Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Bhagat Singh’s village tells a tale of unfulfille­d promises

- Ravinder Vasudeva ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

India celebrated Bhagat Singh’s 109th birth anniversar­y on Wednesday, with everybody from Prime Minister Narendra Modi to cricketer Gautam Gambhir and musician Vishal Dadlani turning up on Twitter to pay their respects to the legendary freedom fighter.

While Modi said Singh left an “indelible mark on India’s history”, Gambhir went on to call the patriot his “only idol, only mentor, only hero”. Even Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi took a break from his hectic strategisi­ng for the UP polls to tweet how Singh’s “courage and sacrifice” continues to inspire generation­s.

But the mood at Singh’s ancestral village — Khatkar Kalan in Shahid Bhagat Singh Nagar district — was surprising­ly downbeat, with local residents claiming that successive government­s have failed to honour the legacy of an iconic personalit­y who laid down his life for the country.

They claim that over a year after the Centre announced it would adopt the village as a special case, nothing has happened on the ground. Even a seven-year-old plan to set up a museum dedicated to Singh and other patriots has failed to materialis­e.

Singh was born in Banga village of Lyallpur district (now Faisalabad in Pakistan) on September 28, 1907. He was a few days short of turning 24 when the British hanged him in 1931 for his involvemen­t in the Lahore conspiracy case, along with Sukhdev Thapar and Shiv Ramhari Rajguru.

The village still witnesses political functions on the birth and death anniversar­ies of India’s most beloved revolution­ary.

The announceme­nt to develop Khatkar Kalan as a model village was made by Union rural developmen­t minister Chaudhary Virender Singh on the martyr’s birth anniversar­y in 2015. “We hear politician­s making such promises every year,” said Parminder Sahota, a villager. “We don’t take them seriously anymore.”

Claiming that Khatkar Kalan doesn’t even have the most basic facilities, Sahota said even a task as simple as repairing the freedom fighter’s ancestral home took over five years for the government to complete.

However, local MP Prem Singh Chandumajr­a maintained that the promise was not carried out due to certain procedural gaps. “We hope to start work on the scheme this year,” he said.

Though the museum project – being executed by Punjab government subsidiary Markfed – has witnessed the constructi­on of the building complex, the art and civil engineerin­g work is yet to be completed. “Funds are coming in at a very slow pace. For a long time, the central government did not release the money required – due to which work remained in limbo for nearly two years. It was resumed only in 2015,” said a district official on the condition of anonymity.

Former Union home minister P Chidambara­m had laid the foundation stone for the museum project on February 23, 2009. It was envisioned as a memorial for Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, Rajguru and over 9,000 martyrs from Punjab who sacrificed their lives during the Indian freedom struggle.

Today, the museum site lacks amenities as basic as drinking water. There are toilets for visitors, but they don’t have doors. “Miscreants made off with the toilet doors last year. We repeatedly asked the local administra­tion to get new ones installed, but to no avail,” an employee said.

 ?? PARDEEP PANDIT/ HT PHOTO ?? Ancestral house of Bhagat Singh at Khatkar Kalan village in Punjab.
PARDEEP PANDIT/ HT PHOTO Ancestral house of Bhagat Singh at Khatkar Kalan village in Punjab.

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