Who Was Mahendra Singh? The People’s Leader Power Tried to Forget

Mahendra Singh was not just an MLA but a political idea shaped by people’s movements. From village protests to Bihar and Jharkhand assemblies, he remained a voice for the displaced and the ignored. Even two decades after his murder, that voice continues to disturb those in power

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“Who Is Mahendra Singh?”

This question says less about the man—and more about the one asking it.

When Bagodar’s sitting BJP MLA Nagendra Mahto recently asked this question from a public stage, it was not innocent curiosity. It was a political jibe—an attempt to belittle a mass leader whose memory still unsettles those in power. But history does not answer such questions with words. It answers them with truth.

Mahendra Singh was not just an MLA.

He was an idea.

A Leader Born From Struggle, Not Power

Mahendra Singh’s rise in Bagodar politics did not come from patronage or privilege, but from grassroots struggles. He was elected MLA three times—in 1990, 1995, and 2000—when the region was still part of undivided Bihar. Land rights, wages, displacement, and the fight for the poor formed the core of his politics.

He was not a leader who appeared only during elections. He stood with the people in every season.

A Movement Leader, Not Just a Legislator

Mahendra Singh’s identity was not shaped only inside the Assembly. It was forged on streets, in villages, and at protest sites. After incidents in places like Markaccho and Telodih, when people were trapped between fear and anger, Mahendra Singh organised them, stood beside them, and led the resistance.

He was not a distant leader on a stage—he walked in processions with the people. Speaking out against police repression, administrative silence, and state apathy carried risks, but he never stepped back. These struggles made him a true people’s leader—someone who did not merely speak about pain, but carried it on his shoulders.

The Lone Voice in the Assembly That Spoke for the People

After the formation of Jharkhand in 2000, new power structures emerged. At a time when most political parties were busy negotiating power equations, Mahendra Singh often stood as a lone opposition voice in the Jharkhand Assembly.

Whether it was displacement, farmers’ distress, or neglect of Adivasi and Dalit regions, he raised every issue in the House. He may have been alone in numbers, but not in voice. Behind him stood the people of Bagodar and surrounding areas.

This moral strength is why even senior leaders like Lalu Prasad Yadav respected Mahendra Singh. Such respect in politics is not easily earned—it comes from public trust and ethical courage.

“I Am Mahendra Singh”: The Moment That Became History

Mahendra Singh’s most powerful introduction did not come inside the Assembly, but on January 16, 2005.

During a public meeting, armed attackers arrived and asked the same question that is echoed today:

“Who is Mahendra Singh?”

In that moment—when silence could have saved his life—Mahendra Singh chose not to hide. He stood up and said:

“I am Mahendra Singh.”

Moments later, he was shot dead on the spot.

This was not just a murder.

It was the martyrdom of a people’s leader who refused to bow to fear and power.

Why Bagodar Still Remembers Him After Two Decades

In today’s politics, where memories fade fast and principles shift easily, Mahendra Singh’s legacy makes those in power uncomfortable. Perhaps that is why attempts are made to shrink his identity.

Yet more than twenty years later, every January 16, thousands gather in Bagodar and nearby areas. These are not formal events—they are tides of memory.

People remember a leader who walked from village to village, who sat on the ground to listen, who drew strength not from power but from the people.

Mahendra Singh does not live in statues or government advertisements.

He lives in collective memory.

So the question rises again:

Who is Mahendra Singh?

He is an answer that cannot be erased.

A name that bullets could not silence.

Shahnawaz Akhtar
Shahnawaz Akhtarhttp://shahnawazakhtar.com
Shahnawaz Akhtar is a senior journalist with over two decades of reporting experience across four Indian states and China. He is the Managing Editor and founder of eNewsroom India, an independent, Kolkata-based digital media platform. His work focuses on human-interest reporting, capturing lived realities, resilience, and voices often ignored by mainstream media
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