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KIRAN BEDI Kiran Bedi was born on June 9, 1949. Her father Prakash Lal Peshawaria, a landlord in Punjab was determined to educate his four daughters at a time when women were largely limited to doing household tasks. |
While studying at the Sacred Heart Convent, Kiran joined the National Cadet Corps (NCC) and took up tennis, a game which her father used to play.
After school she went on to study Political Science at the Government College for Women, Amritsar. She loved the subject as she felt it taught her about her role as a citizen of the country.
Kiran excelled at sports particularly tennis. She won the inter-University women's team title and bagged the national title as well as the Asian title in tennis. Bedi says the game taught her the value of hard work, the importance of staying fit and built in her the qualities of fair play, team work, concentration, and the ability to give in that extra bit under stress. Kiran fell in love with Brij Bedi a fellow student and married him in 1972. This was also the year when Kiran was selected for the Indian Police Service (IPS). |
Did you know? |
Kiran Bedi was the first woman police officer of the Indian Police Service. Spectators at the 1973 Republic Day Parade were amazed to see a lady at the head of the Police Contingent. The then Prime Minister, Mrs. lndira Gandhi was so impressed that she invited Kiran for breakfast with her the very next day. |
Career Highlights |
* In 1977, she put an end to the Akali-Nirankari Sikh riots at India Gate. * 1979, as DCP (West Delhi), she broke up a 200-year-old illicit liquor trade. * In 1981 as DCP (Traffic) she controlled traffic during the 1982 Asian Games efficiently. She didn't hesitate to tow away cars and once even challaned the Prime Minister's car for wrong parking near a car repair shop. * In 1985, as DCP (headquarters) she ordered 1600 pending promotions to be made in a single day. Standing instructions were issued that if any file was not cleared within three days the person concerned would be called personally to explain the delay. |
Kiran Bedi
Cop of big things
By Gautam Kaul
SHE stands at the minimum qualifying height for her job. She gave up sari soon after she entered the service; today she wears trousers with kurta and a Jawahar
jacket, a faint imitation of what Rajiv Gandhi wore. She packs in herself unbelievable energy, and is the only Indian police person to receive the Magsaysay Award.
She wishes a day had a 25th hour, for it is filled with her commitments, She has solutions to all sorts of problems and people are keen to hear her even on matters which she has not specialised in. She photographs well even now in her fifties, and if she is put before a television camera she falls in love with it. But you take a risk if you are sparring with her, as Tim Sebastian of the BBC did some months ago and lost face for himself in India.
She is hard-nosed and soft- hearted. Twenty years ago, she let her hair fall on her shoulders. Today, they are burdened with the task of healing those given to drugs and desolation. She is the most recognised face among Indian women, after Lata Mangeshkar.
That is Kiran Bedi for you.
There is much to Kiran's up bringing which has contributed to her current stature. She was her father's favourite of four daughters, wham he treated more like sans. At school and in college, an extrovert Kiran showed spunk and spirit, and took to tennis at a time when not many women wore shorts and played before the piercing male stares in Punjab. She won the women's Asian title. Tennis gave her the first public platform and helped build up her public personality. Donning the police uniform was, there- fore, simply exchanging the tennis kit of whites to one of khaki.
Kiran has remained a trailblazer, picking up issues which had to be resolved. Her score card has failures too but women all over the country looked up to her. Her male colleagues fretted and fumed on how to handle this mercurial woman in their charge, whether it was getting her to shift the awarded contract for traffic publicity during the 1982 Asian Games or her tiff with the chief minister of Mizoram a decade ago.
When it was decided to 'fix' Kiran by posting her as chief supervisor at the Tihar Jail in New Delhi, the officials committed a big blunder, She emerged out of that confinement with a Magsaysay in hand.
When Kiran presents a case she is intently heard. A scrap of a typed page, listing the equipment for the Police Training College in Delhi, which she handed to the Union home minister became a proposal for 16 computers, 16 shooting simulators, a multimedia projection system and an indoor gymnasium, costing over Rs 3 crore. The speed at which the proposal was executed is unlikely to be rivalled.
Kiran Bedi is vulnerable on one count. She does not like to talk about her family, her friends, or her marriage. An art connoisseur and industrialist in Amritsar, her husband Brij Bedi prefers to work for his favourite city and stay there, leaving Kiran the rest of the world to herself.
I have often wondered where will Kiran end up. She has reached a certain stratospheric level, which denies the intimacy of private life. Her yoga sessions are the only time she shuts up in her world. Her daily schedules are maddening, and her international commitments make her the most travelled police officer in the country. Then she has to tie up her lecture engagements in the country with her police duties.
She has inspired a film – Tejaswani – in which Shantipriya enacts four episodes of Kiran's real life. Kiran is a star in her own right. If women have taken to police profession in India with gusto, it is due to the example she has set, In Kiran's own list of the women she admires most, Indira Gandhi is way up, And between the two women, the women of the country are all wrapped up emotionally as one strong gender.
(Gautam Kaul, DGP Indo-Tibetan Border Police, was Kiran Bedi's guru in Delhi Police.)
Originally posted by: mittijalebi
hey shabari, great articles!! 👏 thanks so much for posting.
i'll be honest with you.....being born and raised in the west i had no idea who kiran bedi was until i saw this program. thank you so much for informing me about this great woman and her accomplishments.