Birsa Munda is a famous person who greatly shaped India’s battle against the British despite his brief 25-year life. Recognized as a major symbol of resistance against British imperialism in India is a young freedom warrior and a vanvasi leader noted for his activities in the late nineteenth century. Munda tribe’s famed spiritual leader and tribal freedom fighter Birsa Munda.
Leading a huge tribal movement among Indian communities that developed in the tribal regions of current-day Odisha, Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, and Chhattisgarh in the late 1800s under British administration, Birsa Munda is a major Indian vanvasi figure fighting the British. Munda inspired several tribes including not only Mundas but also Kharias and Oraons, who viewed him their leader.
Born on November 15, 1875, Birsa Munda came from a Munda household in Ulihatu, under the Bengal Presidency (currently in Jharkhand). Growing up impoverished in a traditional tribal community, Munda embraced Christianity and adopted the name Birsa David in order to attend missionary school. Munda began to see the kind of exploitation the British had inflicted on the native tribes.
British agricultural policies caused major upheaval that damaged the life conditions of these tribal groups, so disrupting their customary way of living, which was formerly harmonic with nature. Both British economic and political policies, along with the antagonistic religious and cultural attitudes of Christian missionaries that eroded the tribal societies and their customs, helped to fuel their revolt against British government.
Birsa Munda spent an extended stay at Chaibasa, close to the hub of the Sardars’ agitation, from 1886 to 1890. Birsa was quite engaged in the fight against British domination of tribal people as he left Chaibasa in 1890. The Mundas’ uprising was sparked by British agricultural policies. The Mundas had followed the Khunkhatti approach of group land ownership.
The British substituted this with the Zamindari System, opening up tribal areas to outsiders. The advent of outsiders, sponsored by the British, resulted in the exploitation of the indigenous peoples. Mundas, formerly landowners, were rapidly forced laborers, which exacerbated poverty and suffering. Birsa Munda announced Ulgulan, or rebellion against the British and the Dikus the aliens, in 1894 in reaction to the introduction of the Zamindari system or permanent settlement in tribal areas.
In these areas, he swiftly came to be known as Birsa Bhagwan, and many tribal people began following Munda. Birsa Munda began to awaken the populace in 1894 and organized them against British domination. The mass’s new leader drew not just the tribals but also several other Hindus and Muslims. Birsa Munda traveled from one village to another to help the public become more knowledgeable.
He announced the conclusion of Victorian control and declared the onset of Munda governance. He coordinated a successful campaign in which individuals ceased paying taxes to the British. The Christian missionaries felt uneasy as Birsa was turning into an obstacle to the process of conversion. Numerous individuals within Christianity also started to associate with Mundas.
In 1895, he was detained and freed after a period of two years. Following his release in 1897, Munda reignited the movement by restructuring the tribal communities. Munda went into hiding and planted the seeds of rebellion against the British. By 1899, he had assembled a formidable army with adequate training for the tribal troops. On December 24, 1899, Munda initiated an assault on police stations and churches, resulting in the deaths of several policemen. The invigorated tribal rebellion had extended to nearly the whole Chhota Nagpur area.
Birsa Munda urged a strong fight against the British and assaulted the areas loyal to them for the following two years. The British troops exerted all their strength to quell the uprising and launched intense assaults against Munda guerrillas. The British assaulted the tribes and took the lives of hundreds. Birsa strategically withdrew to the hills of Singhbhum. The British at Chakradharpur’s Jamkopai forest on February 3, 1900, finally arrested Birsa Munda.
While imprisoned in Ranchi jail at just 25, Birsa Munda passed away on June 9, 1900. Although this is disputed, authorities claimed he died of cholera. Though left Marxist historians have purposefully reduced Birsa Munda’s relevance to advance their ideological objectives, he still inspires the people 125 years after his death.
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