'Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel' The Iron Man Who Made India Whole: Why Congress Fears Patel’s Legacy Even Today?
by https://www.facebook.com/tfipost, TFI Desk · TFIPOST.comAs India celebrates the 150th birth anniversary of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the Iron Man who welded 562 princely states into a single nation, one question haunts history: why did Congress try so hard to erase his legacy? While Patel built India’s foundation brick by brick, the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty built a political monument upon selective remembrance one that glorified its own and diminished those who stood taller. From denying Patel the Bharat Ratna to downplaying his role in textbooks, the Congress establishment systematically buried the legacy of the man who turned chaos into cohesion and ensured that India stood united after Independence.
Architect of Unity: Patel’s Unmatched Feat of Nation-Building
On August 15, 1947, while the rest of India rejoiced in freedom, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel sat in a command room, monitoring naval movements to secure Lakshadweep. The image perfectly captured his essence a man who worked silently, selflessly, and relentlessly to protect India’s territorial integrity. When the British left, 562 princely states were free to choose their destiny join India, join Pakistan, or remain independent. The threat of Balkanisation loomed large.
Patel rose to the occasion with an unmatched blend of diplomacy and firmness. Junagadh joined India through a referendum, Hyderabad through Operation Polo, and hundreds of others through tactful persuasion. Within a few months, he had achieved what historians still call one of the greatest feats in modern statecraft creating India’s unity out of near-anarchy. If India today exists as one cohesive nation, it is because Patel envisioned and executed that unity.
Congress’s Calculated Erasure: The Nehruvian Monopoly on History
Yet, the Congress party systematically buried Patel’s legacy to glorify Nehru’s. Despite being India’s first Home Minister and Deputy Prime Minister, Patel was denied the Bharat Ratna during his lifetime. Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, and even lesser-known Congress figures received the nation’s highest civilian honour long before Patel was posthumously recognised in 1991 ironically by PV Narasimha Rao, the only non-Gandhi Congress Prime Minister in decades.
This was not accidental. The Nehruvian narrative demanded monopoly over India’s freedom and nation-building story. Patel’s realism clashed with Nehru’s utopian idealism. His nationalism didn’t fit the Congress’s secular-socialist image. Hence, he was airbrushed from history books, omitted from political discourse, and ignored in state-sponsored commemorations. Even the Congress headquarters bears Indira Gandhi’s name not Patel’s. Major national institutions, airports, and welfare schemes were named after the Nehru-Gandhi family, not the man who built the very idea of India.
Ignored Warnings: Patel’s Vision on Kashmir and China
History would have taken a different course if Patel’s warnings were heeded. When Nehru insisted on personally handling Kashmir, Patel cautioned him against internationalising the issue. His foresight was remarkable he knew special treatment would lead to long-term instability. Decades later, Article 370 and its consequences vindicated Patel’s concerns. BJP leaders have long argued that had Patel handled all 562 states instead of 561, Kashmir’s fate might have been different.
His prescience extended to China as well. In November 1950, just months before his death, Patel wrote to Nehru warning that China’s entry into Tibet would reshape Asia’s security map. Nehru, however, dismissed his counsel, pursuing the ill-fated “Hindi-Chini Bhai Bhai” narrative. Twelve years later, India faced humiliation in the 1962 war proving Patel’s geopolitical instincts far superior to Nehru’s romanticism.
Despite his sacrifices, Patel was treated with disdain within his own party. When he presented his plan for Hyderabad’s integration, Nehru reportedly shouted at him in a Cabinet meeting, calling him “communal.” Patel quietly walked out and never returned to another meeting. The insult didn’t just target Patel it symbolised Congress’s discomfort with strong nationalist leadership outside the Nehru family.
The story of Patel’s daughter, Maniben, further exposes the party’s apathy. After Patel’s death, she returned ₹35 lakh belonging to Congress to Nehru. The Prime Minister accepted it but never inquired about her well-being. She later lived in near anonymity, her father’s name rarely invoked by the very party he once held together. Years later, a Congress Chief Minister visited her only for photo opportunities a tragic reflection of how deeply Congress buried the Patel legacy.
Sardar Patel was not merely a freedom fighter; he was the architect of India’s unity and sovereignty. His contributions were foundational, not symbolic. Yet, for decades, Congress reduced him to a footnote to safeguard the Nehru-Gandhi monopoly over India’s history. Today, as the nation celebrates Patel’s 150th birth anniversary and the Statue of Unity stands tall in Gujarat, India is finally giving the Iron Man his rightful place. The attempt to erase Patel’s legacy has failed his vision lives on in a united, self-reliant, and confident India, far beyond the reach of dynastic politics that once tried to overshadow him.