Obituary : M.P. Veerendra Kumar (15 August 1937 – 28 May 2020)

Qurban Ali

Veteran Socialist Leader and Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha) M.P. Veerendra Kumar passed away on 28th May 2020, at Calicut, Kerala after a cardiac arrest. He was 83. MP Veerendra Kumar was born on 15th August 1937 at Kalpetta, now in the Wayanad district, to socialist leader and planter M.K.  Padmaprabha Goudar and Marudevi Avva and was married to Smt. Usha Veerendra Kumar. He is survived by his wife Usha, daughters Asha, Nisha, and Jayalakshmi, and son M.V. Shreyams Kumar, a former MLA, and State President, LJD. His early education came in Kalpetta and Kozhikode before getting a Masters degree in Philosophy from Vivekananda College, Madras, and an MBA from Cincinnati University, Ohio, U.S.A.

He started his long political career by accepting the Socialist Party membership from Jayaprakash Narayan during his school days. Socialist Party was his first political forum. He was All India Treasurer, Samyukta Socialist Party from 1968-70, National Secretary, Socialist Party from 1974-1977, Convenor, Opposition United Front, Kerala in 1975 and Secretary and Vice-President of Janata Party Kerala in 1977 and 1983, respectively. From 1968 onwards, he was a member of the National Executive, S.S.P., Socialist Party, Janata Party and Janata Dal.

As a socialist leader, M.P. Veerendra Kumar was jailed during the Emergency and his assets were confiscated by the government. He was put in Kannur Central Jail. CPM leaders Pinarayi Vijayan, Kodiyeri Balakrishnan, E.K. Imbichi Bava and M.V. Raghavan were along with him in the jail. “By then Veerendrakumar was a known leader. He had received special consideration inside the jail. But he never behaved like a leader to us. Veerendrakumar attracted all types of people through his knowledge and oratorical skills,” said CPM leader Kodiyeri Balakrishnan.

In 1987, he was elected as MLA on Janata Party’s ticket and became the Minister of Forests in the CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front government headed by E.K. Nayanar. But he had to resign within 48 hours due to policy-related issues over deforestation. His first order reportedly was against cutting forests. In 1996, he was elected to the 11th Lok Sabha from Kozhikode.

He became Union Minister of State for Finance and later Union Minister of State for Labour (Independent charge) with additional charges as Minister of State, Urban Affairs & Employment (Independent charges) and Parliamentary Affairs in the United Front governments led by H.D. Deve Gowda and I.K. Gujral. He was elected to the Lok Sabha again in 2004. He was a member of the Rajya Sabha since April 2016.

Veerendra Kumar became a director and later Managing Director of the Mathrubhumi group of publications. He was Chairman and Managing Director, ‘Mathrubhumi’ since 1979, Chairman, Press Trust of India, 1988, Director, P.T.I., President, India News Paper Society, Member,  International Press Institute and Commonwealth Press Union. He was an avid collector of watches and pens, a taste inherited from his father.

He was a man of paradoxes. Hailing from a feudal Jain family that owned acres of coffee estates in Kerala’s Wayanad district, and yet he rose to be one of the key leaders of Kerala’s socialist movement. People remember him less for his politics and more as a cultural leader who contributed significantly to literature through his books and also won the Sahitya Akademi award and the Kerala Sahitya Akademi award.

Social And Cultural Activities

A prolific writer, he wrote books on subjects such as politics, philosophy and economics. He was a social activist at the forefront of all people struggles in Kerala during the last five decades.

‘Born comrade’ with feudal roots, Veerendra Kumar was secular to the core and he had one last wish — a united socialist party.

Thampan Thomas, former MP and his colleague in the Socialist movement, said “All he really wanted to be was for all the socialist parties to get united. That was the one dream of his he couldn’t fulfil,” Thomas said.

He changed a lot of parties over the years, serving stints in the Janata Dal (Secular) and the Janata Dal (United) as well. In 2018, a year after Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal (United) joined hands with the BJP in Bihar, a “hardcore secular” at heart and a man of principles, M.P. Veerendra Kumar resigned as Rajya Sabha MP after quitting the JD(U) since he had won on their ticket. He then returned to the parliament as an independent MP. M.P. Veerendra Kumar was undoubtedly one of the prominent socialist leaders Kerala has seen. But, he was much more than a mere political leader.

Though MP Veerendra Kumar was part of the CPI(M) led Left Democratic Front since its inception, he and his party switched sides and joined the Congress-led United Democratic Front after differences of opinion with the Left leadership in 2009. He came back to the LDF some time ago. He had been part of the Janata Dal, Janata Dal(Secular), Janata Dal (United), Socialist Janata Democratic (SJD) as well as the Loktantrik Janta Dal (LJD) which is now in the LDF fold.

‘Cultural icon, prolific author, eloquent orator’

An eloquent orator and prolific writer, he has authored many works highlighting on philosophy, economics and politics.  Socialist ideology, Globalisation and Secularism,  Vivekananda: Human Being and  Saint, Travelogues etc. M.P. Veerendra Kumar was a popular cultural icon, an orator of class, a thoroughly well-read politician and a prolific author who went on to write many books.

His book Ramante Dukham delved into how ‘Hindutva’ has desecrated the idea of Ram. He also wrote a book on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade where he spoke about how international treaties were undermining the lives and economic conditions of third-world countries, particularly India.

Paying tributes Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said, “As a political leader, writer, intellectual, orator and much more, he left his indelible mark on all fields, Imbued with socialist leanings, he relentlessly fought communal and divisive forces till his last breath.”

His death is a great loss to the Progressive and Secular forces in the country in a time of greatest need.

(Qurban Ali is a senior broadcast journalist.)

Janata Weekly does not necessarily adhere to all of the views conveyed in articles republished by it. Our goal is to share a variety of democratic socialist perspectives that we think our readers will find interesting or useful. —Eds.

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