Savarkar asserted that all the reforms that the British brought in over different periods of time were in response to the violent outbursts and activities of revolutionaries—right from Vasudev Balwant Phadke down to the Naval Mutiny of 1946. He warned that efforts would be made to suppress that part of our history but the truth has a way of resurfacing itself. Savarkar expressed satisfaction at the fact that three-fourths of the country was liberated but the Sindhu on whose banks the sacred works of this nation were written remains occupied. Without the Sindhu, there could not be the Hindu, he
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