Born:
September 28, 1907, Khatkar Kalan
Died:
March 23, 1931, Lahore Pakistan
Books;
Why I Am an Atheist, more
Siblings:
Kultar Singh, Bibi Amar Kaur, Rajinder Singh, more
Parents:Sardar
Kishan Singh Sandhu, Vidyavati
Education:
National College, Lahore Dayanand Anglo-Vedic Schools System
Achievements: Gave a
new direction to revolutionary movement in India, formed 'Naujavan Bharat
Sabha' to spread the message of revolution in Punjab, formed 'Hindustan
Samajvadi Prajatantra Sangha' along with Chandrasekhar Azad to establish a
republic in India, assassinated police official Saunders to avenge the death of
Lala Lajpat Rai, dropped bomb in Central Legislative Assembly along with
Batukeshwar Dutt.
Bhagat Singh was one of the most prominent faces of
Indian freedom struggle. He was a revolutionary ahead of his times. By
Revolution he meant that the present order of things, which is based on
manifest injustice must change. Bhagat Singh studied the European revolutionary
movement and was greatly attracted towards socialism. He realised that the
overthrow of British rule should be accompanied by the socialist reconstruction
of Indian society and for this political power must be seized by the workers.
Though portrayed as a terrorist by the British,
Sardar Bhagat Singh was critical of the individual terrorism which was
prevalent among the revolutionary youth of his time and called for mass
mobilization. Bhagat Singh gave a new direction to the revolutionary movement
in India. He differed from his predecessors on two counts. Firstly, he accepted
the logic of atheism and publicly proclaimed it. Secondly, until then
revolutionaries had no conception of post-independence society. Their immediate
goal was destruction of the British Empire and they had no inclination to work
out a political alternative. Bhagat Singh, because of his interest in studying
and his keen sense of history gave revolutionary movement a goal beyond the
elimination of the British. A clarity of vision and determination of purpose
distinguished Bhagat Singh from other leaders of the National Movement. He emerged
as the only alternative to Gandhi and the Indian National Congress, especially
for the youth.
Bhagat Singh was born in a Sikh family
in village Khatkar Kalan in Nawanshahar district of Punjab. The district has
now been renamed as Shaheed Bhagat Singh Nagar in his memory. He was the third
son of Sardar Kishan Singh and Vidyavati. Bhagat Singh's family was actively
involved in freedom struggle. His father Kishan Singh and uncle Ajit Singh were
members of Ghadr Party founded in the U.S to oust British rule from India.
Family atmosphere had a great effect on the mind of young Bhagat Singh and
patriotism flowed in his veins from childhood. While
studying at the local D.A.V. School in Lahore, in 1916, young Bhagat Singh came
into contact with some well-known political leaders like Lala Lajpat Rai and
Ras Bihari Bose. Punjab was politically very charged in those days. In 1919,
when Jalianwala Bagh massacre took place, Bhagat Singh was only 12 years old.
The massacre deeply disturbed him. On the next day of massacre Bhagat Singh
went to Jalianwala Bagh and collected soil from the spot and kept it as a
memento for the rest of his life. The massacre strengthened his resolve to
drive British out from India. In
response to Mahatma Gandhi's call for non-cooperation against British rule in
1921, Bhagat Singh left his school and actively participated in the movement.
In 1922, when Mahatma Gandhi suspended Non-cooperation movement against
violence at Chauri-chaura in Gorakhpur, Bhagat was greatly disappointed. His faith
in non violence weakened and he came to the conclusion that armed revolution
was the only practical way of winning freedom. To continue his studies, Bhagat
Singh joined the National College in Lahore, founded by Lala Lajpat Rai. At
this college, which was a centre of revolutionary activities, he came into
contact with revolutionaries such as Bhagwati Charan, Sukhdev and others. To
avoid early marriage, Bhagat Singh ran away from home and went to Kanpur. Here,
he came into contact with a revolutionary named Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi, and
learnt his first lessons as revolutionary. On hearing that his grandmother was
ill, Bhagat Singh returned home. He continued his revolutionary activities from
his village. He went to Lahore and formed a union of revolutionaries by name
'Naujavan Bharat Sabha'. He started spreading the message of revolution in
Punjab. In 1928 he attended a meeting of revolutionaries in Delhi and came into
contact with Chandrasekhar Azad. The two formed 'Hindustan Samajvadi
Prajatantra Sangha'. Its aim was to establish a republic in India by means of
an armed revolution. In
February 1928, a committee from England, called Simon Commission visited India.
The purpose of its visit was to decide how much freedom and responsibility
could be given to the people of India. But there was no Indian on the
committee. This angered Indians and they decided to boycott Simon Commission.
While protesting against Simon Commission in Lahore, Lala Lajpat Rai was
brutally Lathicharged and later on succumbed to injuries. Bhagat Singh was
determined to avenge Lajpat Rai's death by shooting the British official
responsible for the killing, Deputy Inspector General Scott. He shot down
Assistant Superintendent Saunders instead, mistaking him for Scott. Bhagat
Singh had to flee from Lahore to escape death punishment. Instead
of finding the root cause of discontent of Indians, the British government took
to more repressive measures. Under the Defense of India Act, it gave more power
to the police to arrest persons to stop processions with suspicious movements
and actions. The Act brought in the Central Legislative Assembly was defeated
by one vote. Even then it was to be passed in the form of an ordinance in the
"interest of the public." Bhagat Singh who was in hiding all this
while, volunteered to throw a bomb in the Central Legislative Assembly where
the meeting to pass the ordinance was being held. It was a carefully laid out
plot, not to cause death or injury but to draw the attention of the government,
that the modes of its suppression could no more be tolerated. It was decided
that Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt would court arrest after throwing the
bomb. On April 8, 1929 Bhagat Singh and
Batukeshwar Dutt threw bombs in the Central Assembly Hall while the Assembly
was in session. The bombs did not hurt anyone. After throwing the bombs, Bhagat
Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt, deliberately courted arrest by refusing to run away
from the scene. During his trial, Bhagat Singh refused to employ any defence
counsel. In jail, he went on hunger strike to protest the inhuman treatment of
fellow-political prisoners by jail authorities. On October 7, 1930 Bhagat
Singh, Sukh Dev and Raj Guru were awarded death sentence by a special tribunal.
Despite great popular pressure and numerous appeals by political leaders of
India, Bhagat Singh and his associates were hanged in the early hours of March
23, 1931.
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