Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

US state to introduce Ghadar Party’s works in school syllabus

- Press Trust of India

ASTORIA : Students in America’s Oregan state will soon be studying about the Ghadar Party, top state officials announced, as hundreds of people gathered here to mark the 105th anniversar­y of the founding conference of the revolution­ary group that contribute­d in India’s freedom movement.

The historic city of Astoria on the western coast of the US was a thriving city, as per official records, and home to 74 Indians, mostly Sikhs from Punjab, in 1910.

These Indians, who worked as labourers in a local lumber company, on Sunday came together to mark the first founding conference of the Ghadar Party.

“Over a century ago, the Ghadar Party made strides in both India and the West that paved the way for Indian independen­ce from colonial Britain when facing harsh discrimina­tion Sikhs and Punjabi turned to the law and demanded justice,” Oregon Governor Kate Brown said during the event organised by the Ghadar Memorial Foundation.

Oregon attorney general Ellen F Rosenblum said this historic event some 105 years ago would became part of the curriculum of the schools in the state.

“The Ghadar Party found Astoria and Oregon more welcoming than other parts of the West coast,” she said.

“Your history here is complex and subject to much of the same racism and classism that we face today where America has been willing to let outsiders in to do an essential work here but has too often been unwilling to recognise these outsiders rights to the full benefits and privileges of being an American citizen,” Rosenblum said. “We are committed to doing everything we can to oppose this basic injustice. I want you to know that I’m thrilled that you have found a home here in this state,” she said.

The day-long event on the banks of the Columbia River was addressed by several community leaders with Sikhs’ performing martial arts and bhangra.

The celebratio­ns were attended by several hundred Indian-americans from in and around Oregon, including from neighbouri­ng Washington, California and as far as British Columbia in Canada, was held in a park adjoining the building that hosted the first meeting of Indians in May-june 1913 that laid the foundation of the party.

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