I’ll be heading to India next week for Bangalore literature festival. One of my sessions will be with Justic Leila Seth, India’s first woman chief justice, and the mother of Indian’s literary star Vikram Seth, the author of A Suitable Boy.
I had the pleasure of meeting the justice, a powerful, spirited character, back in 2009 during Jaipur literature festival when she danced enthusiastically with William Dalrymple, the festival’s organizer. the Justice has just publisher her memoir. see below some info.
Leila Seth
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Honorable Justice Leila Seth |
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Justice Leila Seth | |
1st Chief Justice | |
In office 1991–1996 |
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Personal details | |
Born | 01 October, 1930 Lucknow, India |
Nationality | Indian |
Alma mater | Government Law College, Mumbai, Government Law College, Chennai |
Religion | Hinduism |
Justice Leila Seth was the first woman judge on the Delhi High Court and the first woman to become Chief Justice of a state High Court.
Contents
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Background[edit]
Born in Lucknow in October 1930, she joined the Bar in 1959. When in India, she was a junior to Ashoke Kumar Sen when he used to practise during his absence from the central cabinet of India. She was the first woman to top the London Bar exams in 1958. She handled a large number of Tax matters (Income Tax, Sales Tax, Excise and Customs), Civil, Company and Criminal cases as also Matrimonial suits and writ petitions. In 1978, she was appointed as the first woman judge on the Delhi High Court. In 1991, she was appointed the Chief Justice of Himachal Pradesh.
Commissions[edit]
Justice Seth sat upon enquiry commissions which examined the effects of the serial Shaktiman on children, as well as the enquiry into the death of businessman Rajan Pillai in police custody.[1] She served on the Law Commission of India till 2000 and was responsible for the amendments to the Hindu Succession Act which gave equal rights to daughters in joint family property.
Biography[edit]
Leila Seth’s autobiography, On Balance, was recently published by Penguin India. In this book, she talks about her early years of homelessness and struggle, her straying into law while in England with her husband Prem, and later practising in Patna, Calcutta and Delhi; and her happy marriage of over fifty years, including the experience of bringing up three remarkable children: writer Vikram Seth, peace activist Shantum and film-maker Aradhana. Also dwelt upon are her views regarding corruption, discrimination and delay in the legal system; some judgments dealing with education and with inter-personal and constitutional law; and her experiences as a member of the 15th Law Commission. There are also delightful vignettes: Premo and her turning an old mansion into a splendid home in Patna, Vikram’s writing of the novel A Suitable Boy, Shantum’s ordination as a Buddhist teacher by Thich Nhat Hanh and Aradhana’s marriage to Peter, an Austrian diplomat, and work as a documentary film director and production designer on films like Earth and Water.
References[edit]
- Jump up^ "Rajan Pillai death: Advani rejects probe plea". Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 27 February 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
- Seth, Leila. On Balance. New Delhi: Viking, 2003. ISBN 0-670-04988-3
- Seth, Vikram. Two Lives. HarperCollins, 2005. ISBN 0-06-059966-9
Hi Lijia,
It was great to hear you today at the Bangalore Literature Festival. Your story was inspiring, and I was looking for your book in the store there so as to get an autograph on my copy, but couldn’t find it there, at least not quickly enough. Will get one anyway. Thanks for all the inspiration and knowledge.
Best regards,
Harshit.