Jawhar Sircar
Jawhar Sircar (born 22 March 1952) is a retired Indian Administrative Services officer, who is prominent as a public intellectual, speaker and writer. He was elected to the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Parliament of India, on 2 August 2021 on an TMC ticket to represent the state of West Bengal. Sircar joined the IAS in 1975, served as chief executive officer in Prasar Bharati from 2012 to 2016 and was Secretary to the Government of India 2008–12. He has also held important portfolios in the Central and State governments.[1][2][3] On 13 September 2024, Sircar resigned from the position as TMC Member of Parliament of Rajya Sabha over the 2024 Kolkata rape and murder incident and related corruption.[4] SummaryJawhar Sircar is a Member of the Upper House (Rajya Sabha) of the Indian Parliament who was nominated by the Trinamool Congress party and elected uncontested on 2 August 2021 to represent the State of West Bengal. He is a public intellectual based out of Kolkata. He has headed India's Culture Ministry[5] from November 2008 to February 2012 – the longest for any Secretary.[6][7] Sircar supports campaigns to preserve India's inclusive cultural heritage against constant attempts to utilise it for sectarian gains. He has represented India in top international organisations, including the UNESCO and he speaks regularly and writes on public issues relating to the conservation of heritage.[8] He was CEO of India's public broadcaster,[9] (2012 - 2016)[10][11][12][13] he resigned from the prasar bharati CEO post before his term ended, as he was not comfortable with the NDA government as he was appointed to the post by the UPA government. He has stood up to resist constant encroachments on media freedom and recently, DIGIPUB News India Foundation,[14] that represents all important digital media organisations in India, selected him for its 'appellate committee' – as an individual with "unimpeachable public service record and accomplishments". He was on its four-member statutory national-level self regulatory mechanism, which is chaired by the former Supreme Court judge Justice Madan Lokur.[15] Jawhar Sircar was an active member of a powerful pressure group of retired central secretaries, chief secretaries of states, director generals of police, Indian ambassadors and others, known as the 'Constitutional Conduct Group'. Sircar is involved with civil society in its constant opposition to right-wing political and governmental forces encroaching on liberty of thought, idea, expression and belief. He studied at the universities of Calcutta, Presidency, Cambridge and Sussex and has two master's degrees in History and Sociology. His main field work has been on social history, popular religion and the cult of Dharma Thakur in western Bengal. He covered numerous field sites in five districts of the state of West Bengal, but could not submit his thesis, as government did not permit even a short sabbatical. Jawhar Sircar[16][17][18] has published numerous articles on cultural,[19] historical and anthropological subjects for several years in books, as also in noted national and international journals and newspapers. He has also delivered several talks on the subjects of history, religion, contemporary affairs and the intersection between religion and anthropology. The Asiatic Society of Kolkata (established in 1774) has conferred its Biman Behari Memorial Award[20] on him for his contribution to popularising the study of history and politics. From 2017 to 2020, he has chaired the Board of Governors of the prestigious Centre for Studies in Social Sciences,[21] Kolkata – one of India's top 5 social science research and teaching institutes. Sircar was, in fact, its first non academic chairman in its half century history. As an officer of India's premier Indian Administrative Service, Jawhar Sircar has served in the sectors of finance, commerce and industries for 17 years and in 'public communication', i.e., in the administration of education, culture and media for more than a dozen years. He was honoured by the British Museum[22] with its silver medal for piloting museum reforms[23] in the country. The former President of India has publicly complimented him as an "outstanding performer and visionary", while the former Prime Minister described him as "one of India's most distinguished civil servants." Academics and publicationsHe has been active in research even while working full-time in administration. He has published numerous articles on cultural,[24][25] historical[26] and anthropological subjects for several years. He has published research papers on the subjects of history,[27][28] culture,[29][30] media[31] & society.[32][33] He has also delivered talks on the subjects of history,[34][35][36][37] culture[38][39][40][41] and media.[42][43][44] His monograph: The Construction of the Hindu Identity in Medieval Western Bengal: The Role of Popular Cults was well received in India and abroad. His writings are both available in Bangla[45][46][47][48][49][50] as well as English newspapers.[51] EducationJawhar Sircar studied at St. Xavier's School, Presidency College and Calcutta University - all in Kolkata. He did his master's degree in Ancient Indian History and Culture from Calcutta University and a second Masters in Sociology, with Social Anthropology. He graduated in Political Science from Presidency College, standing 2nd in Calcutta University. He also studied at the University of Cambridge and the University of Sussex in the UK.[52] Career in administrationAfter joining the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) in 1975[53] in West Bengal (India), he held several postings in the districts of Burdwan and 24 Parganas where he made a name for himself in tackling very difficult problems including communal riots. After this, he moved on to become the Secretary in the Finance Department looking after Expenditure.,[54] he was appointed Sales Tax Commissioner of West Bengal where he could secure the highest rate of growth in the 1990s. In May, 2006, Sircar was called to the Government of India in New Delhi, on promotion as Additional Secretary and Development Commissioner for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME), a term that he helped introduce through a new Act of Parliament. He is known as the pioneer of 'Cluster Development', as well as for grass-roots financing of tiny industries, including Micro Finance and also for initiating several reforms in the sector. [55] In September 2008,[56] he was elevated as Secretary to Government of India, and moved on to head the Ministry of Culture,[57] where he served as its longest-serving Secretary till early 2012.He initiated long-pending reforms and took up the modernization of museums, archives, and libraries. He is credited with introducing many new programmes to assist cultural organizations and their expressions. Jawhar Sircar was successful in forging a significant number of cultural partnerships between India and other countries,[58] and among his major credits are the Anish Kapoor exhibition from the UK and the holding of seven unique overseas[59] exhibitions of the original paintings of Rabindra Nath Tagore which had not left India shores for more than 80 years. He also had two short stints as acting Secretary, Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, Government of India.[60] Sircar has worked in the fields of Finance, Commerce[61] and Industries for 17 of his 38 years in public service, where he has managed large corporations, including the multibillion-dollar Haldia Petrochemicals. On the other hand, he has also worked in the field of public communication: i.e., in Education, Culture and Media[62] related assignments, for over 11 years. AssociationJawhar Sircar was a member of the Governing Councils of Indian Council of World Affairs,[63] Consortium for Educational Communication,[64] Film & Television Institute of India[65] and also Trustee/GB Member of IIM (India Institute of Management), Kolkata,[66] Victoria Memorial Museum, Indian Museum, National Museum, National Library, National School of Drama, IGNCA, and the Three National Akademies. He has also served on the National Advisory Council of Spic Macay,[67] and was nominated on the National Executive Council of CII. He had also been on the Board of Governors of Media Research Users Council (MRUC), Mumbai, which does research/surveys for readership, viewership and listenership of various media for advertising.[68] He had been on the advisory board of CEMPD, Kolkata (Centre for Environmental Management and Participatory Development).[69] Sircar has also been a Trustee Member of PSBT[70] (Public Service Broadcasting Trust) from 2012 to 2016. Other interestsJawhar Sircar was Vice President of the All India Tennis Association,[71] and served as the President of India's pioneering Children's Little Theatre. Sircar has also been a Trustee Member of PSBT[72] (Public Service Broadcasting Trust) from 2012 to 2016. He is a Life Member of the 240-year-old Asiatic Society, Indian National Confederation and Academy of Anthropologists,[73][74] & Cultural Heritage, Bangiya Sahitya Parishad, Indian History Congress and several other well-known institutions. He was the moving spirit behind the Kolkata[75] International Film Festival from 1997 to 2005, and has organized several film and media related programmes, with participation of many countries. Sircar[76] was instrumental in the management of world's largest Book Fair, in terms of attendance, i.e., the Kolkata Book Fair in its early years. Awards
References
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Jawhar Sircar. Wikiquote has quotations related to Jawhar Sircar. |