Lala Lajpat Rai
Lala Lajpat Rai
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Born
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Died
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Organization
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Indian National Congress, Arya Samaj
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Political movement
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Religion
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Lala Lajpat Rai: (28 January 1865 – 17 November 1928) was an Indian author
and politician who is chiefly remembered as a leader in the Indian fight for
independence from the British Raj. He was popularly known as Punjab Kesari meaning the
same and was part of the Lal Bal Pal trio. He was also associated with activities of Punjab National
Bank and Lakshmi Insurance Company in their
early stages. He sustained serious injuries by the police when leading a
non-violent protest against the Simon Commission and died less than three weeks
later. His death anniversary (November 17) is one of several days celebrated as
Martyrs' Day in India.
Early
life
Lajpat Rai was born in Dhudike
(now in Moga district, Punjab) on 28 January 1865. (The word 'Lala' is an honorific, applied to prominent
Hindu men of the time.) His grandfather was a Svetambara Jain while his father had great respect for Islam, and he
even fasted and prayed like Muslims, but did not embrace Islam largely due to
his family's attachment to the Hindu faith. Rai had his initial education in Government Higher
Secondary School, Rewari (now in Haryana, previously in Punjab), in the late 1870s
and early 1880s, where his father, Radha Krishan, was an Urdu teacher.
Rai was influenced by Hinduism and Manusmriti and created a career of reforming
Indian policy through politics and writing. (When studying law in Lahore, he continued to practice
Hinduism. He became a large believer in the idea that Hinduism, above
nationality, was the pivotal point upon which an Indian lifestyle must be
based.) Hinduism, he believed, led to practices of peace to humanity, and the
idea that when nationalist ideas were added to this peaceful belief system, a
non-secular nation could be formed. His involvement with Hindu Mahasabha leaders gathered criticism from the Bharat Sabha as the
Mahasabhas were non-secular, which did not conform with the system laid out by
the Indian
National Congress. This focus on Hindu practices in the subcontinent would
ultimately lead him to the continuation of peaceful movements to create
successful demonstrations for Indian independence. He was a devotee of Arya Samaj and was editor of Arya Gazette, which he set up
during his student time.
Graduates of the National College,
which he founded inside the Bradlaugh Hall at Lahore as an alternative to
British institutions, included Bhagat Singh. He was elected President of the Congress party in the Calcutta Special Session of 1920.
Travels
to America
See also: Ghadr Party
Lajpat Rai travelled to the US in
1907, and then returned during World War I. He toured Sikh
communities along the US West Coast; visited Tuskegee University in Alabama; and met with workers in the Philippines. His
travelogue, The United States of America (1916), details these travels and
features extensive quotations from leading African American intellectuals,
including W.E.B. DuBois and Fredrick Douglass. The book also argues for the notion of “color-caste,”
suggesting sociological similarities between race in the US and caste in India.
During World War I, Lajpat Rai lived in the United States, but he returned to
India in 1919 and in the following year led the special session of the Congress
Party that launched the noncooperation movement. Imprisoned from 1921 to 1923,
he was elected to the legislative assembly on his release.
Partition
of Punjab
He initiated the discussion on the
partition of Punjab. Writing in The Tribune in November-December 1924, he penned,
My suggestion is that the Punjab
should be partitioned into two provinces, the Western Punjab with a large
Muslim majority to be [a] Muslim-governed province; the Eastern Punjab with a
large Hindu-Sikh majority to be [a] non-Muslim-governed province.
He also proposed Muslim provinces to
be set up in the North
West Frontier Province, Sindh and East Bengal.
Commission
protests
In 1928, the British government set
up the Commission, headed by Sir John Simon,
to report on the political situation in India. The Indian political parties
boycotted the Commission, because it did not include a single Indian in its
membership, and it met with country-wide protests. When the Commission visited
Lahore on 30 October 1928, Lajpat Rai led a non-violent protest against the
Commission in a silent march, but the police responded with violence. The
superintendent of police, James A. Scott, ordered the police to lathi charge the
protesters and personally assaulted Rai, who was grievously injured. Rai could
not recover from the injuries and died on 17 November 1928 of a heart attack.
It was obviously known that Scott's blows had hastened his demise. However, when the matter was raised in the British
Parliament, the British Government denied any role in Rai's death. Although Bhagat Singh did not witness the event, he vowed to take revenge, and joined other revolutionaries, Shivaram Rajguru, Sukhdev Thapar and Chandrashekhar Azad, in a plot to kill Scott. However, in a case of mistaken identity, Bhagat Singh was
signalled to shoot on the appearance of John P. Saunders, an Assistant
Superintendent of Police. He was shot by Rajguru and Bhagat Singh while leaving
the District Police Headquarters in Lahore on 17 December 1928. Chanan Singh, a Head Constable who was chasing them, was fatally injured by Azad's
covering fire.
This case of mistaken identity did
not stop Bhagat Singh and his fellow-members of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association from claiming that retribution had been exacted.
Inspiration
and memorial
The Lala Lajpat Rai Trust was formed
in 1959 on the eve of his Centenary Birth Celebration, to promote education.
The trust was founded by a group of Punjabi
philanthropists (including R.P Gupta and B.M Grover) who have settled and
prospered in the Indian State of Maharashtra. The Lala Lajpat Rai University of Veterinary
& Animal Sciences, in Hisar, Haryana, is a state
university was created in memory of Lajpat Rai. A statue of Lajpat Rai stands
at the central square in Shimla, India (having been originally erected in
Lahore and moved to Shimla in 1948). Lajpat Nagar and Lajpat Nagar Central
Market in New Delhi, Lajpat Rai Market in Chandani Chowk, Delhi; Lala Lajpat
Rai Hall of Residence at Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT) in Kanpur and Kharagpur;
as well as the Lala Lajpat Rai Institute of Engineering
and Technology(LLRIET), Moga,
are named in his honor. Also many institutes, schools and libraries in his
hometown of Jagraon, district Ludhiana are named after him. The bus terminus in
Jagraon, Punjab, India is named after Lala Lajpat Rai. Lala Lajpat Rai
Hospital, Kanpur is also named in his honor.
The Lala Lajpat Rai Institute of
Management is a business school in Mumbai.
Gulab
Devi Chest Hospital
Lala Lajpat Rai's mother, Gulab
Devi, died of TB in Lahore. In order to perpetuate her memory, Lala Lajpat Rai
established a Trust in 1927 to build and run a TB Hospital for women reportedly
at the spot where she had died.
The Trust purchased 40 acres of land
in April 1930 from the then Government which gave a free grant of an additional
10 acres on Ferozepur Road (the road is now called Sharah-e- Roomi).
Construction work was started in 1931 and completed in 1934 when the Hospital
gates were opened to TB patients.
A marble plaque bears witness to the
opening of the Hospital on 17 July 1934 by Mahatma Gandhi. On the migration of trustees to India in 1947, the
Government invited Begum Raana Liaquat Ali Khan, Syed Maratab Ali, Professor
Dr.Amiruddin and some other notables and philanthropists to become acting
Trustees of the Hospital in July 1948. They constituted a Managing Committee
with Begum Raana in the Chair, for running the Gulab Devi Chest Hospital.
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