Following
was narrated by Vedula Satyavati - her impressions of Durgabai Deshmukh - while her granddaughter as acted as scribe)
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Durgaibai,� was married (at the age of 15) when she was a
child just like, every other girl in those times , in India. After hearing
Gandhiji's sermons, she joined the freedom struggle, took to wearing khadi
clothes and selling them in the streets in Kakinada and Rajamundry. She was
activiely involved in the "Videshi vastra dahan, Swadeshi vastra
apnao" andolan [burn foreign clothes and wear native material movement],
a boycott of Clothes manufactured in the foreign (English) mills and promotion
of the Khadi (locally woven material).
In her
childhood, she did not study much, later she completed her
Intermediate
[program], BA Honours from Andhra University (Vishakhapatnam). At Vizag, she
was dynamic even on the campus. She would even cook for the entire hostel, if
the cook was absent for days. She worked with Congress Workers like Bulusu
Sambha Murthy, Tanguturi Prakasam, Pandit Nehru, etc., and went to Gandhiji
frequently for advice. She achieved great academic excellance too.
At Madras,
she started the Chinna Andhra Mahila Sabha, in Mylapore for the betterment of
womenkind. She was intrumental in starting Hindi, English, music classes for
women. She sought and got, donations from the rich for her cause and made
Andhra Mahila sabha a very big institution.
After
India got its independance, she was one of the most important people in the
Indian Congress Party. While working here, she met Chintamani Deshmukh, her
true soul mate, and ICS officer, who later became the Finance Minister in the
first Cabinet under Prime Minister Nehru. Deshmukh was a widower. They got
married in Delhi about 1954. Later they came to Mumbai, to the house where
Deshmukh's younger brother and mother lived.
At that
time V.N.Murti was in Mumbai too. Durgabai was V.N.Murti's
batchmate
from Vishkhapatnam college days.While working at RBI, as a
Statistician,
he hosted a reception for the newly wed couple in Mumbai. He invited
Maharashtrian friends of Deshmukh and the Telugu friends of Durgabai for dinner
and hosted the reception to Mumbai in grandeur.
After that
they came to Hyderabad, and bought land next to Osmania Univ and built a house
and called it Rachana. They were also instrumental in convincing V.N. Murti to
buy a plot nearby.In the same neighbourhood, they got the Literacy House built,
eminent leaders like Indira Gandhi, Sarojini Devi and M .Venkat Rangaiya� came to give lectures at the Literacy
House.In Hyderabad , she established and started the Andhramahila sabha,
elimenatry school and then went on to build larger institutions like the
hospital, and the colleges , which even today run succesfully. It was started
with the vision of providing illetrate people of AP an opportunity to learn how
to read and write.
The colony
was named after her as Durgabai Deshmukh Colony. Durgabai left her husband to
join the Congress, later she got him married
to another
brahmin girl who was more suited to be the home maker that he needed, than
Durgabai herself. Soon after the wedding, the girl became a widow. Durgabai
then brought Timmaiamma (who is still alive) to Andhramahila sabha and involved
her activily for the upliftment of women in Andhra Pradesh.
After she
passed away, Shri V.N Murti was appointed the Chairman, and he generated funds
and grants for continuing her good work. Forwarding the cause of the women,
Shri VN murti started a puppetry cell to use puppetry as a medium to
communicate with the help of Ratnamala Nori . The purpose was to spread the
message of literacy to villagers and the uneducated population in a familiar
medium (puppetry has traditionally been used in India to tell stories). Today
the Cell is a self sustaining unit and carries on the good work that was the
vision of Durgabai Deshmukh.
She was
called 'Veeravanitha', another name for a woman warrior on India and a very apt
one for her life and its work.
(This
information is provided the family of Radhika Gajjala who were close friends of
Durgabai Deshmukh. Some of the names mentioned in this account were
nationalists and some of them are Radhika�s family members. [Personal
correspondence of Radhika Gajjala, dated 8 August 2002)
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