How colour blue got associated with Ambedkar

Press Trust of India  |  Lucknow 

At a time when political parties are fighting it out to grab the legacy of for political gains, not many worry as to how the colour blue came to be associated with the icon.

"Blue was his favourite colour and he mostly used it in his personal life too," Lalji Nirmal of Ambedkar Mahasabha, which conferred the 'Mitra' award on on Ambedkar's birth anniversary, told here.

Retired and leading activist SR Darapuri said that besides being his favourite colour, blue was also the colour of the flag of the party floated by Ambedkar Scheduled Castes Federation of in 1942.

"The flag was blue in colour and had an Ashok Chakra in the centre...later in 1956 when the Republican Party of was set up after dissolving the earlier party, it was also given the same blue flag," Darapuri pointed out.

"Blue, in another shade, is also the colour of the sky, which shows vastness and that was the vision of Baba Saheb," he said.

The same has been adopted by the BSP as its colour and has since came to be associated with emancipation, he stressed.

"The statues of are always seen in a blue coat with the Constitution in one hand and the finger of the other pointing out as a symbol of moving ahead," Darapuri said.

Recently a freshly installed 5-feet-tall statue of the icon was installed in a Badaun village in saffron jacket but was promptly re-painted in blue after questions arose over the choice of a colour associated with Hindutva.

The saffron-attire statue in Kuwargaav village was a replacement for a smaller Ambedkar statue that was damaged by some anti-social elements and local BSP leaders initiated its repainting.

Recalling an anecdote recounted by Ambedkar's wife Dr Savitri Ambedkar, who was a close acquaitance, Lalji Nirmal said that on a visit to as Ambedkar had refused to stay in the Raj Bhawan saying that he cannot part with his books.

"The then had invited to stay in the Raj Bhawan but since he had come with his books in hordes, said that he will be staying in his Railway saloon," Nirmal said, adding that even his wife used to say that books were his first love.

Quoting "Ambedkar ki dincharya" - a book by Baba Saheb's - Darapuri said he was also fond of good and used to cook for his friends and guests.

"on a visit to our place in told us that he liked dressing up immaculately and his clothes were stitched by the same tailor from whom the then Lt of presidency used to get them made," Darapuri said.

Lalji Nirmal also commended efforts of for having made Ambedkar relevant today.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 15 2018. 10:05 IST