Ravi Rohmetra
Kishtwar is a small town in Jammu province. A town nestled in this thick Himalayan woods. She was born on 4th June 1913 in the illustrious Mehta family of Kishtwar. She grew up, loved and adored by all who came in contact with her. She married Duni Chand Mehta, himself the son of an illustrious family of the State. Truly it was a marriage of traditions. On the one side, Krishna, whose great grandfather for four generations, were part of Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s Army that successfully helped annex Ladakh on the other side Duni Chand was direct descendant of a line of distinguished “Vaidas” who even served the royal court. Duni Chand, himself, went, on to become Wazir Wazarat, in Muzaffarabad, now in PoK. And then 1947 the year of destiny. As India found her freedom, tragedy took over young Krishna’s destiny. Duni Chand Mehta was shot dead while on duty and Krishna, along with her young children, was taken to refugee camps.
Krishna, undaunted, unbroken in spirit, rose to this occasion, and refusing to lose herself in self pity took upon herself the task of rehabilitating the suffering women and children of the camps in PoK. It was at Kurukshetra that Krishna Mehta met Jawahar Lal Nehru, then Prime Minister of India. Seeing Krishna’s tremendous power of will, her dedication to the human cause and her personal commitment to her work, Jawahar Lal invited Krishna to join him at Delhi. And so impressed was he with Krishna’s sincerity of purposes, that he felt impelled to call Krishna his sister. This was an important relation, as this would directly lead Krishna on to the greater purpose of her life. With Pandit Nehru’s help and support, Krishna Mehta established two bodies instrumental in the socio-economic development of the disadvantaged women of State; the Gandhi Seva Sadan and the Khadi Gram Udyog Sangh. Both these institutions affected, directly or indirectly, thousands of families. But it was the Gandhi Seva Sadan that was here focal point. Gandhi Seva Sadan was her child, she nurtured it with maternal love and care. Krishna was never motivated by ordinary philanthropic cause. She was not just a social worker. She was a worker with a personal vision and commitment. She had a personal experience of suffering and out of her own suffering was born the zeal to work for the alleviation of poverty. It was a personal need for her to do something positive and concrete about the problems that most of us would face and refuse to confront. She wanted the under privileged to become truly self reliant and independent in spirit- and for this she offered them a workable alternative, a real plan of action, work through cooperatives for social and cared for no political interests.
But this too was not all. She went on to yet another field, realizing that the process of social transformation was an endless one and demanded the coordinated action of several fields, she realized now that unless political will was involved, no sustained development would be possible. And so Krishna Mehta agreed to be nominated to the Lok Sabha, as the first women M.P from the State. This would have been a lifetime’s achievement for anybody else, but for Krishna Mehta, this was only a means towards a more practical end. The development of her native place. Krishna Mehta was thus instrumental in bringing the Prime Minister of India, Indira Gandhi, to Kishtwar and directly acquainting her with the day to day problems of the area. Even today, Kishtwar bears testimony to Krishna’s singular contributions.
Krishna Mehta always had an innate urge for spiritual life. She wrote one of her autobiographical accounts. Krishna met her guru and her spiritual mentor. Magan Baba, a Gujarati Saint, who met Krishna at Kishtwar and immediately perceived her potential and called her to him. From 1972, for a period of more than ten years, she lived at Dadaji’s Ashram, undergoing great austerity, living a perfect life of renunciation with utter simplicity and sincerity that were her hallmarks. Krishna Mehta lived and travelled extensively both in India and aboard. She brought into her work rich and varied experiences of her travels .She wrote several articles, especially on Pandit Nehru. She even wrote a book on the crisis in Kashmir. She was by no means, a person, limited to her professional work.
Krishna Mehta lived a rich and fuflfilled life, useful and inspiring. She passed away on October 20th, 1993, at the age of eighty. She died without any pain or suffering radiating a deep and lasting peace. Even in death one could feel the warmth of the love that she had so beautifully embodied. As she had herself wished, her ashes were immersed in the Chandrabhaga river Kishtwar still throbs with her life.