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Jokingly called 'a very dangerous person' by Jyoti Basu, Sitaram Yechury was fluent in the many tongues of Indian politics

Sitaram Yechury’s tenure as the party’s general secretary had been riddled with challenges

September 12, 2024 / 22:40 IST
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Sitaram Yechury

Veteran communist leader and West Bengal chief minister Jyoti Basu once jokingly told Sitaram Yechury during a trip to Beijing that he was “a very dangerous person”. Basu was stunned to see Yechury speaking to colleagues from different states in their languages. Fluent in Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, and English, the late general secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) had established a unique level of comfort and accessibility with comrades — starting as a student leader in Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) to becoming a member of the CPI(M) politburo, the party’s highest decision-making body.

Yechury died at the age of 72 in Delhi on Thursday. He was admitted to AIIMS in August with a severe chest infection. The multilingual communist with a different approach towards politics and a perpetual smile on his face was known as one of the leaders instrumental in building the opposition bloc, brick by brick.

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For years, Yechury stood as one of the most credible and prominent figures in India’s leftist political landscape. Known for his sharp intellect, unyielding commitment to Marxist ideals, and decades-long political career, the CPI(M) leader was a critical voice of dissent against what he viewed as the rising tide of Right-wing politics in India.

He witnessed the slow decline of the Left, yet his unwavering belief in its core values continued to define his leadership. Yechury’s sudden and “shocking” death — as his comrades called it — deals an “irreversible” blow to the party, because he was seen as the key figure bridging the gap between generational communist-socialist ideals and the pragmatic needs of the modern Left.