Jaipal Singh Munda’s journey – from Oxford, to the hockey field and Constituent Assembly – challenges narrow views of democracy

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Kunal ShahdeoJanuary 3, 2026 03:32 PM IST First published on: Jan 3, 2026 at 03:32 PM ISTEvery January, Jharkhand’s winter carries an old question on its breath. What does it mean to remember a leader whose imagination exceeded his time? Born on January 3, 1903, as Pramod Pahan, Jaipal Singh Munda is remembered in Jharkhand as Marang Gomke, the great leader. Yet, remembrance in India’s public culture follows a curious economy. Some figures are elevated to ritual icons, endlessly reproduced and safely contained. Others are quietly archived into obscurity. Jaipal Singh Munda belongs uneasily to the latter category, invoked occasionally, understood rarely, and engaged with even less.Munda’s life unsettles tidy classifications. He moved across worlds that colonial India worked hard to keep apart. Mission schools, Oxford’s debating halls, international hockey fields, princely administrations, and finally the Constituent Assembly — his journey reads less like social mobility and more like a sustained challenge to hierarchies of race, caste, and civilisation. He was simultaneously an Adivasi intellectual and a global modern, a sporting hero and a constitutional thinker, an administrator within the empire and one of its sharpest critics from the margins.AdvertisementAlso Read | Jharkhand witch-hunting killing: What the rise in attacks on Adivasi women revealsOxford, where Munda studied, did not merely grant him a degree in economics, philosophy, and politics. It offered him a language to speak back to power. As the first Indian to earn an Oxford Blue in hockey, and later as the captain of India’s gold medal-winning team at the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics, he embodied a confidence that colonial stereotypes struggled to contain. Unlike many elite Indians of his generation, Munda did not mistake individual success for collective emancipation. Sporting glory and bureaucratic prestige were tools for him, never destinations in themselves.The decisive turn came with his return to India, where he encountered the everyday realities of Adivasi dispossession in Chotanagpur and Santhal Parganas. Land alienation, cultural denigration, labour exploitation, and administrative arrogance were not abstract themes but lived experiences. As president of the Adivasi Mahasabha, Munda transformed dispersed grievances into a coherent political vocabulary. He did not seek the assimilation of Adivasis into a nationalist mainstream. Instead, he demanded that the nation reshape itself to accommodate its first inhabitants.This insistence found its most powerful articulation in the Constituent Assembly. Munda’s interventions were neither ornamental nor peripheral. When he proudly declared himself to be jungli, he was not romanticising primitivism. He was exposing the civilisational arrogance embedded in nationalist discourse. His claim that tribal societies were among the most democratic in the world inverted the dominant pedagogy of the time. Democracy, he argued, was not something to be taught to Adivasis, but something the modern state could learn from them. In doing so, Munda expanded the moral and political horizons of Indian constitutionalism.AdvertisementHis advocacy shaped the framework of protective discrimination for Scheduled Tribes and infused constitutional debates with an ethic of cultural plurality. At the same time, Munda warned against symbolic inclusion without material justice. His critique of prohibition, grounded in ritual practices and agricultural labour cycles, remains a powerful reminder of how abstract policy can translate into everyday violence when severed from its social context. Long before the language of cultural rights entered policy discourse, Munda was articulating its substance from lived experience.The Jharkhand movement was the political extension of this vision. The demand for a separate state was never merely territorial; it was anchored in claims to dignity, autonomy, and control over land and resources. That Jharkhand came into being three decades after Jaipal Singh Munda’s death speaks to the persistence of this political imagination. Yet, the form the state eventually assumed also reveals its limits. The political economy Munda cautioned against, extractive in orientation, dominated by outsiders, and chronically short of employment, has not receded but hardened over time. The irony is difficult to overlook. A movement grounded in Adivasi self-rule culminated in a state where Adivasis are no longer even a demographic majority.Yet, Munda’s legacy refuses closure. It survives not only in statues or stadium names, but in everyday idioms of resistance and pride. It lives on the hockey fields of Jharkhand, where Adivasi youth continue to transform marginal grounds into national pipelines of talent. It surfaces in contemporary assertions around Sarna religion, land rights, and cultural recognition. Above all, it endures as a reminder that identity, when articulated with confidence rather than apology, can become a source of democratic renewal.most readTo remember Jaipal Singh Munda today is not to indulge in nostalgia. It is to ask difficult questions of the present. Who speaks for Adivasis in contemporary India, and in what language? What does development mean when it systematically displaces those who bear its costs? Can democracy truly accommodate radically different ways of being, or does it merely tolerate them?Munda’s life offers no easy answers, but it offers a method. Speak from where you stand. Refuse erasure. Insist that the nation listen. On his birth anniversary, that insistence matters more than ever. If India is to become the inclusive republic it claims to be, it must return, again and again, to the questions its Marang Gomke once placed at the centre of public life.The writer is an Academic Fellow at National Law School, Bengaluru, and a researcher from Jharkhand