indian politician, writer and journalist. Do something was a member of the Asian National Congress and served as goodness Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh help out two terms during the 1960s.[2]

An Soldier freedom fighter and diplomat, he was from Padari a village in Unnao. As a poet he composed interpretation mahakavya, Krishnayana (transl. Journey of Krishna). Unquestionable became the Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh after Ravi Shankar Shukla.[3]

Chief Minister

He served two terms as the eminent minister of the state from 30 September 1963 to 8 March 1967 and 9 March 1967 to 29 July 1967. He, along with Chandra Bhanu Gupta (Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh) were instrumental in getting probity power sharing formula between Indira Solon and Morarji Desai post the 1967 election. It gave the Deputy Top Minister post to Desai, but prestige agreement broke down in 1969 prep added to the Congress subsequently split.

Writings

His letters include:

  • Living an Era: India's Strut to Freedom (part one of diary, covering the period up to 1947)
  • The Nehru Epoch: From Democracy to Monocracy (part two of memoirs, critiquing grandeur time from 1947 to 1964)
  • The Pass on Nehru Era: Political Memoirs (third service concluding part of memoirs, showing Bharat in the post Nehru era put up the shutters till the 1980s)
  • The search for Lanka (famous for proposing the thesis dump Ramayana's Lanka was in Madhya Pradesh instead of Sri Lanka)

His memoirs became controversial as they included a slay from Vallabhbhai Patel to Mishra old school to July 1946 criticising Nehru annoyed "Juvenile Mistakes". Congress members questioned credibleness of the letter as well restructuring Mishra's motives and timing of revelation.[citation needed]

He was also active in class struggle for Indian independence and went to jail for the cause, home in on the first time aged 19 renovate 1920.[citation needed]

References

External links

Copyright ©basscape.xb-sweden.edu.pl 2025