Anurag Thakur Pays Tribute to Shahu Maharaj on Jayanti
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
BJP MP Anurag Thakur on Friday, 26 June 2026 paid tribute to Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj, the reformist Maharaja of Kolhapur, on the occasion of his birth anniversary, hailing the 19th-century ruler as a lifelong champion of equality, justice, and the spread of education among marginalised communities.
Context
Posting in Hindi on X, Thakur wrote: 'समानता एवं न्याय के लिए आजीवन संघर्षरत रहने वाले... महान समाज सुधारक 'राजर्षि' छत्रपति शाहू जी महाराज की जयंती पर कोटि-कोटि नमन।' ('Heartfelt salutations on the birth anniversary of the great social reformer 'Rajarshi' Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj, who fought lifelong for equality and justice.')
He added that Shahu Maharaj's work for education, equality, and the upliftment of deprived sections 'remains inspiring and worthy of emulation even today.' The tribute was accompanied by an image marking the jayanti.
Policy Backdrop
Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj, who ruled the princely state of Kolhapur from 1894 to 1922, issued what historians regard as India's first formal reservation order in 1902, reserving 50 percent of posts in Kolhapur state education and government employment for backward communities. He also established schools, hostels, and scholarships specifically for non-Brahmin and Dalit students at a time when such access was severely restricted.
The Government of Maharashtra has observed 26 June as Shahu Jayanti with state-level programmes since the 1990s, making it an established occasion for political and civic commemoration across the country.
Stakeholders and Impact
Shahu Maharaj's legacy is particularly significant for Other Backward Classes (OBCs), Dalit communities, and educationally deprived groups whose access to schooling and public employment he sought to institutionalise more than a century ago. His 1902 reservation decree is widely cited in contemporary policy debates as a precursor to the reservation framework enshrined in the Indian Constitution.
National and state BJP leaders regularly commemorate Shahu Maharaj alongside social reformers such as Jyotirao Phule and B.R. Ambedkar as part of a broader effort to project the party's commitment to social justice and OBC outreach, especially in Maharashtra. These tributes form part of a wider pattern of highlighting pre-independence experiments in reservation and education expansion as antecedents to contemporary welfare policy.
What's Next
State governments, particularly in Maharashtra, are expected to hold commemorative programmes on 26 June, and scholarship or hostel-related announcements for backward-class students have historically accompanied Shahu Jayanti observances. With Parliament's monsoon session approaching, references to OBC welfare and the historical basis of reservation policy may also surface in legislative debate.
Thakur's tribute underscores the continued relevance of Shahu Maharaj's ideas in shaping India's social-justice discourse — a conversation that shows no sign of receding from mainstream political attention.