Unsung Heroes of Freedom Movement

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Unsung Heroes of the Freedom Movement from Maharashtra

(Past and present)

Anant Laxman Kanhere (1892 -1910) was an Indian independence fighter


from Nashik. On 21 December 1909, he shot dead
the Collector of Nashik in British India. The murder of Jackson was an important
event in the history of Nashik and the Indian revolutionary movement
in Maharashtra. He was prosecuted in Bombay court and hanged in the Thane
Prison on 19 April 1910, aged just 18.

Babu Genu(1908 -1930) was an India freedom fighter and revolutionary. On


12 December 1930, a cloth merchant named George Frazier of Manchester was
moving loads of foreign-made cloth from his shop in old Hanuman galli in
the Fort region to Mumbai Port. He was given police protection as per his
request. The activists begged not to move the truck, but the police forced the
protesters aside and managed to get the truck moving. Near Bhaangwadi on
Kalbadevi Road, Shahid Babu Genu stood in front of the truck, shouting praises
for Mahatma Gandhi. The police officer ordered the driver to drive the truck
over Shahid Babu Genu, but the driver was Indian, so refused, saying: "I am
Indian and he is also Indian, So, we both are the brothers of each other, then how can I murder my
brother?". After that, the English police officer sat on the driver seat and drove the truck over Babu
Genu and crushed him to death under the truck. This resulted in a huge wave of anger, strikes, and
protests throughout Mumbai.

# Babu Shedmake (1833–1858) was an Indian pro-independence rebel and


a Gond chieftain from Central India. During the Indian Rebellion of 1857, he
led the revolt in Chanda district. Born in a Gond zamindar family, he fought
multiple battles against the British in a period of seven months in 1858. He
was eventually captured and hanged for rebellion against the British
government. Baburao Shedmake's life and his revolt against foreign rule are
still celebrated by the Gond community. A sobriquet veer, i.e. brave, is added to
his name as a mark of his bravery. His birth and death anniversaries are
observed annually throughout Gondwana region.
(# Why important : Being a prominent tribal chieftain of the Gond community. Maharashtra’s Birsa
Munda)
# Baiza Bai: (1784-1863) Baiza Bai was born in Kagal, Kolhapur,
Maharashtra in 1784. In February 1798 in Poona, at the age of 14, she was
married to Daulat Rao Scindia, the ruler of Gwalior. She was known as a
superb horsewoman, and had been trained to fight with a sword and spear.
She accompanied her husband during the Maratha wars with the British,
and she fought against Arthur Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington, at
the Battle of Assaye. During the British campaign against the Pindaris, she
had urged her husband to support the Peshwa Baji Rao II against them. When Daulat Rao submitted
to British demands, she even left him briefly, accusing him of cowardice. She was also fiercely
opposed to the Scindia surrender of Ajmer to the British. Baiza Bai died in Gwalior in 1863.
(#Why important : Being a warrior queen who fought against the army of Arthur Wellesley)

Chapekar brothers – Damodar, Balakrishna and Vasudev were involved in


the murder of W. C. Rand, the British plague commissioner of Pune. A Special
Plague Committee was formed, under the chairmanship of Walter Charles
Rand, an Indian Civil Services officer. Troops were brought in to deal with the
emergency. The measures employed included entry into private houses,
stripping and examination of occupants (including women) by British officers
in public, evacuation to hospitals and segregation camps and preventing
movement from the city. These measures were considered oppressive by the
populace of Pune and complaints were ignored by Rand. On 22 June 1897,
the Diamond Jubilee of the coronation of Queen Victoria, Rand and his military escort Lt. Ayerst
were shot while returning from the celebrations at Government House. All three brothers were
found guilty and hanged in 1899 (Chapekar Brothers story is reasonably well known)

Godavari Parulekar (1907- 1996) was the first woman law graduate in
Maharashtra. She was active in the student movement against British rule
and was irresistibly drawn to the freedom struggle and plunged into
individual satyagraha, for which she was convicted by the British regime in
1932. Godavari then came to Mumbai, where she took up social service in the
Servants of India Society, founded by Gopal Krishna Gokhale in 1905, in the
early 1930s. She became the first woman to be inducted as a life member of
the Society. She was influenced by Marxist ideologies and led the armed
struggle for the liberation of Dadra and Nagar Haveli from Portuguese rule and the Warli Adivasi
Revolt in 1945.
Krishnaji Gopal Karve (1887-1910) was a member of the Abhinav Bharat
Society in Nashik. On 21 December 1909, he along with Anant Laxman
Kanhere shotdead Arthur Jackson, the Collector of Nashik. He was sentenced
to death in the Bombay high court and hanged in Thane Jail on 19 April 1910.

# Lahuji Vastaad or Lahuji Raghoba Salve (1794-1881) was a Dalit activist,


preacher and freedom fighter. He learnt wrestling from his father and he
became an expert wrestler, which eventually conferred him the title of
‘Vastaad’ (or master). He owned a gymnasium at Ganj peth in Pune where he
also taught martial arts to many reknowed people and also acted as a mentor
preaching the need for Indian freedom from British Raj and the upliftment of
untouchables. Lahuji got acquainted with Jyotirao Phule’s work for the
liberation of depressed classes by educating them and joined his Satyashodhak Samaj.
(# Why important : Being one of the first Dalit independence activists)

Madhavrao Bagal (1895-1986) was among the front runner leaders, who
spearheaded the agitation for independence of India and especially merger
of Kolhapur State into the Union of India. He was arrested with several of
his compatriots like Ratnappa Kumbhar, Dinakar Desai, Nanasaheb
Jagadale, R. D. Minche and others. He joined Indian National Congress in
mid-1930s, disillusioned by pro-British politics played by older leaders of
peasants movement like Bhaskarrao Jadhav, with whom Madhavrao had
started agricultural co-operative societies in Kolhapur and adjoining regions.[10] During 1940-47, he
was closely working with leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Vallabhbhai Patel, Jawaharlal Nehru.[
#. Madhav Shrihari Aney (1880 –1968) popularly called Loknayak Bapuji
Aney , was an ardent educationist, freedom fighter, statesman, a modern
Sanskrit poet and a politician. He was one of the founder of the Congress
Nationalist Party along with Madan Mohan Malaviya. He was first among the
eminent disciples of Lokmanya Tilak and after Tilak’s death accepted the
leadership of Mahatma Gandhi . He disapproved Congress throwing itself
in Khilafat Movement and warned against excessive wooing of Muslims at the
cost of national interests. Mahatma Gandhi admiring his calm logic, confided
in him and often sought his counsel. He was chosen to arbitrate the disputes between Subhash
Chandra Bose and Jatindra Mohan Sengupta.
(#Why important : For being the confidant of Mahatma Gandhi and a voice of reason)

Nagnath Naikwadi (1922–2012), popularly known as Krantiveer Nagnath


anna, was an Indian independence activist, social worker, politician and
educationist, known for his revolutionary activism during the Indian
independence struggle. During the early 1940s, Naikwadi and his colleagues
resorted to armed conflict against the British colonial authorities. In order to
raise funds for the movement, his group robbed a government treasury
in Dhule and supported the insurgency against the Nizam of
Hyderabad. During one of his skirmishes with the British police, he was caught after being injured
[3]

by a bullet. While in custody at Satara jail, he staged a jailbreak with his fellow activists. The British
colonial government announced a reward on his head but Naikwadi managed to stay underground
for four years.[2] In 1943, along with Nana Patil, Kisanrao Ahir and a few others, he declared a
parallel government, Prati Sarkar, which operated in around 150 villages in the western
Maharashtra region which included Satara and Sangli.[3]

# Nana Patil, popularly known as Krantisinh was an Indian independence


activist. He was a founder member of the Hindustan Republican
Association who went underground between 1929 and 1932. Patil was
imprisoned eight or nine times during the struggle with the British Raj from
1932 to 1942. He was the leader of the ‘Satara Parallel
Government’ in Maharashtra from August 1943 to May 1946
against British rule. It was an armed offshoo t of the 1942 Quit
India movement, like the parallel governments in Midnapore in Bengal, Bhagalpur in
Bihar, Ballia in Uttar Pradesh and Basudevpur in Odisha. Later on he joined the
Communist movement.
(#Why important : For leading the Satara Parallel Gov t during British rule)
# Pandurang Mahadev Bapat (1880-1967) A maverick freedom
fighter who both supported and challenged Mahatma Gandhi, Bapat
earned the moniker of ‘Senapati’ when he fought for the rights of
farmers during the Mulshi satyagraha in 1921. During his stay in
Britain, he was associated with India House, spending a majority of his
time learning bomb-making skills instead of pursuing his official
studies. He became associated at this time with the Savarkar
brothers, Vinayak and Ganesh. While in hiding after the Alipore
bombing of 1908, Bapat travelled the country and discovered that the
majority of the Indian population did not realize that their country
was under foreign rule. At this point, his focus shifted from
overthrowing the British government to educating the population. On 15 August 1947 — Indian
Independence Day — Bapat was given the honour of raising the Indian national flag over the city
of Poona for the first time.
(#Why important : For being both a supporter and challenger of Mahatma Gandhi)

Pandurang Sadashiv Khankhoje (1884 –1967) was an Indian


revolutionary, scholar, agricultural scientist and historian who was
among the founding fathers of the Ghadar Party. Khankhoje's earliest
nationalist work abroad dates back to the time around 1908 when he,
along with Pandit Kanshi Ram founded the Indian Independence League
in Portland, Oregon. His works also brought him close to other Indian
nationalists in United States at the time, including Tarak Nath Das. In the
years preceding World War I, Khankhoje was one of the founding
members of the Pacific coast Hindustan association, and subsequently
founded the Ghadar Party. He was at the time one of the most influential
members of the party.

Prabhakar Kunte (1922-2012) joined the Indian National


Congress and was active in Quit India movement in 1942, and was
imprisoned by British regime. He was a leading trade union leader
and was elected to the Bombay Municipal corporation. He actively
participated in the Samyukta Maharashtra agitation (1955–1960)
and the liberation of Goa (1961).
Raghoji Bhangre (1805-1848) was an Indian Revolutionary who
challenged and defied the British power in Maharashtra. He was the son
of Ramji Rao Bhangre a Koli who also resisted the British rule and was
subsequently hanged in Cellular Jail. He had killed a British Officer and
10 constables in an ambush in 1844.

# Rama Khandwala (born 1926) is India's oldest tour guide and the
oldest living member of the Rani Jhansi Regiment formed by Subhas
Chandra Bose during India's freedom movement. Films Division has
made a documentary on Rama Khandwala in 2019.
(#Why important : for being the oldest living member of INA founded by
Subhash Chandra Bose)

Capt. Rambhhau Lad (1926 - ) ' led the Toofan Sena which was the
armed wing of the Prati Sarkar in Satara - an astonishing chapter in
India’s struggle for freedom. The prati sarkar, headed by the
legendary Krantisinh Nana Patil, functioned as a parallel government
in the villages it controlled. It organised the supply and distribution
of foodgrain, set up a market structure and ran a judicial system. It
also penalised moneylenders, pawnbrokers and landlord
collaborators of the Raj, The Toofan Sena conducted daring strikes
on imperial armouries, trains, treasuries and post offices.
# Shirishkumar Mehta (1926-1942) was an Indian freedom fighter
and the youngest independence activist to be martyred at the age of 15.
Mahatma Gandhi started the Quit India movement against the British in
1942. Shirishkumar was leading a procession protesting against the
government in Nandurbar. The police had set up barricades at Mangal
Bazar area. The police launched a Lathi charge on the protesters as soon
as procession reached them. Shirishkumar had the Tiranga, the Indian
national flag and the slogan was 'Vande Mataram'. The police opened fire
when their lathi charge could not stop the procession. Shirishkumar was
killed on the spot.
(# Why important : For being the youngest martyr of Quit India Movement at age 15)

Shivram Bhiku Murkar was born in Dabhol village in taluka Dapoli,


district Ratnagiri. He actively participated in the freedom struggle, the
record of which is lost in time. as he worked in fisheries and had to deal
with ports every day, he received secret messages that came via the sea
route and passed on to his revolutionary comrades, including the ones
underground. He was arrested by the British in Mumbai in 1930. He was
arrested because he helped hiding the revolutionaries. He was sentenced
to a prison life of around 2 – 3 years.

Swami Ramanand Tirtha (1903 –1972) was


an Indian freedom fighter, educator and social activist who led
the Hyderabad liberation struggle during the reign of Osman Ali Khan, the
last Nizam of Hyderabad State. Swami Ramanand Tirtha was the principal
leader of the Hyderabad State Congress. Before taking Sanyasa, his family
name was Vyenkatesh Bhagvanrao Khedgikar. The state university in
Nanded is named after him. (Reasonably well known. Nanded University is
named after him)
Umaji Naik (1791-1832) was an Indian revolutionary from Pune was one
of the earliest freedom fighter of India who challenged the British rule in
India around 1826 to 1832.He fought against East India
company and company rule. Soon after the fall of Maratha Empire Umaji
raised a tiny army against the British. His anti-British manifesto asked the
country-men to fight against the foreign rulers. To capture him, the British
Government announced a bounty of 10,000 rupees. Betrayed Nana Raghu
Chavan British arrested him, enquired then hold him guilty and hanged till
death on 3 Feb 1834.

Vasudev Balwant Phadke (1845 –1883) was an Indian independence


activist and revolutionary who sought India's independence from
the British Raj. With the help of the Koli, Bhil and Dhangar communities in
the region, he formed a revolutionary group of the Ramoshi people. The
group started an armed struggle to overthrow the British Raj, launching
raids on rich English businessmen to obtain funds for the purpose. Phadke
came to prominence when he got control of the city of Pune for a few days
after catching British soldiers off-guard during one of a surprise attacks.
Phadke was transported to jail at Aden, but escaped from the prison by
taking the door off from its hinges on 13 February 1883. He was soon
recaptured and then went on a hunger strike, dying on 17 February 1883.
(Reasonably well known)

Vishnu Ganesh Pingle (1888 –1915) was an Indian revolutionary and a


member of the Ghadar Party . Pingle and a number of other Ghadarites
including Kartar Singh Sarabha, Harnam Singh and Bhai
Paramanand were tried in the Lahore Conspiracy trial in April 1915 by a
special tribunal constituted under the Defence of India Act 1915, for
their roles in the February plot.] Pingle was executed by hanging at
the Lahore Central Jail on 16 November 1915, along with Kartar Singh.
3 Places associated with freedom struggle

Satara : The Satara parallel government in Maharashtra from August 1943 to May 1946
against British rule was a legendary chapter in the glorious freedom struggle of India.
It was an armed offshoot of the 1942 Quit India movement, like the parallel
governments in Midnapore in Bengal, Bhagalpur in Bihar, Ballia in Uttar Pradesh and
Basudevpur in Odisha. British rule was effectively overthrown in large parts of Satara
district (now bifurcated into Satara and Sangli districts) of western Maharashtra
during those three years. The parallel government (prati sarkar) movement was a
guerrilla type of struggle, and it operated in over 250 villages with solid peasant
support. There were raids on taluka treasuries and armouries. The prati sarkar took
over many of the functions of the gove rnment. This parallel government established
many public utilities like a market system, supply and distribution of food -grains and
a judicial system to settle disputes and penalise dacoits and robbers, pawnbrokers
and money lenders. Law and order was enti rely in its hands. Under this government
an army was formed named Toofan Sena

Wardha: Wardha and its adjacent city Sevagram were major centers for the Indian
Independence Movement, especially as the location for an annual meeting of the Indian National
Congress in 1934, and Mahatma Gandhi's Ashram.

Aronda : A village in Sindhudurg District (formerly Ratnagiri district) of Maharashtra on Terkhol


river. This village is associated with the Goa Liberation Movement against the Portuguese rule.
The Goa Liberation Movement had its first meeting in 1947 in Aronda, held by Dr. Ram Mohan
Lohia at Ummal Maidan
Palghar Martyrs : Palghar was one of the important sites of 1942 Quit India Movement. On 14
August 1942, there was an uprising against the British in Palghar, in which Kashinath Hari
Pagdhare, Govind Ganesh Thakur, Ramprasad Bhimashankar Tiwari, Ramchandra Mahadev Churi,
and Govind Sukur More were killed. The main circle of Palghar is known as "Paachbatti" (which
means 'five lights' in Marathi) in honour of these martyrs. 14 August has been declared "Martyrs
Day" in Palghar, when people gather at Paachbatti Circle to honour the five who sacrificed their
lives for Indian independence.

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