A united India wanted to free itself from the unjust reigns of the British and in the process, produced the heroics of the admired ‘conservatives’ in Gandhi, Nehru to the ‘extremists’ in Bhagat Singh and Chandrashekhar Azad. Although to bracket Nehru in the ‘conservatives’ would be harsh as he was duly moderate and an articulate par excellence.
But it wasn’t just the struggle of the above admired, but of many unsung heroes in Batukeshwar Dutt, Jatindra Nath Das and Hari Krishan to name a few. They were a brute force and a serious thorn in the eye of the British but hardly got the adulation from the natives that they richly deserved.
Pratap: a defiant newspaper, is penned by a daddy-daughter duo of Chander Mohan and Jyotsna Mohan, who have done an exceptional job in throwing light on the above martyrs and the corresponding incidents that unfolded during pre-partition, the infamous Emergency of 1975 and a terror hit Punjab of the 1980s.
Pratap’s patriarch, named Mahashay Krishan wrote daily editorials and challenged the might of the then dispensation. But this was when a pen was mightier than a sword and wasn’t readily pliable as it is today. This book additionally highlights the role of his son Virendra and how he played a key role in India’s freedom struggle.
This book is firmly unputdownable and highly recommended to the like-minded.
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