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  1. Maniben Patel (3 April 1903 — 26 March 1990) was an Indian independence movement activist and a Member of the Indian parliament. She was the daughter of freedom fighter and post-Independence Indian leader Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel .

  2. Maniben Patel (3 de abril de 1903 - 26 de marzo de 1990) fue un activista del movimiento independentista indio y miembro del parlamento indio. Era hija del luchador por la libertad y líder indio posterior a la independencia Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.

  3. 31 de oct. de 2018 · Maniben, daughter of Sardar Patel, was a dedicated aide, a self-effacing personality and lived in her father’s shadow during his lifetime. After Sardar’s death, she plunged into national electoral politics even before Dahyabhai did.

  4. 12 de ago. de 2017 · Aug 12, 2017. 0. Shares. Maniben Patel was the daughter of the great Indian freedom father Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. She inherited the patriotic fervour from her father, and like him, she is also remembered for her role in the independence movement. Early life. Maniben with Mahatma Gandhi.

  5. 4 de jun. de 2018 · She lived life as a worthy daughter of Sardar Patel, strictly following her father’s ideals, till her death on 26 March 1990. In January 1924, when Vallabhbhai went to his native, Karamsad, his mother, Ladba, raised the question of Maniben. Patel’s biographer, Rajmohan Gandhi, records: “Already several years older than most brides of the ...

  6. She emancipated women from the clutches of men. Maniben was born on April 3, 1903 at Karamsad in Gujarat. She was the daughter of Sardar Patel. When she was barely six years old she lost her mother. It was her uncle, Vithalbhai Patel, who took the responsibility of upbringing her up. She received her early education from The Queen Mary High ...

  7. Senior Journalist, Editor, India Weekly, London. 'The outlook of the Sardar and of Nehru,' the late Maniben Patel, the Sardar's daughter, is quoted as having said, 'was vastly different. They agreed to differ, but at the same time worked together for the common cause of India's freedom.'