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What do the current chief justice of India, RBI governor, cabinet secretary, finance secretary, CBI director, comptroller and auditor general, NITI Aayog CEO all have in common? St Stephen’s College.
St Stephen’s College, the oldest college in Delhi (established in 1881), has a long list of alumni currently in office:
And it is not just among these top officers that St Stephen’s is a common theme. Shashi Tharoor – another graduate of St Stephen’s – documented the disproportionate representation of graduates from the college among India’s elite political figures in this 2014 essay for The Hindu.
When Tharoor was a student, however, Stephanians were not expected to join politics. In his time, notes Tharoor, graduates of St Stephen’s were expected to go “into the IAS and IFS, not to enter politics.”
“They conquered babudom in large numbers every year, rising to the highest ranks of the civil service but believing profoundly that politics was not for them,” adds Tharoor.
But that changed as more and more Stephanians became successful politicians, and for Tharoor personally, the turning point was a speech by the then Additional Secretary to the Government of India, Kanwar Natwar Singh. Singh bluntly advised Tharoor’s class of students not to join the civil service, where one’s fate was to merely take orders from politicians. (Natwar Singh, also a Stephanian, went on to follow his own advice, quitting his civil service post and entering politics instead, notes Tharoor.)
The list of Stephanians in politics ranges from high-ranking politicians such as Rahul Gandhi to Rajasthan’s newly appointed Deputy Chief Minister Sachin Pilot.
Congress President Rahul Gandhi pursued History Honours at St Stephen’s college, which he did not finish, before leaving for Harvard University.
Sachin Pilot, who was on Friday, 14 December named the Deputy Chief Minister of Rajasthan, has a BA in English Honours from the institution.
Khushwant Singh, Sitaram Yechury, Arun Shourie, Naveen Patnaik, Rahul Bajaj, even Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq (former President of Pakistan) are all St Stephen’s alumni as well.
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