Singh’s legacy continues to stir the millions of ordinary souls throughout the Indian subcontinent even years after the remnants of a separation. In a moving epitaph recalled by the following words, ‘The Lahore Conspiracy Case’, Director Punjab Archives Abbas Chughtai opened for display an entire “literature of the revolutionary activities of Singh and his comrades” and commented on how the initiative brought to light the case file from the trial of the colonial-era freedom fighter and Lahori hero in what was titled, Trials, Tribulations & The Lahore Conspiracy Case.
Chughtai traced the story of Singh’s unfinished struggle for the greater cause of revolution, shedding light on the aftermath of a tragedy where Singh along with his accomplices, planned to avenge the death of their revolutionary leader, LalaLajpat Rai, who died at the hands of the British in a protest against the Simon Commission in Lahore.
“In a case of mistaken identity, Bhagat Singh with the help of Rajguru, Sukhdev, and Chandrashekar Azad, shot Superintendent of Police, John Saunders, about eight times, managing to escape from the scene into hiding. A year later in April 1929, he and his associate, BatukeshwarDutt, threw bombs and showered leaflets in the Delhi Legislative Assembly, shouting their slogan ‘InquilabZindabad’. Singh did not resist his arrest, and it was during interrogation at this very point that the British came to know about his involvement in the death of John Saunders five months earlier, in the November of 1928,” he said.
Responding to a question, Additional Chief Secretary Punjab Omer Rasul, stressed on Singh’s notable services for both Pakistan and India. “Singh was not a ‘terrorist’. He threw bombs in the New Delhi Assembly, where nobody was killed or hurt. What he said was only this: if the people have turned deaf, you need a bang to get yourself heard. This was his message to the people of India in the freedom struggle against the British,” said Rasul.
“Bhagat Singh was a true freedom-fighter and a hero of the Independence movement to the core,” he further went on to say. “Singh died at the age of 23 and made a point that the British must leave India to the hands of its people. He was narrated as the ‘greatest Indian ever’, which is why the Government of Punjab has taken this commendable step to show to the public his fight for freedom, not only in physical terms but by show of example, as he sacrificed his youth to the Indian freedom struggle based on his philosophy of autonomy, right to education and health for the people of his soil,” he added.
Amidst the melodious sounds of ghazal, ‘Piya bin chain nahi avat’ – 1926, given voice by Khan Saheb Abdul Karim Khan, playing in a chilling repeat in the background, the exhibition showcases at the tomb of Anarkali, which also houses the prestigious Punjab Archives Department. The display has been open for access to the public till Sunday, the 1st of April, 2018. With this inaugural enterprise, the Punjab Archives wishes to set forth a precedent for future exhibitions to come and follow.
Bhagat Singh and his comrades were hanged on 23March 1931 at 7:30 PM, the schedule having moved forward by 11 hours to its original time. Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev’s bodies were burnt, stuffed in gunny bags and their ashes dumped in the waves of the Sutlejriver, miles from the Lahore Central Jail.
Published in Daily Times, March 28th 2018.
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