I dare

By: Kiran BediContributor(s): IndiaMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi Hay House India 2011Edition: 3Description: 378 pISBN: 9788189988548Subject(s): Political corruptionDDC classification: 364.13230954 Summary: The saga of India’s first and the highest ranked woman officer in the Indian Police Service – who pioneered a humane method of policing – marked by willpower, devotion to duty, innovation, and compassion and, above all, a never-say-die attitude… The eyewitness account – forthright and unsparing – in this fully revised and updated edition provides a well-documented exposé of the sabotage of police reforms (to be implemented as per a verdict of the Supreme Court of India) by certain bureaucrats and by some members of Kiran Bedi’s own service. These persons also blocked her appointment as police commissioner. This kind of sabotage was the proverbial last straw that compelled her to ‘shake off the shackles’. After a long and rewarding innings (35 years in all), Kiran Bedi decided to move on. She believed that she could no longer work with persons who were keeping the system enslaved. She was clear in her mind that she was not going to be subordinated by this team of saboteurs. What direction and leadership would such persons provide except to create pygmies and stifle initiative and crush morale? She did not want to be a part of such dubious ‘history’. As she asserts: ‘My self-respect, my innate sense of justice and my beliefs and values in life propelled me to throw off the “yokes” that were already obstructing my growth and I now made up my mind to set myself free and be a master of my own time.’ This is a no-holds-barred narrative packed with punch, spirit and vitality.
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The saga of India’s first and the highest ranked woman officer in the Indian Police Service – who pioneered a humane method of policing – marked by willpower, devotion to duty, innovation, and compassion and, above all, a never-say-die attitude…

The eyewitness account – forthright and unsparing – in this fully revised and updated edition provides a well-documented exposé of the sabotage of police reforms (to be implemented as per a verdict of the Supreme Court of India) by certain bureaucrats and by some members of Kiran Bedi’s own service. These persons also blocked her appointment as police commissioner.

This kind of sabotage was the proverbial last straw that compelled her to ‘shake off the shackles’. After a long and rewarding innings (35 years in all), Kiran Bedi decided to move on. She believed that she could no longer work with persons who were keeping the system enslaved. She was clear in her mind that she was not going to be subordinated by this team of saboteurs. What direction and leadership would such persons provide except to create pygmies and stifle initiative and crush morale? She did not want to be a part of such dubious ‘history’.

As she asserts: ‘My self-respect, my innate sense of justice and my beliefs and values in life propelled me to throw off the “yokes” that were already obstructing my growth and I now made up my mind to set myself free and be a master of my own time.’

This is a no-holds-barred narrative packed with punch, spirit and vitality.

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