Gurdial Singh Dhillon | |
Birth Date: | 6 August 1915 |
Death Place: | New Delhi, India |
Office: | Minister for Agriculture |
Term Start: | 12 May 1986 |
Term End: | 14 February 1988[1] |
Primeminister: | Rajiv Gandhi |
Office2: | 5th Speaker of Lok Sabha |
Term Start2: | 8 August 1969 |
Term End2: | 19 March 1971[2] |
Deputy2: | G.G. Swell |
Predecessor2: | Neelam Sanjiva Reddy |
Successor2: | himself |
Term Start3: | 22 March 1971 |
Term End3: | 1 December 1975 |
Deputy3: | G.G. Swell |
Predecessor3: | himself |
Successor3: | Bali Ram Bhagat |
Alma Mater: | Punjab University Law College |
Occupation: | Politician Diplomat |
Party: | Indian National Congress |
Dr. Gurdial Singh Dhillon (6 August 1915 – 23 March 1992) was an Indian politician from the Indian National Congress party. He served as the Speaker of the Lok Sabha twice, President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (1973–76)[3] and Indian High Commissioner to Canada (1980–82).
On 6 August 1915, Gurdial Singh Dhillon was born in the Panjwar, some 20 kilometres west of Amritsar city in Punjab into a Dhillon Jat family, He was descendants of Bhangi misl rulers. He studied at Khalsa College, Amritsar and Government College, Lahore before graduating in Law from Punjab University Law College in Lahore.[4] He played an active role in the Harse Chhina Mogha Morcha rebellion in 1947.[5]
Dhillon was a member of the Punjab Legislative Assembly (1952–1967), where he was its Deputy Speaker (1952–54) and its Speaker (1954–62).[6] In 1967 he was first elected to the Lok Sabha, the lower House of the Indian Parliament representing Tarn Taran parliamentary constituency.[7] He was elected from Firozpur in 1985.
Dhillon served two terms as Speaker of Lok Sabha (1969–71 and 1971–75) and was Minister of Agriculture in the Indian Government (1986–1988).[8] Regarding his time in Parliament, his biography on the Lok Sabha website expresses the following:
With Kartar Singh, he co-authored a series of eight children's books in the early 1970s entitled 'Stories from Sikh History'.[9]
Having undergone heart bypass surgery, Dr. Dhillon died at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi on 23 March 1992 following a heart attack.[10]