Swami Keshwanand (12 March 1883 – 13 September 1972) was an Indian freedom fighter and social reformer.
Early life
Born in
Jat family of village Magloona in
Sikar district of present-day Rajasthan in 1883, Swamiji, whose actual name was Birama, was the son of Thakarsi, a penurious camel-driver, and his wife Saran. The family were
Hindu and belonged to the Dhaka gotra and the
Jat people clan. When Birama was five, his family left Magluna for the nearby town of Ratangarh.
Thakarsi, who used to escort prosperous Seths (Businessman) from Ratangarh to Delhi on his camel, died in 1890 when Birama was seven. This put paid to Birama's already slim chances of gaining an education; it is said that for a prolonged period, his mother had perforce to move from place to place in search of shelter and fodder for her animals. Mother and son finally settled at village Kelania in present-day Sri Ganganagar district in 1897.
However, this was not the end of their misfortunes: Rajasthan was then headed for one of its periodic famines. By one account: "There was no vegetation left on the ground. There was no drop of water. All the animals died for want of fodder. People survived on grasses and the bark of "Khejri" trees. Even that also became scarce. There was nothing like governance. The ruling Jagirdar were least bothered for the poor people....". It was in these circumstances that Birama's mother Saran died in 1899 at village Kelania.
Education
The
famine of 1899 forced the 16-year-old Birama to leave the
Thar Desert region and move to
Punjab region in search of livelihood. Circumstances had induced in him an ineffable spiritual quest. He approached Mahant Kushaldas of the
Udasin sect, to whom he expressed the desire to learn
Sanskrit, to be able to study the higher
Hindu scriptures from primary sources. Noting that Birama belonged to the Jat caste, who were customarily precluded from studying the higher scriptures or even the liturgical
Sanskrit language, Mahant Kushaldas advised him to become a
sannyasi, or renunciate, which would render him eligible to learn
Sanskrit.
Accordingly, Birama became a sannyasi in 1904, was inducted into the Udasin sect, and commenced his education at the Sadhu Ashram Fazilka, a Hindu seminary located in Punjab region. He learned the Hindi and Sanskrit languages and the Devanagari and Gurmukhi scripts at the Ashram. At the Kumbha Mela held at Allahabad in 1905, Mahatma Hiranandji Avadhut conferred on Birama the new name "Swami Keshwanand".
Career
Swami Keshwanand lived a life of many facets—as
freedom fighter, educator and
social reformer.
Freedom fighter
The Jalianwalla Bagh Massacre of 1919, which caused a profound impact on the collective psyche of the
Punjab region, left Swami Keshawanand profoundly moved. He started attending the meetings of the Indian National Congress, joined the Indian Independence Movement under the leadership of
Mahatma Gandhi, and participated in the non-co-operation movement, for which was imprisoned for two years (1921–1922) at
Ferozepur. In 1930, he was given charge of Congress activities in Ferozepur district. He was again arrested the same year, but was soon released pursuant to the
Gandhi-Irwin pact.
Educator
Swami Keshwanand, an orphan, illiterate, nomadic man who never received formal education, was the founder of more than 300 schools, 50 hostels and innumerable libraries, social service centres and museums. In 1911, within a few years of his initiation into the
Udasin Dasnami sect as a
sanyasi, swami Keshawanand started the "Vedant Pushp Vatika" library within the precincts of the Sadhu Ashram
Fazilka. The following year, he started a
Sanskrit school at the same place. In 1932, swami Keshwanand was made director of the Jat School, Sangaria, which was at the verge of closure for want of funds. He went from village to village to collect funds, and was successful in averting the closure of the school, which was renamed
Gramothan Vidyapith, Sangaria in 1948. Within the precincts of this school, Swami Keshwanand developed a museum with a valuable collection of rare documents, paintings and antiques, thus initiating the idea of conservation in a profoundly backward area. The students of the school, aided by the local community, undertook a large-scale, successful project to green the precincts of the school, which is located in one of the most arid regions of
India. Gramothan Vidyapith, Sangaria has become an inspiration for educators far and wide.
Propagation of Hindi
Swami Keshwanand felt that the knowledge of the
Hindi language is a must to keep the country united and to educate the public about nationality. Swami's own mother-tongue was of course Hindi, and he somehow felt that forcing people from other parts of India to learn that language would aid national unity. He started his programme of spreading Hindi by founding, in 1920, a Hindi forum, the 'Nagari Pracharini Sabha', at
Abohar in the
Ferozepur district of
Punjab region. This forum was later renamed "Sahitya Sadan, Abohar". In 1933, he started a press named "Deepak" at Abohar, which published material in Hindi language that was distributed either free or at a very nominal price. He organised the 30th All India Hindi Sahitya Sammelan at Sahitya Sadan, Abohar, in 1941. Swami Keshwanand was a longtime member of the Hindi Sahitya Sammelan,
Allahabad. He either himself wrote, or arranged for the translation into
Hindi, of around 100 books. At immense effort over the course of eleven years, he arranged for the publication of the
Hindi edition of the book "History of Sikhs" in 1954. In 1942, he was honoured with the "Sahitya Vachaspati" for his pains in propagating his own mother-tongue to other people.
Social reformer
Swami Keshwanand's deep understanding of the rural society of the desert region can be gleaned from his book "Maru Bhumi Seva Karya". In this book, he has explained the peculiarities of the Desert region, identified the problems and suggested solutions. It was Swami Keshwanand's lifelong endeavour to eradicate social evils like untouchability, illiteracy, child marriage, indebtedness, poverty, backwardness, alcohol abuse, moral dissipation, etc.
Swami Keshwanand, born in a Jat Hindu family of Dhaka clan, and a renunciate belonging to the Udasi sect which was propagated by Srichandji, son of , the founder of the Sikh faith, was a unique example of communal harmony. He organised celebrations in honour of Sikh, Bishnoi, Namdhari and Jain gurus. During the partition of India in 1947, he got wounded admitted to hospitals and arranged food and shelter for them.
Swami Keshwanand started a girls' school called ( Gramothan Vidyapeath) in Sangriya in August 1917. Because of his efforts, many others in Sangriya have prioritised education.
Swami Keshwanand was presented the "Abhinandan Granth" by the then chief minister of Rajasthan on 9 March 1958. He was a member of the Rajya Sabha for two consecutive terms, 1952–58 and 1958–64. He died on 13 September 1972 in Delhi. The department of Posts, Government of India, issued a commemorative postage stamp in his honour on 15 August 1999. In 2009, Swami Keshwanand Rajasthan Agricultural University and Swami Keshvanand Institute of Technology Management & Gramothan jaipur were named after him.