Remembering Chandra Shekhar Azad: The fearless son of Bharat Mata

Published by
Aniket Raja

Children, the liberties we enjoy in Independent Bharat have not come to us on a platter. A lot of sacrifices were made by our countrymen to achieve this. And now we have got so inclined towards the western culture that we don’t find it necessary to remember the contribution made by the shinning stars of Bharat. Chandra Shekhar was one of such star whose death anniversary falls on February 27.

Popularly known as Azad (“The Liberated”), Chandra Shekhar Azad was an Indian revolutionary who reorganised the Hindustan Republican Association under the new name of Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA) after the death of its founder, Ram Prasad Bismil.

Early life

Chandra Shekhar was born on July 23, 1906 in village Bhavra in Jhabua district of Madhya Pradesh to Pandit Sita Ram Tiwari and Jagrani Devi. He received his early education in Bhavra.

Just like any other parents his mother wanted her son to be a great Sanskrit scholar and persuaded his father to send him to Kashi Vidyapeeth, Banarasto study. In December 1921, when Gandhiji launched the Non-Cooperation Movement, Chandra Shekhar, then a 15-year old student, was so facinated by it that he joined it.

When arrested and produced before the magistrate, instead of telling his true name, i.e. Chandra Shekhar Tiwari he gave his name as ‘Azad’, his father’s name as ‘Swatantra’ and his residence as ‘prison’. The provoked magistrate sentenced him to fifteen lashes of flogging and sentenced him to fifteen-day imprisonment.

Revolutionary life

After withdrawal of the Non-Cooperation Movement in 1922, Azad was attracted towards revolutionary activities. He joined the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA) and believed that India’s future lay in socialism. He met a young revolutionary, Pranvesh Chatterji, who introduced him to Ram Prasad Bismil who had formed the Hindustan Republican Association (HRA), a revolutionary organisation. Azad was impressed with the aim of HRA, i.e., an Independent India with equal rights and opportunity to everyone without discrimination of caste, creed, religion or social status. On introduction, Bismil was impressed by Azad, when Azad reportedly put his hand over a lamp and did not remove it till his skin burnt. He then became an active member of the HRA.

Most of his revolutionary activities were against the British Government and were planned and executed from Shahjahanpur which was also the hometown of Ram Prasad. He was involved in numerous such activities like the Kakori Train Robbery (1926), the attempt to blowup the Viceroy’s train (1926) and the shooting of John Poyantz Saunders at Lahore (1928) to avenge the killing of Lala Lajpat Rai. Despite being a member of Congress, Motilal Nehru regularly gave funds in support of the cause for which Azad was fighting.

Activities in Jhansi

Azad made Jhansi his organisation’s hub for some time. He used the forest of Orchha, situated 15 kilometres from Jhansi, as a site for shooting practice and, being an expert marksman, he trained other members of his group. Near the forest he built a hut near to a Hanuman Temple on the banks of the Satar River. He lived there under the alias of Pandit Harishankar Brahmachari for a long period, and started teaching children from the nearby village of Dhimarpura. In this way he managed to establish good rapport with the local residents. The village Dhimarpura was renamed as Azadpura by the Madhya Pradesh Government.

While living in Jhansi, he also learned to drive a car at Bundelkhand Motor Garage in Sadar Bazar. Sadashivrao Malkapurkar, Vishwanath Vaishampayan and Bhagwan Das Mahaur came in close contact with him and became an integral part of his revolutionary group.

With Bhagat Singh

In the aftermath of the Kakori train robbery in 1925, the British clamped down on revolutionary activities. Prasad, Ashfaqulla Khan, Thakur Roshan Singh and Rajendra Nath Lahiri were sentenced to death for their participation. Azad, Keshab Chakravarthy and Murari Sharma evaded capture. Chandra Shekhar Azad later reorganised the HRA with the help of revolutionaries like Sheo Verma and Mahaveer Singh. Azad was also a close associate of Bhagwati Charan Vohra who along with Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru, helped him to transform the HRA into the HSRA in 1928 so as to achieve their primary aim of an Independent India based on socialist principle.

Martyrdom

In the last week of February 1931, Azad went to Allahabad where on February 27, 1931 he went to Alfred Park (now called Chandrashekhar Azad Park) to meet a revolutionary colleague, Sukhdev Raj. The police was notified of his location by an informer. Faced with armed police, Azad fired upon them. He was wounded in the process of killing three policemen and wounding some others. His actions made it possible for Sukhdev Raj to escape. After a long shootout, holding true to his pledge to never be captured alive, he shot himself dead with the last bullet of his pistol. The Colt Pistol of Chandra Shekhar Azad is displayed at the Allahabad Museum.

The body was sent to Rasulabad Ghat for cremation without informing general public. As it came to light, people surrounded the park where the incident had taken place. They made slogans against the British rule and grieved the death of a true son of the soil, Azad.

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