In the early 1920s, Mirajkar, S. A. Dange, and S. V. Ghate constituted the early communist leadership that emerged within India, and who resented the role played the emigre leadership who formed the Communist Party of India in Tashkent in 1920.[2] He began organizing trade unions of textile workers in Bombay.[3] When the Workers and Peasants Party was founded in Bombay in January 1927, Mirajkar became its general secretary.[4] Mirajkar was tried and convicted in the Meerut Conspiracy Case.[5][6]
In 1940–1941, Mirajkar was detained at Deoli Detention Camp in Ajmer-Merwara.[5] He was arrested again in August 1949, along with many other communist trade unionists.[7]
When the so-called "Dange Letters" surfaced in 1964, Mirajkar affirmed that they were authentic.[10] Mirajkar would side with the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in the 1964 CPI split.[11][12] However, Mirajkar's decision to side with the left in the CPI split was not an issue of ideology, but of personal conflict with S. A. Dange.[13] Prior to the split Mirajkar had belonged to the Dange-led right-wing faction in the party.[14] When the CPI(M) Politburo called for a boycott of the January 1970 AITUC session in Guntur, Mirajkar refused to comply with the party directive and participated anyway.[12] Mirajkar was subsequently expelled from CPI(M).[15]
He rejoined the CPI in 1973, persuaded by C. Rajeswara Rao.[1] He retired as AITUC President in 1973, and was succeeded by Dr. Ranen Sen.[8] Mirajkar died in a Bombay nursing home on 15 February 1980, at the age of 79.[16]
References
^ abSS Mirajkar: Builder of TU, Communist movement, in New Age Weekly. No. 38, 2020. pp. 11-12