Recalling her initiation into communism, Gouri had stated that a reference to Soviet Union and Joseph Stalin in her degree class in a women’s college in Kochi had triggered curiosity in the topic. She had served as the president of Kerala Karshaka Sangham from 1960 to 1984 and the Kerala Mahila Sangham from 1967 to 1976. She lost in 1948, but won elections to that assembly in 1952 and 54. In 1948, she joined the Communist Party and contested to the Travancore-Kochi Assembly in 1948 at the age of 22 as party candidate. Recalling Gouri had once said about torture in police custody, “if lathis had the power to impregnate, I would have conceived several times.’’ Gouri Amma had served as the president of Kerala Karshaka Sangham from 1960 to 1984 and the Kerala Mahila Sangham from 1967 to 1976.
Gouri had faced severe torture in police custody during her early days of politics.
She was active in agitations as part of the Quit India movement. She got inspired to political life during her student days. Her affluent family had bequeathed 132 acres of land to the Kerala government. Gouri had recalled that her father Kalathilparambil Raman and elder brother K R Sukumaran, then a trade union leader of the 1940’s, had been her inspiration in life. She was born in an aristocratic Ezhava family at Pattanakkad village in Alappuzha district. In 2015, Gouri Amma decided to take her fledgling JSS to the LDF, which led to her reunite with CPI (M) leaders. She had lost in 2006, and 2011 as UDF ally. In 2001, she became a minister in the Congress government led by A K Antony and served as agriculture minister.įrom 1957 to 2001, she had won all assembly elections, except a defeat of 1977. Her party JSS later became a constituent of Congress-led UDF. Like a young vibrant leader, she toured across Kerala and built up a new party from scratch. She formed a new party JSS, daring the challenges posed by CPI (M) stalwarts of those days such as EMS, Nayanar and Achuthanandan. But age was not a barrier for the redoubtable Gouri to chart a new political course. When sacked from CPI (M), Gouri was aged 76.
When sacked from CPI (M), Gouri was aged 76 The rift between Gouri Amma and the party, then controlled by party state secretary V S Achuthanandan, who also belonged to Gowri’s Hindu Ezhava community in Alappuzha, grew leading to her ouster from CPI (M) in 1994. However, she was inducted into the cabinet as minister of industries and social welfare. Although the party formed the government under Nayanar, Gouri was not considered for the post of CM, which went into the political history how Kerala missed the first woman chief minister. Her last innings in a Left cabinet was from 1987 to 1991 in the government led by E K Nayanar.ĭuring the elections of 1987, CPI (M) had campaigned projecting Gouri as the party’s chief minister candidate. Four times she served as minister in the governments led by the Left. She was elected to Kerala Assembly 11 times, nine of the terms from Aroor assembly seat in Alappuzha. She had plunged into agitations during her student days and faced severe torture, later emerging as an icon of women emancipation and fight against feudal system. But, Gouri who again became agriculture minister in the second EMS Government of 1967, had amended the act in favour of the landless.įrom the first woman law graduate from the backward Hindu Ezhava community, Gouri had risen to a firebrand Communist leader and able administrator, fighting all the way in the days when politics had been male-dominated. The Congress government of 1960 had watered down the norms in favour of landlords. Land reforms, pioneered in Kerala by Communist Party, had fixed a ceiling for ownership of land and ensured that excess land be taken away from landlords and given to the landless. As the revenue minister in the EMS cabinet, Gouri had drafted and piloted the historic Kerala Agrarian Relations Bill, which paved the way for land reforms, leaving a far-reaching impact on the state’s socioeconomic and political spheres. She had been a minister in the first democratically elected Communist Government of 1957 in Kerala led by E M S Namboodiripad. The eight-decade-long political life of Kalathilparambil Raman Gouri is inseparable from the annals of modern Kerala. A prominent CPI (M) leader of several decades, Gouri Amma, as she is popularly known in the state, is currently the president of Janathipathya Samrakshana Samithi, a rebel outfit she had formed in 1994 after her ouster from CPI (M).