A look back at the War of Bharat’s Independence
Highlighting the contribution of the unnamed heroes, events, institutions and places to the struggle is essential for successive generations to understand that the freedom of today comes from the sacrifice of the past
Today, Bharat is celebrating the festival of liberation from colonial dependence. Amid this series of celebrations, while the journey of 75 years of independent Bharat will be evaluated, it is also natural to remember the constant struggle and sacrifice of more than four centuries to achieve it.
The national movement against this colonial slavery in Bharat was inspired by the spirit of swa, self, whose manifestation was churning the whole country in the form of a trilogy of swadharma, swaraj and swadeshi. As a result of the presence of saints and sages in the movement, spiritual consciousness was constantly flowing in the form of an undercurrent.
The spirit of self, which has been in the soul of Bharat for ages, manifested itself with all its might, and these foreign powers had to face resistance at every step. These forces destroyed Bharat’s economic, social, cultural, and educational system; they also destroyed village self-reliance. It was a totalitarian invasion by foreign powers, which Bharat retaliated against in all spheres of life.
The Bharatiya resistance against European powers is a unique example in world history. It was a multifaceted effort in which, on the one hand, armed resistance was being undertaken against the foreign invasion, and on the other, the work of social reconstruction was taking place by removing the distortions in society to make it strong.
While the kings of the princely states were resisting the British with all their might, the janjati society rose from place to place against the interference of the British in their simple lives and the attack on their values of life. These people who woke up to protect their values were brutally massacred by the British, but they did not back down from the struggle. The nationwide war of Independence of 1857, in which hundreds of thousands of people sacrificed their lives, was a result of this.
To thwart the efforts to destroy the Bharatiya education system, institutions such as Banaras Hindu University, Shantiniketan, Gujarat Vidyapeeth, MDT Hindu College Tirunelveli, Karve Shikshan Sanstha, Deccan Education Society and Gurukul Kangri rose and created a sense of patriotism among the students and youth. While scientists such as Prafulla Chandra Ray and Jagdish Chandra Basu dedicated their talents for the upliftment of Bharat, artistes such as Nandlal Bose, Avanindranath Thakur and Dadasaheb Phalke and almost all national leaders, including Makhanlal Chaturvedi, were involved in public awareness through journalism. They were awakening the country through their arts.
The spiritual inspiration of many learned men such as Maharishi Dayanand, Swami Vivekananda and Maharishi Aurobindo acted as the guiding light for all of them. While Hindu fairs being organised by Rajnarayan
Bose in Bengal, Ganeshotsav and Shivaji Utsav by Lokmanya Tilak in Maharashtra were watering Bharat’s cultural roots, social reformers such as Jyotiba Phule and Savitribai Phule were engaged in the creative campaign of promoting women’s education and empowering the underprivileged sections of society. BR Ambedkar showed the way to organise society and struggle for achieving social equality.
No area of Bharatiya social life remained untouched by the influence of Mahatma Gandhi. While living abroad, the work of giving an edge to the Bharatiya independence movement was progressing under the patronage of people such as Shyamji Krishna Varma, Lala Hardayal and Madam Cama. London’s India House had become the centre of activities related to Bharat’s independence. The Bharatiya War of Independence 1857, written by Veer Savarkar, was very popular among revolutionaries. Bhagat Singh himself got it published and distributed hundreds of copies of it.
The revolutionaries involved in more than 400 underground organisations operating across the country were engaged in the campaign to free Bharat Mata by putting their lives at stake. Active in the activities of Anushilan Samiti, the revolutionary organisation of Bengal, Keshav Baliram Hedgewar joined the Congress, thanks to the inspiration of Lokmanya Tilak and was elected as the secretary of the Central Provinces. He was the vice-president of the organising committee of the party’s national convention held in Nagpur in 1920. In this session, he, along with his colleagues, made every effort to get the resolution of purna swaraj, complete independence, passed, but the Congress leadership was not ready for it. Ultimately, this resolution was passed in Lahore after nine years, in January, 1929.
Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose took over the leadership of the Azad Hind Fauj during World War II. Not only was the first government of independent Bharat formed under his leadership, but the Azad Hind Fauj also succeeded in liberating some parts of Northeast Bharat. The trial of the officers of the Azad Hind Fauj in Red Fort filled the whole country with fury. Along with this, the rebellion by the Navy against the British officers forced the British to leave Bharat.
The sun of freedom rose, but the eclipse of Partition had fallen on it. The credit for the courage to move forward even in difficult circumstances goes to every Bharatiya who shed his blood and sweat to fulfil the national aspiration of hundreds of years.
Maharishi Arvind had said – Bharat has to wake up, not for itself but for the whole world, for humanity. His declaration proved to be true when Bharat’s independence became an inspiration for the freedom fighters of other countries of the world. One by one, all the colonies became independent, and Britain’s never-ending sun went down forever.
The Portuguese, Dutch, French and, lastly, the British came to Bharat. Alongside trade, all of them made constant efforts to destroy Bhartiya culture and engage in proselytisation. The retaliation against colonialism had begun on the very day that Vasco da Gama, the first European traveller, set foot on Bharatiya soil in the year 1498. The Dutch had to leave Bharat after being defeated at the hands of Maharaja Marthanda Varma of Travancore. The Portuguese remained confined to Goa. In the struggle for supremacy, the British eventually proved to be the victors who, on the strength of their devious policies, established control over a little more than half of Bharat. The rest of Bharat remained under the control of Bharatiya rulers with whom the British made treaties. After Independence, the union of these states emerged as the Republic of Bharat.
Bharat chose the path of democracy. Today, it is the largest and most successful democracy in the world. Those who contributed to the freedom movement to protect the cultural values of Bharat also performed the duty of framing the Constitution for Bharat.
This is the reason that in the first copy of the Constitution, arrangements were made to keep the cultural flow of Bharat intact by displaying the image of Ram Rajya through pictures and exponents of Bharatiyata such as Vyasa, Buddha and Mahavira.
This “Amrit Mahotsav of Bharatiya Independence” is an occasion to show gratitude towards patriots due to whose sacrifice, we are moving towards getting our rightful place in the world community as an independent nation. Those unnamed heroes, events left out of discussion, institutions, and places, which gave direction to the freedom movement and proved to be milestones, will have to be reviewed, evaluated, and preserved in the folk memories associated with them. They should be introduced to the mainstream so that the coming generations understand that behind the innately available freedom today, there lies a struggle of past generations for the nation and their blood, sweat, and tears of many centuries.