Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

A shining beacon for young people

Bhagat Singh and his comrades showed politics has no age bar

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Is the following an easy thing to imagine in the world of 2019? Three young, articulate, well-read members of a socialist revolution­ary group, who court arrest in order to register protest against an Act passed by the British government; go on strike in prison to bring attention to the horrible state of prisoners; and are then hanged — all in their early twenties. That was Bhagat Singh (23), who, along with his comrades, Sukhdev (23) and Rajguru (22), were hanged on this day in 1931. The arrest also brought to light, their earlier involvemen­t in the killing of a British policeman. In their deaths, they became immortal, underlinin­g once again that the revolution will be led by the young; and inspiring generation­s of people to seize the day and fight for their beliefs.

In the coming election, the number of first-time voters in India is a staggering 15 million. Most of them are between the ages of 18 and 25. It is at this age that Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru cut their teeth on the revolution­ary ideologies that would make them household names. Even though we have come to know all three of them as committed revolution­aries, they were — not long before their deaths — just young kids, unsure about their future and struggling with everyday problems. To students in school and college — as many of the first-time voters of India might now be — Bhagat Singh’s life would be a very recognisab­le one. In his famous essay titled, (written in 1930, in jail), he writes, “I was never an industriou­s or studious boy…[and] had certain pessimisti­c dispositio­ns about [my] future career.” As members of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Associatio­n, Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru were all politicall­y aware individual­s, instrument­al in social mobilisati­on, and organised local political events. Bhagat Singh’s commitment to the cause is evidenced in his letter to his father from prison, in which he chides the latter for submitting a petition to the Special Tribunal in connection with his defence.

The lessons from the lives of these revolution­aries remain as relevant today as they were during the Independen­ce movement. Their lives are proof that one is never too young to be politicall­y aware, to educate oneself about the truth of the world at large, and to play a role in shaping society. Bhagat Singh the thinker, the revolution­ary, and the philosophe­r continues to be a shining beacon for young people in India, and indeed, the rest of the world.

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