209 Bhagat Singh 1907 to
1931
Portrait of Shaheed-e-Azam
Bhagat SinghShaheed-e-Azam Bhagat Singh was a
revolutionary and martyr, born on 27 September
1907 at the village of Banga, Lyallpur district
(now in Pakistan) the second son of Kishan Singh
and Vidya Vati. Bhagat Singh was imbued from
childhood with the family's spirit of
patriotism. At the time of his birth, his father
was in jail for his connection with the Canal
Colonization Bill agitation, in which his
brother, Ajit Singh (Bhagat Singh's uncle), took
a leading part. Through his father, who was a
sympathizer and supporter of the Ghadr campaign
of 1914-15, Bhagat Singh became an admirer of
the leaders of the movement. The execution of
Kartar Singh Sarabha made a deep impression on
the mind of the young man who vowed to dedicate
his life to the country.
Having passed the fifth
class from his village school, Bhagat Singh
joined Dayanand Anglo-Vedic School in Lahore. In
response to the call of Mahatma Gandhl and other
nationalist leaders, to boycott government aided
institutions, he left his school and enrolled in
the National College at Lahore. He was
successful in passing a special examination
preparatory to entering college. He was reading
for his B.A. examination when his parents
planned to have him married. He vehemently
rejected the suggestion and said that, if his
marriage was to take place in Slave-India, my
bride shall be only death." Rather than allow
his father to proceed any further with the
proposal, Bhagat Singh left home and went to
Kanpur where he took up a job in the Pratap
Press. In his spare time, he studied
revolutionary literature. He joined the
Hindustan Republican Association, a radical
group, later known as the Hindustan Socialist
Republican Association. When Bhagat Singh was
assured that he would not be compelled to marry
and violate his vows sworn to his motherland, he
returned to his home in Lahore. This was in 1925
when a morcha had been going on at Jaito to
protest against the deposition by the British of
Maharaja Ripudaman Singh of Nabha because of his
sympathy with the Akali agitation. A warrant for
the arrest of Bhagat Singh was issued because he
had accorded a welcome to one of the jathas, but
he managed to elude the police and spent five
months under the assumed name of Balvant Singh
in Delhi, where he worked in a daily paper Vir
Arjun.
As Akali activity subsided,
Bhagat Singh returned to Lahore. He established
contact with the Kirti Kisan Party and started
contributing regularly to its magazine, the
Kirti. He also remained in touch with the
Hindustan Socialist Republican Association. In
March 1926 was formed the Naujawan Bharat Sabha.
Bhagat Singh, one of the principal organizers
became its secretary. As the Simon Commission
arrived at Lahore on 30 October 1928, an
all-parties procession, headed by Lala Lajpat
Rai, marched towards the railway station to make
a protest. Intercepting the procession, police
made a laths charge and Lala Lajpat Rai received
injuries. He died a fornight later. Although the
British saw no connection between the lathi
charge and Lala Lajpat Rai's death, Bhagat Singh
and his associates did. They plotted the
assassination of Mr Scott, the Superintendent of
Police, believed to have been responsible for
the laths blows given Lala Lajpat Rai, but
instead J.P. Saunders, an Assistant
Superintendent of Police, became the actual
victim owing to mistake in identification.
Bhagat Singh and Rajguru had done the actual
shooting. They and those who had served as
lookouts escaped through the D.A.V. College
grounds. The next day a leaflet was circulated
by the Hindustan Socialist Republican
Association announcing that the death of Lala
Lajpat Rai had been avenged.
Shaheed Bhagat Singh in
Jail
Bhagat Singh escaped to
Calcutta disguised as a wealthy personage. He
remained quiet for several months, but became
active again when Public Safety Bill and the
Trade Disputes Bill were being debated in Delhi.
As his group resolved to explode a bomb to
express disapproval of the bill, Bhagat Singh
and B.K. Dutt volunteered to carry out the plan.
They were seated in the gallery of the Central
Assembly Hall awaiting the reading of the
proclamation that would enact the bills. When
the announcement was made, Bhagat Singh jumped
up and threw a relatively harmless bomb behind
one of the members' benches. There was an
explosion, followed by still another from a
second bomb. No one was seriously injured.
Bhagat Singh and Dutt began shouting
revolutionary slogans and threw leaflets
explaining their intent of making "the deaf
hear" with the loud noise of explosion. Both
were promptly taken into custody. As the trial
proceeded, a statement, written in its entirety
by Bhagat Singh, was read in defence of the two
accused. Bhagat Singh said that "force used for
a legitimate cause has its moral justification."
He and B.K. Dutt were found guilty and sentenced
to transportation for life. After the sentence
had been pronounced in the Assembly Bomb case,
Bhagat Singh was bound over for trial in the
Saunders Murder case, approvers having
identified his role in the killing. While
awaiting trial in the Lahore Jail, Bhagat Singh
started a hunger strike in behalf of political
prisoners. The fast was continued even after the
hearing of the case began on 10 July 1929, and
was subsequently joined by many others. It was
not until after the death of one of these, J.N.
Das, on 13 September 1929, that facilities were
promised to the prisoners and the hunger-strike
abandoned.
At the time of trial,
Bhagat Singh offered no defence, but utilized
the occasion to propagate his ideal of freedom.
He and his fellow accused kept delaying the
proceedings by refusing to appear before the
court, by ignoring what was going on, or by
disrupting the work by shouting revolutionary
slogans. He heard with defiant courage the
death-sentence pronounced on 7 October 1930. In
the same spirit, he kissed the hangman's noose
on 23 March 1931, shouting for the last time his
favourite cry, "Down with British imperialism."
His body was secretly cremated at Husainivala by
police and the remains thrown into the River
Sutlej. The next day, however, his comrades
collected the bodily remains from the cremation
site and a procession was taken out in Lahore.
Mourning for him was spontaneous and widespread
and homage was paid to him for his sterling
character and sacrifice.
In 1950, after
Independence, the land where Bhagat Singh and
his companions were cremated was procured from
Pakistan and a memorial built. In March 1961, a
Shahidi Mela was held there. Every year, on 23
March, the martyr's memory is similarly
honoured. The old memorial, destroyed in the
1971 Indo-Pak war, has been rebuilt Bhagat Singh
is remembered by the endearing title of
Shahid-i-Azam, the greatest of martyrs.
Paying his tribute to him
at a meeting of the Central Sikh League at
Amritsar on 8 April 1931, Subhas Chandra Bose
said, Bhagat Singh who set an example of
character and patriotism by sacrificing himself
for the sake of the country's freedom, was from
the Sikh community. Today, he is known to be a
brave Sikh hero throughout the world The Sikh
community has to produce thousands of Bhagat
Singhs for the cause of the country."
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