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Recently, the Prime Minister paid tribute to Vinayak Damodar Savarkar on his 138th birth anniversary.
About Vinayak Damodar Savarkar
- Early Life
- He was born in a Hindu Marathi family in Nashik, Maharashtra on May 28, 1883.
- He was nicknamed ‘Veer’ for his courage from an early age .
- He , popularly known as Swatantryaveer Savarkar,
- He was a freedom fighter, politician, lawyer, writer, social reformer, and institutor of Hindutva ideology.
- He was heavily influenced by his older brother Ganesh Savarkar.
Image Courtesy:Cultural India
- Contribution in Freedom Struggle
- Association with Abhinav Bharat Society and Free India Society
- He established a secret organization called Abhinav Bharat Society in 1904 with his brother, Ganesh Damodar Savarkar.
- He was associated with India House and founded student societies like Free India Society.
- Propagated the idea of Swadeshi
- Savarkar was against foreign goods and propagated the idea of Swadeshi. In 1905, he burnt all the foreign goods in a bonfire on Dussehra.
- Armed revolt against British
- He was arrested in 1909 on charges of plotting an armed revolt against the Morley-Minto reform. In 1910, he was arrested over his associations with revolutionary group India House.
- He was sentenced to two life sentences i.e. 50 years in the cellular jail of Andamans, also known as Kala Pani, in 1911.
- He was released in 1924 under strict conditions of not participating in politics for 5 years.
- As the President of the Hindu Mahasabha.
- He was a nationalist and one of the most important figures of the Hindu Mahasabha (“Great Society of Hindus”), a Hindu nationalist organization and political party.
- He also served as the President of the Hindu Mahasabha for seven years.He endorsed the idea of a Hindu Rashtra (Hindu nation).
- Association with Abhinav Bharat Society and Free India Society
- Formation of Mitra Mela
- In his teenage years, Savarkar formed a youth organization. Known as Mitra Mela (Group of Friends), this organization was put into place to bring in national and revolutionary ideas.
- Untouchability
- He started one of the most powerful social reform movements against untouchability in India”,He built the Patit Pavan Mandir in the Ratnagiri district to allow entry to all Hindus, including Dalits.
- Writing
- He wrote ‘The Indian War of Independence, 1857‘ during his jail time.
- In the book, he indicated the view that the Indian Mutiny of 1857 was the first expression of Indian mass rebellion against British colonial rule.
- He also wrote Hindutva: Who Is a Hindu? coining the term Hindutva (“Hinduness’ ‘), which sought to define Indian culture as a manifestation of Hindu values; this concept grew to become a major tenet of Hindu nationalist ideology.
- He also founded the two-nation theory in his book ‘Hindutva’ calling Hindus and Muslims two separate nations. In 1937, Hindu Mahasabha passed it as a resolution.
- He wrote ‘The Indian War of Independence, 1857‘ during his jail time.
- Ideology
- He was instrumental in forming the idea of a Hindu nation before Independence.
- He also championed atheism and rationality and also disapproved orthodox Hindu belief. He even dismissed cow worship as superstitious.
- Views on Quit India Movement of 1942
- He opposed the Quit India Movement of 1942.
- He was accused of having a role in the conspiracy to assassinate Mahatma Gandhi, but was later acquitted by the court.
- Death
- It was in 1964, when Savarkar declared his wish to attain Samadhi and started hunger-strike on February 1, 1966 and passed away on February 26, 1966.
- He believed that his purpose of life was solved as India gained Independence.
- In 2002, Port Blair airport at Andaman and Nicobar Islands was renamed Veer Savarkar International Airport.
- Book on him
- Historian Vikram Sampath’s concluding volume on the life and works of Veer Savarkar will hit the stands on July 26.
- The book, titled “Savarkar: A contested Legacy (1924-1966).
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