The first woman to hold a cabinet rank in India, Rajkumari Amrit Kaur was also the only Indian Christian in the cabinet then. The Rajkumari had a long history in the Independence struggle of India. Born on February 2, 1889, in Lucknow, she was the only daughter of Raja Harnam Singh, the last ruling prince of Kapurthala in Punjab, and enjoyed the goodwill and confidence of many leaders of the Indian National Congress. Many other political leaders also visited the Raja, and Amrit Kaur became interested in the freedom struggle and learnt about the activities of the freedom fighters and about Mahatma Gandhi.
She saw Mahatma Gandhi for the first time in Bombay, and was immensely influenced by his words. It was the Jallainwala Bagh massacre of 1919 that inspired Kaur to fight for an independent India. And despite being against the wishes of her parents, the Rajkumari joined the Indian National Congress and eventually shifted into Mahatma Gandhi's ashram in 1934. She became a disciple of the Mahatma and was assigned the role of his English language secretary. |