Sushma Swaraj’s father, Hardev Sharma was a prominent Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh member with her parents hailing from Dharampura area of Lahore, Pakistan. She was educated at Sanatan Dharma College in Ambala Cantonment and earned a bachelor's degree with majors in Sanskrit and Political Science.
She also studied law at Punjab University, Chandigarh and was known for her oratory in several languages, prominent among them being, Hindi, Kannada, and Sanskrit besides English as a business language. It is said that a state-level competition held by the Language Department of Haryana saw her winning the best Hindi Speaker award for three consecutive years. The art of oration won her special attributes both in India and internationally- including her power packed speeches at the United Nations Headquarters in New York.
I personally was witness to a few of those speeches that she delivered, with absolute clarity and without mincing words. Among her diplomatic virtues, she trusted her instincts and abilities in dealing with world leaders at the equal footing and with distinction.
A senior UN Representative once asked me about her persona while praising for her diplomatic astuteness and a personal touch in everything that she did. She indeed immediately touched a chord within a few minutes with anyone she engaged with.
The fact that many among those who reached out to personally pay their last respects to the departed Indian leader of international standing included several ambassadors, heads of foreign missions and high commissioners from a large number of nations stationed in India gives a testimony to her popularity and personal relationship that she had struck with these members of the diplomatic corps during her various assignments more particularly during her India’s foreign minister.
Starting her practice as an advocate in the Supreme Court of India in 1973, Swaraj began her political career with Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad in the 1970s. After the Emergency, she joined the Bharatiya Janata Party and later she became a national leader of the BJP.
Her sense of belonging to her party, courage of conviction and honesty of purpose stand duly reflected in her last tweet to Indian prime minister a few hours before her heavenly departure where she said, “ I was waiting to see this day come true during my lifetime”, referring to abrogation of article 370 and 35 (A).
She is survived by her husband, Swaraj Kaushal, a senior advocate of Supreme Court of India and a criminal lawyer who also served as Governor of Mizoram from 1990 to 1993 besides having been a member of parliament from 1998 to 2004 and her daughter, Bansuri, who is a graduate from Oxford University and a Barrister at Law from Inner Temple.
Sushma Swaraj, who during her recently concluded tenure as India’s external affairs minister, duly earned the epithet of being a motherly figure to more than 30 million Indians and Indian diaspora- firm and tall- in providing every possible support needed in hour of their need and crisis, suddenly leaves for heavenly abode, leaving many to remember her as a kind, caring and affable individual for a long time to time. In her, India loses a tall public figure, an outstanding parliamentarian and an iconic orator who could steal the show by the dint of her wisdom and presence of mind.
A people’s person, she also perhaps characterises, in her untimely death, the famous saying - those who God loves more deeply leave the world sooner.
She will long be fondly remembered not for who she was as a human being but more so for her deeds, which brought smiles and comfort to millions of Indians in distress through her extraordinary outreach mechanisms. She above all possessed a soft kennel interior, bestowed by the Almighty in abundance - a single most important virtue - which made her an extraordinary Indian political leader with international standing.
(Author currently is Managing Director of SOENT, an European policy consulting group besides having founded the first non - Anglo-Saxon think tank in Germany as its CEO. He also sits on a number of boards of the UN, corporate houses, think tanks, media and not-for-profit organisations both in India and internationally. He has 12 books to his credit. He is also a British Chevening Scholar at the London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom.)
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