Saswat
Panigrahi - September 10, 2016, 11:45 am
Exactly 101 years ago, on this day, the nationalist-revolutionary succumbed to severe bullet injuries in Balasore hospital following a gallant battle with the British-controlled police.
Indian history has discounted the significant contributions of Bagha Jatin towards the freedom movement, thanks to the Left-leaning historiographers. This, despite the fact that there is no dearth of well documented historical records available on the vast revolution the great freedom fighter had conceived!
Much before India won its independence
in 1947, there was an attempt under the leadership of Jatin in 1915 to pull the
country out of slavery by means of armed insurrection. Jatin’s efforts can also
be taken as a precursor to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s armed struggle to throw
British out of India.
Exactly 101 years ago, on 10 September
, the nationalist-revolutionary succumbed to severe bullet injuries in Balasore
hospital following a gallant battle with police.
From Kaya in Bangladesh to Chasakhand
in Odisha’s Balasore, Jatin lives on in the hearts of millions. He was indeed
an inspiration to Bangabandhu Mujibur Rahman in his fight against Pakistani
army during the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971.
Born in Kaya village in Kushtia
district of the undivided Bengal, part of present day Bangladesh, in 1887,
Jatin kindled the flame of revolution against the colonial British rule in the
Indian subcontinent. Jatin envisioned a modern India – politically free,
economically prosperous and spiritually progressive. His vision was far ahead
of his times.
The epithet ‘Bagha Jatin’ was earned by
young Jatindranath Mukherjee in 1904 when he fought with a Royal Bengal tiger
all alone for three hours and killed it using a dagger.
Birth of Jugantar
As a college student Jatindranath
joined a relief camp organised by Sister Nivedita, the Irish disciple of Swami
Vivekananda. She introduced him to Vivekananda. And it was Swami Vivekananda
who instructed Jatindranath to take up the mission to bring together dedicated
youth with “iron muscle” and “nerves of steel” who could plunge into the
service of the motherland.
Later, his meeting with Sri Aurobindo
ignited his fervour for revolution against the British further. It was Sri
Aurobindo who entrusted him to create a “secret society” for training dedicated
youth for a revolution against the British. That secret society was known as
Jugantar and Bagha Jatin became its commander-in-chief.
The nation was seething with discontent
against the British Raj. It was at that time, Jatin’s clarion call “Amra
morbo, jagat jagbe” (We shall die to awaken the nation) evoked the growing
currents of India nationalism. Thousands of restless youth joined Jatin’s brand
of freedom movement.
Jugantar soon became a pan-India
movement. The Jugantar Party successfully set up its units across India and
even spread far across South-East Asia, Europe and America.
It was an era of Indian liberation
movement where cultural nationalism and socialism had a rare blend in the focal
point of revolution against the British.
Armed Insurrection Against British
There is no dispute that in the war of
Indian independence, Jatin proudly took the path of violence and dedicated
himself to the cause of Purna Swaraj (total independence) as opposed to
the framework of Indian National Congress.
The year was 1914 when the First World
War broke out. Believing in ‘my enemy’s enemy is my friend’, Jatin
looked towards Germany as a land of hope. In 1912, Jatin approached the German
Crown Prince for the delivery of arms for an insurrection in order to create a
socialist government in India.
The task of obtaining funds and
armaments were entrusted upon MN Roy, the key lieutenant of Jatin. In April,
1915, Roy left India in search of German armaments which were believed to be en
route, somewhere in the Pacific. The plan was indeed fantastic. As Roy had
later recounted in his posthumously published memoirs:
The plan was to use German ships
interned in a port at the northern tip of Sumatra, to storm the Andaman Islands
and free and arm the prisoners there, and land the army of liberation on the
Orissa coast. The ships were armoured, as many big German vessels were, ready
for wartime use. They also carried several guns. The crew was composed of naval
ratings. They had to escape from the internment camp, seize the ships, and
sail... Several hundred rifles and other small arms with an adequate supply of
ammunition could be acquired through Chinese smugglers who would get then on
board the ships.
Odisha’s Balasore coast was selected as
the place where shipload of arms consignment from Germany was supposed to be
delivered.
Battle of Balasore
Jatin, along with his followers, were
sheltered in a hideout at Kaptipada village in Mayurbhanj district of Odisha –
situated in the vicinity of Balasore – to receive the shipload of arms
consignments from Germany.
Destiny, however, intervened. It is
said that EV Voska, a Czech spy, had accessed the plan of delivering the
Germany consignments at India’s east coast and sold the information to the
British. Reports further suggest that the very German agent – who was tasked to
oversee the arms consignment – had turned into a double agent and informed the
British. Though Jatin was told that a cargo of arms and ammunition was already
on its way, the consignment never reached Indian shores.
As soon as the information reached the
British authorities, they swiftly swung into action. Meanwhile, Jatin and his
followers reached Balasore walking through the tough terrain of Mayurbhanj for
two days. They took position on a hillock at Chashakhand village in Balasore. A
large contingent of British Police – headed by top European police officers from
Calcutta and Balasore – and reinforced by army unit from Bhadrak’s Chandbali
approached the revolutionaries in a pincers movement.
While the British side was armed with
highly sophisticated rifles, Jatin and his team fought with Mauser pistols. The
gunfight lasted for two hours. There were significant causalities on the
British side also.
Jatin was seriously wounded in the
battle and the next day he succumbed to injuries in Balasore city hospital.
Praises For The Courageous Bagha
Jatin
Although the armed uprising could not
take off, Jatin’s martyrdom and the battle of Balasore galvanised the fight
against the British Raj.
It is pertinent to mention that Jatin’s
mounting serial attacks on British Raj shook the colonial administration in
London. British records suggest that Earl of Minto and Charles Hardinge – two
consecutive governor-generals of India – had shown their desperate concern
about the rise of Jugantar movement under the leadership of Jatin.
During the Indo-German conspiracy
trail, this is what the prosecuting British official had remarked on Jatin:
Were this man living, he might lead the
world.
Struck by his heroism, Charles Augustus
Tegart, then top colonial police officer in India, wrote:
Bagha
Jatin, the Bengali revolutionary, is one of the most selfless political workers
in India. His driving power (…) immense: if an army could be raised or arms
could reach an Indian port, the British would lose the war.
Augustus Tegart had once told his
colleagues:
If
Bagha Jatin was an Englishman, then the English people would have built his
statue next to Nelson’s at Trafalgar Square.
MN Roy, the revolutionary who had
worked closely with Jatin, wrote:
All
dadas practised magnetism; only Jatin Mukherjee possessed it.
Historian Prithwin Mukherjee – the
grandson of Jatin – who vividly chronicled the detailed vignettes of the great
freedom fighter from his birth until his death wrote:
Bagha
Jatin chose to suffer and taught his followers to do so in the name of a future
of India where citizens would be happy and prosperous in the midst of the other
free nations.
Mahatma Gandhi had described Jatin as a
‘divine personality’.
Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee wrote:
Jatindranath
was the well-known and principal leader of the second episode in the history of
the revolutionary movement who belonged to that band of fighters, who had
written a blood-red chapter of their country’s fight for freedom. Sacrificing
all they had… they rushed to the ritual call of death and, inch by inch, by
shedding their lives, they had left for us the relish of a greater life.
Referring to the Battle of Balasore –
where Jatin fought valourly – renowned author Hirendranath Mukherjee wrote:
The
Balasore battle where Jatin, with select comrades, laid down his life remains a
luminous landmark in India’s struggle for freedom from British imperialist
subjugations.
Noted author Ajoy Chandra Banerjee
wrote:
At
a time when conventional India nationalism could not even contemplate India’s
independence, Jatin was a believer of total freedom.
According to Raymond Aron, eminent
French historian, Jatin embodies the “thinker in action” who furnishes the
“missing link” in modern history.
“India has to rise with her own
strength,” Jatin once famously declared. It was in his philosophies and
thoughts that the vocabularies of revolutionary ideas were rooted.
Living for a short span of 36 years,
Jatin left his footprints on the sands of time. His legacy will stay on to
guide the nation, nationalism and nationhood.
http://swarajyamag.com/culture/bagha-jatin-the-bengal-tiger-whom-the-british-feared
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