Anandiben Patel: Gujarat's first woman Chief Minister
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Some 25 years ago, without a second thought, a woman school teacher plunged into the Narmada river and rescued two young girl students who were drowning. The teacher was 47 years old then. Today, at age 73, Anandiben Patel is all set to become Gujarat's next and first woman chief minister, succeeding Narendra Modi.
Both Patel and Modi, 11 years younger, studied at the N.M. High School in Visnagar village in Mehsana district.
Patel's act of bravery in 1987 won her many national and state honours. Now the focus is again on the soft-spoken Patel as she prepares to govern Gujarat, a state now at the heart of Indian politics.
Her elevation now is a far cry from the days when she refused all promotions at school as administrative responsibilities in a senior post would have deprived her of her passion — teaching.
After her act of bravery, Patel was coaxed by BJP activists to join politics. It was finally her husband and RSS functionary Mafatbhai Patel — they separated later — who convinced her into taking the political plunge.
She did that, reluctantly. A few months later, the young Modi became general secretary of the Gujarat Bharatiya Janata Party and made her the BJP women's wing president.
Partly due to Modi's backing and partly because Gujarat had no other woman leader from the powerful and affluent Patel community, Patel's stars were on the ascendant. She got a Rajya Sabha nomination in 1994.
She quit the Rajya Sabha in 1998 to fight her first election in Gujarat — and has remained the longest serving woman legislator in the state.
Over the years, Patel worked under two chief ministers — Keshubhai Patel and Modi.
Patel has handled the education portfolio and virtually turned around the department, and is presently handling key ministries like revenue, urban development, roads and buildings.
"Behind her soft exterior is a tough and decisive woman who knows exactly how to deal with the bureaucracy and get work done without any excuses or compromises," said former journalist Bashir Pathan, who has watched her political career for two decades.
Even in her high school, she was the only girl -- and a good athlete -- among 700 boys students.
She went on to do masters in science and education. A mother of two, she is also known to do yoga and pranayam regularly.
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