
At 93, Babarao Durne
remembers the tumultuous action of the late 1930s as though it happened
yesterday.
"I was hurrying back home one late evening when I heard spirited slogans
and saw flames leaping up at a distance. Nearing the road intersection
in the main market, I saw crowds of men and women standing around a
bonfire - I instantly realized it was the bonfire of European clothes. I
threw my costly English cap in it as the people cheered and clapped..."
The oldest surviving freedom fighter of Nagpur, who spent his childhood
in Amravati nearby, continues wearing khadi he adopted that day as a
14-year-old boy-and he has not missed a single Independence Day function
since 1947.
The spirit of freedom struggle Babarao imbibed during those electrifying
days motivated him to plunge into the Quit India movement of 1942,
barely three months after his marriage and two years after he set up an
edible oil shop in Nagpur.
"So fired were the people
by Gandhiji's Civil Disobedience call - I remember he came twice to
Amravati and addressed two largely attended meetings - that they were
literally ready to do anything that the freedom struggle demanded,"
Babarao told IANS.
"It was a measure of the effect that Mahatma Gandhi's call for the
symbolic satyagraha had on people that a fistful of salt or a small
bundle of hay would fetch a price of Rs.10,000 in the auction," Durne
says, recalling the salt and jungle struggles of 1929.
The three days of Aug 13-15, 1942, when Nagpur (then exactly the
geographic centre of India) was on fire, are also etched in Babarao
Durne's memory. "Frenzied mobs set ablaze the Itwari police post, tried
to burn the city Kotwali and ransacked a bank near the Tilak statue in
the Mahal area resulting in the army being called... Several people died
in firing; we had a tough time rushing the injured on upturned cots
through narrow by-lanes to distant hospitals."
The freedom fighter bears the marks of two bullet injuries on his legs
and a deep scar of a lathi blow on his head as priceless ornaments. And
he regrets the fact that he was put in jail only for six months.
"Resurrecting the folded oil shop and restarting the stalled married
life was but a small price to pay for the freedom."
If Babarao Durne recalls the freedom struggle of which he was a part,
86-year old Annaji Annewar 'relives' the magical moments in Nagpur and
Bela village near it.
Oblivious of the present, the robust freedom fighter slips into a trance
that transports him to the village that declared itself 'freed' Aug 13,
1942.
"A mob of over 6,000 people stormed into the police station and took
control of it; then it marched to the government office and destroyed
the office records even as one of us hoisted our flag atop it," Annaji
reminisces. He remembers how he broke the lock of the police station's
strong room, took out two rifles and dozens of cartridges and deposited
them inside an adjacent temple.
"On being caught by the police a few days later, I said, 'Yes, I did it
and will keep doing it", he recalls.
"I gave the same answer to the magistrate and repeated it twice as he
rebuked me for my 'arrogance' and multiplied the (prison) sentence from
six months to 18 months."
Another prominent surviving freedom fighter of Nagpur, 86-year old
Hargovind Chourse is still active in public life. Chourse inherited
patriotic fervour from his father Keshavram, who was president of the
Beitul district Congress committee in old Madhya Pradesh.
Responding to Mahatma Gandhi's call in 1941, Hargovind, then 19, left
his college in Hoshangabad - he resumed studies later, earning three
masters degrees - and was jailed for participating in the satyagraha
against the British.
Next year, a brave Hargovind was a cynosure of all eyes when he unfurled
the tricolour in the midst of a 4,000-strong rally in Betul even as the
far outnumbered gun-toting cops watched helplessly.
Such 'notoriety' had the daredevil and his young group earned in the
eyes of the British rulers that they were trapped in a well-laid siege
and taken to Nagpur, then capital of the old Madhya Pradesh, in a
special military train.
Chourse has not forgotten the torture he and his friends were subjected
to.
"We were made to sleep bare-bodied on sheets of ice and denied any
clothes at all for demanding khadi garments. I was kept in solitary
confinement and provided meagre food for presenting the jailer a garland
of shoes," he says with pride.
August 15, 2007
60 Years of India's Independence
Freedom at Midnight by VK Joshi
Bombay Stock Exchange - Epitomizing India's Growth by
Nayanima Basu
Raising a Toast to the Indian Diaspora on Independence
Anniversary By Aroonim Bhuyan
The 60 Days to August 15, 1947 by Joydeep Gupta
When India Wears its Badge of Patriotism With Pride by
Anil Sharma
With Glimmer in Their Eyes, They Tell Tales of Valour by Shyam Pandharipande
Abdullah Paid for Favouring India's Secularism by Sarwar
Kashani
Confident India Pauses, Remembers, Moves Fast Forward
'Dear NRI Son', Writes Mother India, Aged 60 by Kul
Bhushan
Hope Floats in Kolkata's Heritage Zones by Sujoy Dhar
Post-Independence, India's Olympic Performance Dismal
From a 'Babu' to Being the Mahatma's Man by Papri Sri
Raman
A Historic Congress Session and Nagpur's Freedom Struggle
by Shyam Pandharipande
Booming India Key to Global Economic Growth by Joydeep
Gupta
That Blissful Dawn, Those Ringing Headlines by Manish
Chand
The Milestones of Independent India by Joydeep Gupta
60 Sporting Reasons to celebrate India at 60 by Qaiser
Mohammad Ali
A Midnight's Child Wishes Empowerment for Rural Women by
Prashant K. Nanda
Revolutionary Who Kept Death at Bay till August 15, 1947
by R.K. Parashar
60 Years After Partition US De-hyphenates India, Pakistan
by Arun Kumar
Nehru's Memorable Dawn of Independence Speech
India at 60: A Remarkable Success Story by Amulya Ganguly
At Wagah Border, A Sea Change in 60 Years by Jaideep
Sarin
India is a Model for Universal Brotherhood, says Maulana
Parekh by Shyam Pandharipande
Indian Science Conquers New Frontiers
Sixty Years and a Life of Empowerment by Azera Rahman
Six Decades of Dynamic Filmmaking in India by Prithwish
Ganguly
An Asian City Rises, But Old Charms Fade by Fakir Balaji
and V.S. Karnic
Indian Women Still Have Miles to Go by Liz Mathew
60 Years of India-Britain Ties: Onwards and Upwards by
Prasun Sonwalkar
60 Years After Partition, 'Home' Still Beckons by Azera
Rahman
Shimla - More Than Just Raj Nostalgia by Baldev S.
Chauhan
In 60 Years, Bhagat Singh's Village is Modern and Completely
NRI by Jaideep Sarin
I celebrate Independence Day, Not my Birthday: Rakhee by
Aparna
Where August 15 Only Ignites Fear, Sorrow by Syed Zarir
Hussain
Another Special Birthday for Miss Independence by Shyam
Pandharipande
When Kashmiri Peasants Got the Land They Tilled by F.
Ahmed
Painful Memories for Erstwhile Hyderabad State by
Mohammed Shafeeq
Fighting for a
Better India - Six Decades and Counting by Jatindra Dash
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