Verghese Kurien — I Too Had a Dream — Class 8 English (Poorvi)
"It is not the cow that matters most — it is the men and women behind the cow." — Dr. Verghese Kurien
1. About the Chapter
This chapter (closing Unit 2) is based on excerpts from Dr. Verghese Kurien's autobiography 'I Too Had a Dream' (2005). It tells the inspiring true story of how one man's vision and action transformed Indian agriculture, lifted millions out of poverty, and made India the world's largest milk producer.
Key Idea
Like Major Sharma (concrete sacrifice), Kurien shows what HAPPENS when ONE PERSON pursues a dream relentlessly. The Indian White Revolution is one of the greatest agricultural transformations in human history.
2. About Dr. Verghese Kurien (1921-2012)
Quick Facts
- Born: 26 November 1921, Calicut (now Kozhikode), Kerala
- Died: 9 September 2012, Nadiad, Gujarat (age 90)
- Profession: Engineer, business manager, social entrepreneur
- Famous as: 'Milkman of India', 'Father of White Revolution'
- Founded: Amul; National Dairy Development Board (NDDB)
Education
- B.E. (Mechanical) — Madras University
- Higher studies in dairy engineering — Michigan State University, USA (1948)
Major Honours
- Padma Vibhushan (1999) — India's 2nd highest civilian award
- Padma Bhushan (1966)
- Padma Shri (1965)
- Ramon Magsaysay Award (1963)
- World Food Prize (1989)
- Order of Agricultural Merit (France)
- Multiple honorary doctorates
The Improbable Story
- Born in Kerala
- Trained in USA
- Sent to Anand, Gujarat — a remote village — for one year (1949)
- Ended up STAYING for life and building Amul
3. The Amul Story
Background
In 1946, dairy farmers in Anand, Gujarat were exploited by middlemen who bought their milk cheap and sold to Polson Dairy at huge profits. Tribhuvandas Patel (Sardar Patel's associate) organised farmers into a cooperative — Kaira District Co-operative Milk Producers' Union — which became AMUL.
Kurien Joins (1949)
Government sent young engineer Verghese Kurien to Anand for one year of mandatory service after his US training. He hated the rural posting initially. But Tribhuvandas Patel convinced him to help the farmers' cooperative.
Kurien's Innovations
- Modern pasteurisation in remote India
- Buffalo milk powder (first in the world!) — solved India's seasonal milk surplus
- Marketing — Amul became a beloved brand
- Cooperative model — farmers OWNED the dairy
- Direct payment to farmers (no middlemen)
Amul Today
- Over 3.6 million farmer members
- ₹72,000+ crore turnover (2022)
- World's largest dairy cooperative
- 'Amul Girl' mascot — iconic cultural symbol
4. The White Revolution (Operation Flood)
Background
After independence, India was a milk-deficit country. In 1965, milk powder was IMPORTED. Children went malnourished. Government wanted change.
Operation Flood (1970)
PM Lal Bahadur Shastri appointed Kurien to lead a national programme. Created NDDB. Three phases:
- Phase I (1970-80): Linked 18 milksheds in 10 states to demand centres in 4 metros
- Phase II (1981-85): Extended to 136 milksheds, 1,000 cities
- Phase III (1985-96): Strengthened cooperative network
Results (by 2026)
- India became the WORLD'S LARGEST MILK PRODUCER (since 1998)
- Milk production: 17 million tonnes (1950) → 230+ million tonnes (2023)
- ~80 million farmer families benefited
- Daily milk income for millions of poor
- Women's empowerment (women run many cooperative units)
- Rural prosperity
5. Kurien's Philosophy
Cooperative Movement
- Farmers OWN the dairy, not middlemen
- Profits go BACK to farmers
- Democratic decisions
- Inspired by Sardar Patel's principles
'Anand Pattern'
- Village-level milk collection
- District-level union
- State-level federation
- Cooperative ownership at every level
- Replicated globally
Self-Reliance
Kurien insisted on Indian solutions for Indian problems. Built Indian-designed equipment, Indian-trained engineers, Indian-managed cooperatives.
Values
- INTEGRITY (no corruption tolerated)
- DEDICATION (worked 7 days a week for decades)
- VISION (saw what no one else saw — that Indian farmers could be empowered)
- COURAGE (fought political pressure constantly)
- HUMILITY (refused to take personal credit)
6. Lessons from Kurien's Life
1. One Person Can Make a Difference
Kurien transformed Indian agriculture, lifted millions from poverty.
2. Stay Where You Are Needed
He could have left Anand for big cities. He stayed for life.
3. Combine Skills with Service
Engineering + management + social vision = revolution.
4. Cooperatives Empower the Poor
Owning the means of production transforms lives.
5. Dream Big, Act Concrete
'I Too Had a Dream' — anyone can dream. Few make it real.
7. Famous Quotes
"If we are to revitalise the rural economy, we have to put more milk in cattle."
"It is not the cow that matters — it is the men and women behind the cow."
"I am a Christian. My mother is a Christian. My father is a Christian. But I have lived my life as an Indian."
"We have to make India a powerful country. But power comes from being self-reliant."
8. Modern Indian Dairy
Amul Today
- 3.6 million farmer members
- World's largest dairy cooperative
- ₹72,000 crore turnover
- Exports to 50+ countries
- 'Amul Girl' cartoon character
India Today
- World's #1 milk producer (~230 million tonnes/year)
- ~16% of world's milk
- 80 million farmer families involved
- White Revolution = success story for the world
Inspired Similar Movements
- BLUE REVOLUTION (fisheries)
- GREEN REVOLUTION (food grains)
- YELLOW REVOLUTION (oilseeds)
- PINK REVOLUTION (meat/poultry)
9. Activities
Activity 1: Read Aloud
Read excerpts from 'I Too Had a Dream'. Discuss Kurien's character.
Activity 2: Research
Research another Indian cooperative success (e.g., IFFCO, KRIBHCO).
Activity 3: Visit
Visit a dairy or cooperative society. Talk to members.
Activity 4: Reflection
"What would YOU dream for India? How would you start?"
10. Vocabulary
- COOPERATIVE: organisation owned by its members
- PASTEURISATION: heat treatment of milk to kill germs
- DAIRY: business handling milk and milk products
- WHITE REVOLUTION: dramatic increase in Indian milk production
- MILKSHED: rural area producing milk for a city
- EMPOWER: give power/authority/strength
- VISIONARY: someone with imaginative foresight
- EXPLOITATION: unfair use of others
- MIDDLEMEN: traders between producers and consumers
11. Worked Examples
Example 1: Kurien's transformation
What did Kurien transform India from and to?
- FROM: milk-deficit country importing milk powder (1960s)
- TO: world's largest milk producer (since 1998)
Example 2: Cooperative model
Why are cooperatives good for poor farmers?
- They OWN the dairy collectively
- Profits return to farmers, not middlemen
- Democratic — every farmer has voice
- Stable income through fair prices
Example 3: Operation Flood
What was Operation Flood?
- National programme (1970-96) to multiply Indian milk production
- 3 phases, gradually expanding
- Led by Kurien through NDDB
- Made India world's #1 milk producer
12. Conclusion
Verghese Kurien's life embodies the COMPLETE message of Unit 2 (Values and Dispositions):
- He had a DREAM (vision)
- He took CONCRETE actions (engineering, management)
- He showed VALOUR (fought political pressure for decades)
- He served OTHERS (empowered millions of farmers)
- He was WISE (knew when to fight, when to compromise)
In 1949, a young Malayali engineer arrived in remote Gujarat, hating his posting. He stayed for 63 years and transformed a nation.
In Class 8, you stand where Kurien stood at age 28 — full of potential, unsure of direction. Read his autobiography. Take his lessons. Then DREAM YOUR OWN DREAM — and make it real.
India transformed because one man dared to dream — and acted on his dream every single day.
