November 26, 2015,
Thursday
Verghese Kurien: The Milk
Man of India
Today is the birth
anniversary of the legendary master, late Verghese Kurien.
Please send some time
reading these - http://www.drkurien.com/ and http://www.amul.com/ - this would be a perfect
tribute to the great man, whom I had an opportunity to meet and interact after
a press conference. In his trademark
safari suit, he was simplicity thy name Verghese Kurien.
Kurian (November 26, 1921
- September 9, 2012) led the milk revolution of India - often referred to as
the Operation Flood – and he is credited as Father of Milk Revolution or
Milkman of India. He founded several
organisations including the robust Amul.
But, he is not considered
a Bharat Ratna. Why?
The work of Dr Kurien is
second to none – and whether he gets a Bharat Ratna award or not, he would
always be a Bharat Ratna in the hearts of Indians.
He transformed India from
a milk-deficient nation to the world's largest milk producer, surpassing the
United States of America in 1998, with about 17 percent of global output in
2010–11, which in 30 years doubled milk available to every person.[5] Dairy
farming became India's largest self-sustaining industry. He made the country
self-sufficient in edible oils too later on, taking the powerful and entrenched
oil supplying lobby, head-on.
Dr. Verghese Kurien was
born on November 26, 1921 to an affluent Syrian Christian family in Calicut
(now Kozhikode), Kerala. His father Puthenparakkal Kurien was a civil surgeon
in British Cochin and his mother was a highly educated woman as well an
exceptional piano player. He was named after his uncle Rao Sahib P.K Verghese.
Dr Kurien joined Loyola College in Madras and attained his degree in B.Sc in
Physics. He was also very active in sports and represented the college in
cricket, badminton, boxing and tennis. He went to the United States of America
on government scholarship where he pursued his degree in Master of Science in
Mechanical Engineering (Distinction). He returned to India after completion of
his studies and on May 13, 1949 he headed for Anand, a place in Kaira district
of Gujarat where he was supposed to spend five years as an officer of the Dairy
division in return for the scholarship paid by the government. On arriving at
Anand, he found that the farmers were being exploited by the distributors of
milk and the entire region was controlled by a shrewd but clever businessman
called as "Pestonjee Edulji" who marketed Polson butter.
Looking at the struggle of
these people to survive and mesmerized by the personality of their leader
Tribhuvandas Patel who was trying to unite the farmers and form a cooperative
movement against the exploitation, Dr. Kurien left his government job and
joined forces with Tribhuvandas Patel and the farmers to start the Milk
Cooperative movement in the region registered under the name of Kaira District
Cooperative Milk Producers Union Ltd (KDCMPUL), which was later renamed to now
popular "Amul". He worked towards bringing a White Revolution in
India and executed the much needed programme of "Operation Flood".
Dr. Verghese Kurien married Susan Molly Peter on June 15, 1953 and they had one
daughter Nirmala Kurien and a grandson, Siddharth. Dr. Kurein was the man
responsible for turning India from a milk deficient country to the largest
producer of milk in the world today. Under his inspiring leadership many
important institutions were established namely the GCMMF (Gujarat Cooperative
Milk Marketing Federation Ltd) and NDDB (National Dairy Development board which
played a significant role in shaping the Dairy Cooperative movement across the
country and led the replication of Anand model of cooperative dairy practiced
all over the country.
Dr. Kurien always regarded
himself as an employee of the farmers who would do anything to bring prosperity
in their favor.In his service of over fifty years he attained 15 honorary
degrees from different institutions of the world as he believed that learning
should never stop.
His enduring personality, spirit, undying charisma and
conviction of turning the impossible into possible won him many accolades such
as the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership (1963), Padma Shri
(1965), Padma Bhushan (1966), Krishi Ratna Award (1986), World Food prize
(1989), Padma Vibhushan (1999), Economic Times award for Corporate Excellence
(2001) and several other awards, but the best award that the people of the
country gave him was the title "Milkman of India". After a lifetime
of struggle and conviction towards serving the nation Dr. Verghese Kurien
breathe his last on 9 September 2012 due to brief illness at Anand. Dr.
Verghese Kurien will always be remembered as the person who redefined the
meaning of milk as a powerful tool for economic development.



No comments:
Post a Comment