He made the ordinary, neighbourhood doodhwala a key player in the country's struggle for economic development and progress at the grassroot level.
Verghese Kurien, the man who brought milk revolution in the country, died early Sunday in Gujarat.
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He was instrumental in laying the foundation of democratic enterprises at the remote villages and farflung hamlets which ensured economic justice. And it was with people’s voluntary participation.
Honoured as the architect of India’s White Revolution, which catapulted India to be the world’s largest milk producer, Kurien managed the feat in the 1970s at a time when it faced grim uncertainties over its food security.
Kurien, the founder-chairman of National Dairy Development Board (1965-98) and also chairman of Gujarat Co-Operative Milk Marketing Federation Ltd (GCMMF)(1973-2006), and also the Institute of Rural management (1979-2006), dedicated his life to the cause of empowering the humble Indian farmers through co-operatives, said current GCMMF Managing Director RS Sodhi.
Born November 26, 1921 in Kozhikode, Kerala, Kurien graduated from Loyola College in 1940 and later completed his engineering from Guindy College of Engineering, Chennai. Having acquired specialised training at the Imperial Institute of Animal Husbandry and Dairying in Bangalore, Kurien went to the US and completed his masters in Mechanical Engineering with dairy engineering as a minor subject from the Michigan State University, in 1948.
A year later, he was assigned to a Government Creamery in Anand, Gujarat as part of his bond commitment. Arriving in Anand on a hot May 13 in 1949, Kurien was a harried man, only waiting to be released from his bond and leave the place as quickly as possible. He got his release orders after six months and was all set to pack up and go to the city of Bombay — but a minor incident halted him in his tracks.
Just as he was preparing his exit, Tribhuvandas Patel, the then chairman of Kaira District Co-operative Milk Producers Union, popularly known as ‘Amul’, requested him to stay back in Anand for some more time and help him organise his co-operative society’s dairy equipment. Kurien stayed back for a few more days... going on to become a legend through Operation Flood, launched in 1971.
“His forced tenure at Anand changed the destiny of the entire Indian dairy sector. He help the fledgling dairy co-operative movement and was forced to stay there to see it flourish. The rest is history,” Sodhi said.
The Dairy co-operative movement had a modest beginning with the first Dairy Co-operative Union in Gujarat formed in 1942 with only two village co-operatives joining as members.
Around 65 years later that figure has grown to a staggering 16,100 with 3.20 million milk producers pouring millions of tonnes of milk into the GCMMF containers twice daily.
Through Kurien’s efforts vide the Amul Model, the country’s milk production shot up from a mere 20 million metric tonnes (MMT) per annum in 1960 to a whopping 122 MMT last year.
Not only did Operation Flood — initiated by Kurien —result in making India the world’s largest producer of milk and milk products, it also helped reduce malpractices by milk producers and merchants, and alleviated poverty during that era.u00a0