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Author Topic: Analysis of Bhagat Singh's written work  (Read 7476 times)

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Analysis of Bhagat Singh's written work
« on: March 25, 2009, 05:47:00 PM »
Stamp of the martyr

Bhagat Singh’s private and public correspondence throws light on his role in the freedom struggle. On the eve of the martyr’s 77th death anniversary,
  Chaman Lal looks at some of the less-known notices and telegrams issued by the valiant freedom fighter in the late 1920s


 
 
   

    Site of the Killing: J.P. Saunders was shot in front of the SSP’s office in Lahore on December 17, 1928
 
 
As many as 107
  documents on the life of Bhagat Singh have come to light. Out of
  these, 45 documents fall in the category of correspondence —
  letters, telegrams and notices/leaflets. Bhagat Singh’s
  correspondence is available from 1918, when he had not even
  turned 11. There are four notices and three telegrams in the 45
  documents.


 

Out of the 38
  letters, 15 are personal in nature, and 23 fall in the political
  category. The first five available letters of Bhagat Singh were
  written between 1918 and 1921, when he was 11 to 14 years old.
  Another set of 10 personal letters was written from jail during
  1930-31.

 

In 1923, when
  Bhagat Singh was 16, he wrote his first ‘political’ letter
  to his father. Between 1927 and 1931, more than 20 letters were
  written, including one written just a day before his execution.
  This period in Bhagat Singh’s life impacted him the most,
  turning him into a mature freedom fighter.

 

The notices,
  though just four in number, have great significance. The first
  notice was pasted on the walls of Lahore, in the intervening
  night of December 18 and 19, 1928. The notice was drafted on
  December 18 by Bhagat Singh, but issued in the name of Balraj,
  commander-in-chief of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA),
  the military wing of the Hindustan Socialist Republican
  Association (HSRA). Balraj was the pseudonym name of
  Chandrashekhar Azad. Both wings of the Hindustan Republican
  Association (HRA) were rechristened HSRA on September 8
  and 9, 1928, at Ferozeshah Kotla grounds in Delhi.


 

Lajpat Rai’s
  death avenged

 

This notice was
  pasted after the killing of J. P. Saunders, Deputy
  Superintendent of Police, Lahore, on December 17 in broad
  daylight, in front of the SSP’s office in the city. Saunders
  had ordered his men to hit Lala Lajpat Rai with lathis on
  October 30, 1928, when the latter was leading a large procession
  against the Simon Commission. Lala Lajpat Rai died on November
  17 and the HSRA decided to avenge this ‘national humiliation’.


 

Exactly a month
  later, Saunders was killed and this notice appeared on the walls
  of Lahore. The notice was handwritten by Bhagat Singh and
  was later produced as an exhibit in the court. The notice
  declares in bold letters —"J.P. Saunders is killed; Lala
  Lajpat Rai’s (death) is avenged." The text of notice
  says: "Really it is horrible to imagine that so lowly and
  violent hand of an ordinary police official, J. P. Saunders,
  could ever dare to touch in such an insulting way the body of
  our (leader) so old, so revered and so loved by 300 million
  people of Hindustan and thus cause his death. The youth and
  manhood of India was challenged by blows hurled on the head of
  India’s nationhood."

 

The subhead of
  notice reads: "Beware ye tyrants; beware." The notice
  warns the British not to "injure the feelings of a
  downtrodden and oppressed country. Think twice before
  perpetuating such a diabolic deed."


 

The third subhead
  says: "Long live revolution." This section states:
  "Sorry for the death of a man. But in this man has died the
  representative of an institution, which is so cruel, lowly and
  so base that it must be abolished. In this man has died an agent
  of the British authority in India — the most tyrannical of
  government of governments in the world." The last paragraph
  of the notice reads: "Sorry for the bloodshed of a human
  being; but the sacrifice of individuals at the altar of the
  revolution, which will bring freedom to all and make the
  exploitation of man by man impossible, is inevitable."

 

Then twice
  comes "Inquilab zindabad."

 

The socialist
  thought of the HSRA seems evident in this notice. The colonial
  government has been perceived as the most tyrannical government
  of the world and Saunders identified not as an individual, but
  as ‘representative of an institution’ — the institution of
  colonialism and exploitation. The ‘death of a man’ has been
  regretted, but in the death of this man, the death of the
  colonial system had been wished.


 

Saunders’
  killing justified

 

The second notice
  on the same incident was issued on December 23. It again carried
  the name of Balraj but was actually written by Bhagat Singh. The
  killing of Saunders was justified. "This was a revenge for
  the biggest national insult" that came in the form of an
  attack on the grand old man of India, Lala Lajpat Rai. The
  killing was also justified as per "the rule (10-b&c) of
  the HSRA".

 

The slogan "Inquilab
  zindabad" was repeated in this notice as well. It seems the
  HSRA had given a serious thought to the adoption of this slogan
  as well as "Samrajyavad murdabad" (death to
  imperialism), which reverberated in the Central Assembly in
  Delhi, four months later. For Bhagat Singh, the political
  purpose of the slogans was to arouse people’s emotions.
  Earlier the slogan "Vande Mataram" was used. The
  freedom fighters thought that a new slogan was necessary to
  arouse people. That is why all the three notices issued by the
  HSRA prominently focused on these slogans. The two slogans,
  drawn from the Bolshevik Revolution of Russia in 1917, suited
  Indian conditions perfectly and caught the imagination of the
  people in no time.


 

The third and more
  elaborate political notice/leaflet was printed and thrown in
  Central Assembly on April 8, 1929, by Bhagat Singh and B K Dutt,
  after harmless bombs were exploded in the Assembly. They quoted
  French revolutionary Edouard-Marie Vaillant "It
  takes a loud voice to make the deaf hear" — to justify
  their action. The leaflet refers to the repressive measures
  adopted by the British regime, particularly the Public Safety
  Bill and the Trade Disputes Bill. The leaflet refers to the
  Hindustan Socialist Republican Association as a serious and
  responsible body which had decided to stop "this
  humiliating farce" and not let "the alien bureaucratic
  exploiters" do what they wished. Instead, the HSRA wanted
  them to "come before the public eye in their naked
  form".


Inquilab
  zindabad

 

The leaflet again
  refers to "the callous murder of Lala Lajpat Rai" and
  declares that "it is easy to kill individuals but you
  cannot kill ideas. Great empires crumbled but the ideas
  survived. Bourbons and czars fell while the revolution marched
  ahead triumphantly".

 

This is a clear
  reference to the French Revolution of 1789 and the Bolshevik
  Revolution of 1917. By far this is the most definitive political
  statement by Bhagat Singh and his associates about the power of
  ideas to arouse people. It is a clear break from the earlier
  quasi-religious approach of Indian revolutionaries to arouse
  people in the name of nation or religion against ‘foreign
  rulers’. Emphasis on "the sanctity of human life"

  has been asserted in the concluding paragraph of the leaflet,
  but the necessity of sacrifice of individuals has also been
  underlined. "The sacrifice of individuals at the altar of
  the great revolution`85 is inevitable." The leaflet
  concludes with the slogan "Inquilab zindabad". In
  fact, all three notices issued by the HSRA and drafted by Bhagat
  Singh, show that the revolutionary movement in India had taken a
  clear ideological position, akin to Lenin’s anti-imperialism
  stance.

 

Demands of
  political prisoner

 

The fourth notice
  had been issued by Bhagat Singh on June 17, 1929, as life
  convict No 117 of Mianwali Jail. Addressed to the Inspector
  General, Jails, Lahore, it announced that he was on hunger
  strike from June 15 and had lost six pounds. By asserting
  himself as a "political prisoner", Bhagat Singh had
  enlisted his demands for better food, bathing facilities,
  availability of books/newspapers, etc. This notice shows how
  Bhagat Singh had matured as a political personality.


 

Three brief
  telegrams also confirm the ideological positions adopted by the
  HSRA in these notices.

 

On January 24,
  1930, Bhagat Singh and other convicts of Lahore Conspiracy Case
  greeted Third International, an international Communist
  organisation founded in Moscow in 1919, on Lenin Day. They
 
came to the court wearing a red scarf around their neck and
  shouted slogans like "Socialism zindabad", "Samrajyavad
  murdabad" and gave telegrams to the Magistrate, which was
  published in The Tribune of January 26, 1930.


 

They sent another
  telegram to Hindustani Samiti in Berlin on April 5, 1930,
  condoling the passing away of Indian revolutionary Shyamji
  Krishan Verma. The third telegram was sent to the convicted in
  the Kakori case, who were on hunger strike in Bareilly jail.
  Sachinder Nath Bakhshi, Rajkumar Sinha, Mukundi lal and Manmath
  Nath Gupt were requested to end their hunger strike in view of
  the notification issued for classification of convicts in jail.

 

There was another
  telegram sent by Bhagat Singh to the Home Secretary, Government
  of India, on January 24, 1930, drawing his attention to the fact
  that though the inmates had ended their hunger strike yet
  Congress leaders of the jail reform committee were not being
  allowed to meet them. It is also stated that undertrials in the
  Lahore conspiracy case were badly beaten up by orders of police
  officials on October 23 and 24, 1929.

 

Bhagat Singh’s
  correspondence makes for an interesting, unexplored and
  significant area of research in context of the Indian
  revolutionary movement.


ref: http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20080322/saturday/main1.htm
« Last Edit: March 25, 2009, 07:29:34 PM by Grenade Singh »

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