The Local Events Calendar is reserved for 501(c)(3) nonprofit and charitable organizations. Using the event submission form does not guarantee that your event will be published. Telemedia Broadcasting reserves the right to review, edit, and/or delete any submission. Please do not submit the same event more than once. Events that donate proceeds from for-profit business fundraisers will not be accepted.
- This event has passed.
Great Lives Lecture: Indira Gandhi
February 22, 2022 @ 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
One of first female Prime Ministers in the world and the first and only in India, Indira Gandhi was born in 1917 to a prominent political family at the height of India’s nationalist movement for freedom from British colonial rule. She spent a lonely childhood as her father, Jawaharlal Nehru, noted nationalist leader and later, independent India’s first Prime Minister, was mostly away from home and often incarcerated by the British colonial administration and her mother, Kamala Nehru, was in poor health. Gandhi was educated in private schools in India and Switzerland and eventually, went to college in Oxford. She was unable to complete college on account of the second World War and her own ill health, returning to India in 1941. She married Feroze Gandhi, a politician and journalist, on her return to India.
Indira Gandhi’s political career started at thirteen in the youth wing of the Indian National Congress, picketing against the British during India’s largely nonviolent freedom movement. After a hiatus during which she traveled to Europe on account of her mother’s need for treatment and for her own higher education, she resumed her political work on her return to India. Her involvement with politics got deeper as her marriage began to fail and she became her father’s confidant, advisor, and de facto hostess at his prime ministerial residence. Her political profile rose as she became the President of the Indian National Congress in 1959. However, her reputation remained one of a “dumb doll”, revealing little of the shrewd, decisive, aggressive and somewhat dictatorial leader she would eventually become.
Her rise to the post of the Prime Minister of India in 1966 reflects the challenges women faced in ascending to leadership positions in politics and elsewhere. Once in power, Gandhi transformed Indian politics and the Indian state itself. India’s decisive victory against Pakistan in 1971 and its “peaceful nuclear explosion” in 1973 reset India’s reputation as a dominant power in the region. India became self-sufficient in food production under her watch. Her economic policies transformed the industrial landscape, turning the Indian economy more inward-looking. Her eventual declaration of political “emergency” signaled the only period of formal suspension of democratic norms in independent India. She faced electoral defeat, imprisonment and rose from those ashes to become Prime Minister again in 1980. Finally, her disastrous response to a separatist movement in India’s northern state of Punjab cost her her life when her personal bodyguards assassinated her in 1984.
Event subject to being a virtual-only lecture, depending on COVID-19 levels. Check for updates: Indira Gandhi – Great Lives (umw.edu)