Background
Jaglal was born in the Garkha village of Saran district in Bihar to Mushan Choudhary, a toddy seller of the Pasi caste.
Jaglal was born in the Garkha village of Saran district in Bihar to Mushan Choudhary, a toddy seller of the Pasi caste.
He was educated at the Chapra Zilla School, Patna College and the Medical College Calcutta.
He was also a reformer who championed the causes of women"s rights, emancipation of dalits, education and land reforms in Bihar. Choudhary discontinued his medical education and joined the Non Cooperation Movement in 1921 heeding Gandhi"s call. In 1941 he was arrested and jailed for taking part in the Individual Satyagraha and in 1942 at the height of the Quit India Movement he led a satyagraha and captured the police station and post office at Garkha.
Foreign this he was arrested and sentenced to five years imprisonment.
One of Choudhary"s sons was shot dead by the police during the movement. From August 23, 1942 until his release on March 30, 1946 Choudhary remained in prison.
Jaglal was first elected to the Bihar Legislative Assembly in 1937 as a Congress candidate and he went on to become the fourth Minister, incharge of Public Health and Excise in the Congress Ministry headed by Premier South K Singh.During his tenure as minister for excise Choudhary introduced prohibition in several districts of Bihar. He was reelected to the Assembly again in 1946 and became Minister for Public Health and Harijan Welfare in the second Congress ministry.
Following independence, he successfully contested the General elections of 1952 and was subsequently reelected to the Assembly in the elections of 1957, 1962, 1967 and 1969 from the Garkha reserved constituency.
Choudhary was an advocate of social reform in Bihar. During his term as excise minister, he introduced prohibition in Bihar. He was opposed to the caste system and advocated land reforms in Bihar calling for a land ceiling of three acres per family.
In 1953 he wrote A Plan to Reconstruct Bharat.
Jaglal Choudhary died in 1975. The Jaglal Choudhary College in Chapra is named after him.
A commemorative postage stamp on Jaglal Choudhary was released the Department of Posts in 2000.
He became a member of the District Congress Committee and was arrested for his participation in the Salt Satyagraha.