Youth consciousness for freedom in Bengal
By: Sen, Rabi Ranjan
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BookPublisher: Yojana: A Development Monthly Description: 68(8), (Special issue) Aug, 2024: p.54-58.
In:
Yojana: A Development MonthlySummary: The partition of Bengal announce by the British on 16 July 1905, by viceroy Lord Curzon added fuel to this fire of nationalism, and the Bengal anti-partition movement introduced the twin weapons of Swadeshi (use together were to be a distinctive feature of the Indian Independence movement even after this particular struggle. The Yugantar, called the ‘paper of undiluted armed revaluation’ by its founders, was soon described in governmental reports as “the first and most pernicious of the revolutionary papers of Calcutta.” In its first edition, published on 18 March 1906, the Yugantar boldly derailed that for them, Swedish (the motherland) comes first and Swedish (i.e. Indigenously manufactured goods) afterwards. The fact that the freedom fight and particularly the armed struggle never saw a lull after 1908 and was continued by the next generation of revolutionaries like Rash Behari Bose, Jatin drench Mukherjje (Bagha jatin ), Bhagat Singh and his group, Surya Sen., and many others is a testament to Baarin’s proplhetic feeling that the work of the first group wass not so much to militarily achieve a successful revolution but more to rouse public opinion and prepare the ground for the next generation of revolutionaries. – Reproduced
| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 68(8), (Special issue) Aug, 2024: p.54-58 | Available | AR132631 |
The partition of Bengal announce by the British on 16 July 1905, by viceroy Lord Curzon added fuel to this fire of nationalism, and the Bengal anti-partition movement introduced the twin weapons of Swadeshi (use together were to be a distinctive feature of the Indian Independence movement even after this particular struggle. The Yugantar, called the ‘paper of undiluted armed revaluation’ by its founders, was soon described in governmental reports as “the first and most pernicious of the revolutionary papers of Calcutta.” In its first edition, published on 18 March 1906, the Yugantar boldly derailed that for them, Swedish (the motherland) comes first and Swedish (i.e. Indigenously manufactured goods) afterwards. The fact that the freedom fight and particularly the armed struggle never saw a lull after 1908 and was continued by the next generation of revolutionaries like Rash Behari Bose, Jatin drench Mukherjje (Bagha jatin ), Bhagat Singh and his group, Surya Sen., and many others is a testament to Baarin’s proplhetic feeling that the work of the first group wass not so much to militarily achieve a successful revolution but more to rouse public opinion and prepare the ground for the next generation of revolutionaries. – Reproduced


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