Page 1
YOJANA August 2022 43
o understand any nation and its current
contexts, it is necessary to explore the sources
present in the folk and rural areas and history.
After all, what are these references and sources
that help in understanding the makings of the Indian nation?
What would be the time for understanding them and their
history? What would be the ideology? What would be the
theory? These are some of the questions which always
trouble history scholars.
Jaishankar Prasad says about India: arun yeh madhumay
desh hamara. And then, in the collective consciousness of the
larger society of the country, the aspiration for national liberation
in the form of words resonates all over with the sentiments of
national aesthetic as– jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek
sahara/ saral tamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha
manohar/ chitka Jeevan hariyali par,
mangal kumkum sara.
Although these feelings in the
poetry of Jaishankar Prasad indicate
the traditional nationalism of the
Indian nation, writers like Bhartendu
Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Mahavir Prasad Dwivedi, and Acharya
Ramchandra Shukla, Acharya Hazari
Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma,
etc., address it by associating it with
national literature. It is also true that
these creations inspired the Indians
to stand prepared against the British
Raj and create a historical form of
nationalism in Indian society for
which the country and its people are
supreme.
Role of Hindi Literature
Devendra Choubey
The author is a Professor, Centre of Indian Languages, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. Email: devendrachoubeyjnu@gmail.com
T
The question is how to understand this form of
nationalism created between 1857 and 1947. Should it
be linked to the peasant movements of Gandhi, the Dalit
references of Ambedkar, the revolutionary socialism
of Bhagat Singh, or the radical nationalist attitude of
Subhas Chandra Bose? It is a complex question, but what
is important is the way Hindi writers like Premchand,
Ramchandra Shukla, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, etc., see
it in caste contexts. Writers like Rabindranath Tagore of
Bengal consider it as a hypothetical consciousness. Tagore
sees a deep understanding of the civilisation and cultures
of the subcontinent in that consciousness, which he tries
to understand through his novels like Gora and works like
Gitanjali. Meanwhile, Premchand sees hidden currents
of rural civilisation in it, which he tries to understand by
associating them with the agricultural
way of life.
But the folk memories and the
various versions of folk creation
imprinted in those memories help to
understand the nationalist creations
between 1857 and 1947. For example,
dividing this form of nationalism and
its historical consciousness into the
following periods of the history of
the Indian Independence movement
somewhat helps in understanding
the structure of Indian nationalism.
First, the Struggle of 1857 and its
culmination; second, 1873 and Indian
Literature, Press and Journalism;
1885, the Rise of the Congress and
the rise of a new intellectual class;
Arun yeh madhumay desh hamara.
Jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek sahara
Saral taamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha manohar
Chitka Jeevan hariyali par mangal kumkum sara.
– Jaishankar Prasad
shaPing consciousness
Page 2
YOJANA August 2022 43
o understand any nation and its current
contexts, it is necessary to explore the sources
present in the folk and rural areas and history.
After all, what are these references and sources
that help in understanding the makings of the Indian nation?
What would be the time for understanding them and their
history? What would be the ideology? What would be the
theory? These are some of the questions which always
trouble history scholars.
Jaishankar Prasad says about India: arun yeh madhumay
desh hamara. And then, in the collective consciousness of the
larger society of the country, the aspiration for national liberation
in the form of words resonates all over with the sentiments of
national aesthetic as– jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek
sahara/ saral tamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha
manohar/ chitka Jeevan hariyali par,
mangal kumkum sara.
Although these feelings in the
poetry of Jaishankar Prasad indicate
the traditional nationalism of the
Indian nation, writers like Bhartendu
Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Mahavir Prasad Dwivedi, and Acharya
Ramchandra Shukla, Acharya Hazari
Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma,
etc., address it by associating it with
national literature. It is also true that
these creations inspired the Indians
to stand prepared against the British
Raj and create a historical form of
nationalism in Indian society for
which the country and its people are
supreme.
Role of Hindi Literature
Devendra Choubey
The author is a Professor, Centre of Indian Languages, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. Email: devendrachoubeyjnu@gmail.com
T
The question is how to understand this form of
nationalism created between 1857 and 1947. Should it
be linked to the peasant movements of Gandhi, the Dalit
references of Ambedkar, the revolutionary socialism
of Bhagat Singh, or the radical nationalist attitude of
Subhas Chandra Bose? It is a complex question, but what
is important is the way Hindi writers like Premchand,
Ramchandra Shukla, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, etc., see
it in caste contexts. Writers like Rabindranath Tagore of
Bengal consider it as a hypothetical consciousness. Tagore
sees a deep understanding of the civilisation and cultures
of the subcontinent in that consciousness, which he tries
to understand through his novels like Gora and works like
Gitanjali. Meanwhile, Premchand sees hidden currents
of rural civilisation in it, which he tries to understand by
associating them with the agricultural
way of life.
But the folk memories and the
various versions of folk creation
imprinted in those memories help to
understand the nationalist creations
between 1857 and 1947. For example,
dividing this form of nationalism and
its historical consciousness into the
following periods of the history of
the Indian Independence movement
somewhat helps in understanding
the structure of Indian nationalism.
First, the Struggle of 1857 and its
culmination; second, 1873 and Indian
Literature, Press and Journalism;
1885, the Rise of the Congress and
the rise of a new intellectual class;
Arun yeh madhumay desh hamara.
Jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek sahara
Saral taamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha manohar
Chitka Jeevan hariyali par mangal kumkum sara.
– Jaishankar Prasad
shaPing consciousness 44 YOJANA August 2022
The Dalit renaissance also
emerged in Maharashtra
because of Savitribai Phule and
Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian
Independence and social
movements after 1920 following
Ambedkar's arrival.
1905, the Partition of Bengal, the surge of the Independence
movement; 1917, Gandhi, Ambedkar and the National stream
of the Freedom Movement; 1942, Quit India Movement,
Liberation context of Revolutionary Nationalism.
Meanwhile, 1936 brought about a different meaning to
the world of literature when the economically oppressed
and socially exploited sections became the focal point of
literature. It can be seen as nationalism of the oppressed and
deprived sections, which Premchand alludes to in his novel
‘Godan’ published in 1936. Godan is a splendid example
of peasant nationalism. Premchand, in his novel, has tried
to understand the meaning of nationalism for the deprived
and exploited society on the pretext of the characters of a
farmer, Hori and a labourer, Gobar. An important task will
be understanding nationalism and contemporary India based
on these contexts and the literary works highlighting them.
Indian Literature, Press and Journalism in 1873
What were the Rules and Acts that affected India after
1857, especially after 1873, whose resonance is perceptible
in the world of literature and journalism and against which
the consciousness of an intellectual nationalism in Hindi-
and Bengali-speaking society of North India is seen?
Among them, two Acts made in 1858 are important: one,
the Press Act, and the other, the Arms Act. It was the effect
of these Acts that in India, from 1878 to 1947, many works,
magazines, and books were banned by the British Raj,
including Balkrishna Bhatt’s Hindi Pradeep, Premchand’s
Soz-e-Watan, Sakharam Ganesh Deuskar’s Desher
Katha, etc. The deep consciousness of resistance against
the British Raj can be seen in these works. The biggest
role of these works was creating a sense of discontent
among the public against the British Raj. The Hindi writer
Bhartendu Harishchandra played a big role in this. The
poem Swapn by Mahesh Narayan, a poet of this period,
while igniting a consciousness of resistance against these
two Acts, points towards the same form of nationalism that
John Plamenatz discusses. One can feel the consciousness
of this intellectual nationalism in the following lines of
Mahesh Narayan’s Swapn: Mahadev yeh raj swadhin
karte (Mahadev would have made this kingdom free).
1
Here, the poet uses the myth of Mahadev to avoid the clause
of the British Press Act against him. It is also important
to note that many Hindi writers of
that period, including Balakrishna
Bhatt, and Pratap Narayan Mishra
have tried to understand Indianness
through such myth, which sometimes
some commentators associate with
a particular religion. However, the
reason behind using such analogies was
that the British Raj’s laws and writers
were resorting to religious notations to
protect them from these laws.
1885: Rise of the Congress and Emergence of New
Intellectuals
One reason for development of a particular stream
of Indian nationalism by poets like Mahesh Narayan or
writers like Bhartendu Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Pratap Narayan Mishra, etc., was the English education
along with the formation of the Congress in 1885. As a
counter measure, it gradually developed a deep affection in
Indians for the motherland and the native language. It was
because of the Congress, that the Indian intellectual class
also got a space, the effect of which was that after receiving
the English education, this section played a big role in the
freedom movement as a middle class, as seen in Amritlal
Nagar’s novels like Karwat and Peediyan. Simultaneously,
the Dalit renaissance also emerged in Maharashtra because
of Savitribai Phule and Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian Independence and social
movements after 1920 following Ambedkar’s arrival. The
seriousness with which Hindi writer Radhamohan Gokul
wrote on Dalit and women’s issues in Hindi around 1890
is significant. One of his works, Angrez Daku, published in
1910, was also banned by the British. But it is unfortunate
that none of his works find a mention in the history of
Hindi literature. Among the critics of Hindi, Ram Vilas
Sharma and Karmendu Shishir discuss him and consider
his works an important part of the Hindi Renaissance. After
understanding the policies of the British Raj, these writers,
through their writings, developed a deep consciousness of
patriotism in public. One can also say that the nationalist
collective consciousness of resistance against the British Raj
created by these writers on an intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in later Indian literature.
1905: Partition of Bengal and Surge of the Independence
Movement
A later example is Rabindranath Tagore’s works after
the Bengal partition in 1905. The images of the Indian
nation Tagore creates in Gitanjali and other works deeply
affect the entire world, including India. This song composed
by Tagore in Gitanjali alludes to Indian nationalism which
can be called a peasant-centered cultural nationalism and
whose development is visible in the works of Hindi writers
like Premchand after 1930. It expresses the pain of the
agrarian society of being separated from
the land that introduces us to a new form
of nationalism. The poignancy with
which Tagore expresses the sorrow of
Bengal in Gitanjali is very touching.
In this collection of poems, Bengal is
mourning after its partition, wishing for
a better future, and praying for regaining
its prosperity snatched away by the
British Raj as follows: Banglar mati,
Banglar jol, Banglar bayu, Banglar
Page 3
YOJANA August 2022 43
o understand any nation and its current
contexts, it is necessary to explore the sources
present in the folk and rural areas and history.
After all, what are these references and sources
that help in understanding the makings of the Indian nation?
What would be the time for understanding them and their
history? What would be the ideology? What would be the
theory? These are some of the questions which always
trouble history scholars.
Jaishankar Prasad says about India: arun yeh madhumay
desh hamara. And then, in the collective consciousness of the
larger society of the country, the aspiration for national liberation
in the form of words resonates all over with the sentiments of
national aesthetic as– jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek
sahara/ saral tamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha
manohar/ chitka Jeevan hariyali par,
mangal kumkum sara.
Although these feelings in the
poetry of Jaishankar Prasad indicate
the traditional nationalism of the
Indian nation, writers like Bhartendu
Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Mahavir Prasad Dwivedi, and Acharya
Ramchandra Shukla, Acharya Hazari
Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma,
etc., address it by associating it with
national literature. It is also true that
these creations inspired the Indians
to stand prepared against the British
Raj and create a historical form of
nationalism in Indian society for
which the country and its people are
supreme.
Role of Hindi Literature
Devendra Choubey
The author is a Professor, Centre of Indian Languages, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. Email: devendrachoubeyjnu@gmail.com
T
The question is how to understand this form of
nationalism created between 1857 and 1947. Should it
be linked to the peasant movements of Gandhi, the Dalit
references of Ambedkar, the revolutionary socialism
of Bhagat Singh, or the radical nationalist attitude of
Subhas Chandra Bose? It is a complex question, but what
is important is the way Hindi writers like Premchand,
Ramchandra Shukla, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, etc., see
it in caste contexts. Writers like Rabindranath Tagore of
Bengal consider it as a hypothetical consciousness. Tagore
sees a deep understanding of the civilisation and cultures
of the subcontinent in that consciousness, which he tries
to understand through his novels like Gora and works like
Gitanjali. Meanwhile, Premchand sees hidden currents
of rural civilisation in it, which he tries to understand by
associating them with the agricultural
way of life.
But the folk memories and the
various versions of folk creation
imprinted in those memories help to
understand the nationalist creations
between 1857 and 1947. For example,
dividing this form of nationalism and
its historical consciousness into the
following periods of the history of
the Indian Independence movement
somewhat helps in understanding
the structure of Indian nationalism.
First, the Struggle of 1857 and its
culmination; second, 1873 and Indian
Literature, Press and Journalism;
1885, the Rise of the Congress and
the rise of a new intellectual class;
Arun yeh madhumay desh hamara.
Jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek sahara
Saral taamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha manohar
Chitka Jeevan hariyali par mangal kumkum sara.
– Jaishankar Prasad
shaPing consciousness 44 YOJANA August 2022
The Dalit renaissance also
emerged in Maharashtra
because of Savitribai Phule and
Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian
Independence and social
movements after 1920 following
Ambedkar's arrival.
1905, the Partition of Bengal, the surge of the Independence
movement; 1917, Gandhi, Ambedkar and the National stream
of the Freedom Movement; 1942, Quit India Movement,
Liberation context of Revolutionary Nationalism.
Meanwhile, 1936 brought about a different meaning to
the world of literature when the economically oppressed
and socially exploited sections became the focal point of
literature. It can be seen as nationalism of the oppressed and
deprived sections, which Premchand alludes to in his novel
‘Godan’ published in 1936. Godan is a splendid example
of peasant nationalism. Premchand, in his novel, has tried
to understand the meaning of nationalism for the deprived
and exploited society on the pretext of the characters of a
farmer, Hori and a labourer, Gobar. An important task will
be understanding nationalism and contemporary India based
on these contexts and the literary works highlighting them.
Indian Literature, Press and Journalism in 1873
What were the Rules and Acts that affected India after
1857, especially after 1873, whose resonance is perceptible
in the world of literature and journalism and against which
the consciousness of an intellectual nationalism in Hindi-
and Bengali-speaking society of North India is seen?
Among them, two Acts made in 1858 are important: one,
the Press Act, and the other, the Arms Act. It was the effect
of these Acts that in India, from 1878 to 1947, many works,
magazines, and books were banned by the British Raj,
including Balkrishna Bhatt’s Hindi Pradeep, Premchand’s
Soz-e-Watan, Sakharam Ganesh Deuskar’s Desher
Katha, etc. The deep consciousness of resistance against
the British Raj can be seen in these works. The biggest
role of these works was creating a sense of discontent
among the public against the British Raj. The Hindi writer
Bhartendu Harishchandra played a big role in this. The
poem Swapn by Mahesh Narayan, a poet of this period,
while igniting a consciousness of resistance against these
two Acts, points towards the same form of nationalism that
John Plamenatz discusses. One can feel the consciousness
of this intellectual nationalism in the following lines of
Mahesh Narayan’s Swapn: Mahadev yeh raj swadhin
karte (Mahadev would have made this kingdom free).
1
Here, the poet uses the myth of Mahadev to avoid the clause
of the British Press Act against him. It is also important
to note that many Hindi writers of
that period, including Balakrishna
Bhatt, and Pratap Narayan Mishra
have tried to understand Indianness
through such myth, which sometimes
some commentators associate with
a particular religion. However, the
reason behind using such analogies was
that the British Raj’s laws and writers
were resorting to religious notations to
protect them from these laws.
1885: Rise of the Congress and Emergence of New
Intellectuals
One reason for development of a particular stream
of Indian nationalism by poets like Mahesh Narayan or
writers like Bhartendu Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Pratap Narayan Mishra, etc., was the English education
along with the formation of the Congress in 1885. As a
counter measure, it gradually developed a deep affection in
Indians for the motherland and the native language. It was
because of the Congress, that the Indian intellectual class
also got a space, the effect of which was that after receiving
the English education, this section played a big role in the
freedom movement as a middle class, as seen in Amritlal
Nagar’s novels like Karwat and Peediyan. Simultaneously,
the Dalit renaissance also emerged in Maharashtra because
of Savitribai Phule and Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian Independence and social
movements after 1920 following Ambedkar’s arrival. The
seriousness with which Hindi writer Radhamohan Gokul
wrote on Dalit and women’s issues in Hindi around 1890
is significant. One of his works, Angrez Daku, published in
1910, was also banned by the British. But it is unfortunate
that none of his works find a mention in the history of
Hindi literature. Among the critics of Hindi, Ram Vilas
Sharma and Karmendu Shishir discuss him and consider
his works an important part of the Hindi Renaissance. After
understanding the policies of the British Raj, these writers,
through their writings, developed a deep consciousness of
patriotism in public. One can also say that the nationalist
collective consciousness of resistance against the British Raj
created by these writers on an intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in later Indian literature.
1905: Partition of Bengal and Surge of the Independence
Movement
A later example is Rabindranath Tagore’s works after
the Bengal partition in 1905. The images of the Indian
nation Tagore creates in Gitanjali and other works deeply
affect the entire world, including India. This song composed
by Tagore in Gitanjali alludes to Indian nationalism which
can be called a peasant-centered cultural nationalism and
whose development is visible in the works of Hindi writers
like Premchand after 1930. It expresses the pain of the
agrarian society of being separated from
the land that introduces us to a new form
of nationalism. The poignancy with
which Tagore expresses the sorrow of
Bengal in Gitanjali is very touching.
In this collection of poems, Bengal is
mourning after its partition, wishing for
a better future, and praying for regaining
its prosperity snatched away by the
British Raj as follows: Banglar mati,
Banglar jol, Banglar bayu, Banglar
YOJANA August 2022 45
The nationalist collective
consciousness of resistance
against the British Raj created
by these writers on an
intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in
later Indian literature.
phal/ Punyo hauk, Punyo hauk, Punyo
hauk, hey bhagoban!/ Banglar ghar,
Banglar haat, Banglar bon, Banglar
Maath. Purno hauk, Purno hauk, Purno
hauk, hey bhagoban!
It is the narrative of the Indian
Independence Movement that the
masses created with peasant nationalism.
Among the nationalist leaders, Gandhi
was the first to identify it. But its
foundation was laid back in 1905 when the people across
the nation, including Bengal, intensified their struggle
against the British Raj. As a result, eminent leaders like
Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, etc., joined
the movement after 1905 and infused a new consciousness
towards the nation, which gained immense strength after
Gandhi’s entry in 1917.
1917: Gandhian Influence
In fact, after the First World War, Gandhi went to
Champaran in 1917 as soon as he returned from Africa and
met the indigo farmers there. His meeting with the farmers
of Champaran was a national event. The impact of Gandhi’s
travels on rural society across India was profound. He
motivated farmers to join non-violent movements and be an
ally in building a free and fearless nation. A folk poet of
Khari Boli has enthusiastically described this active
state of mind of resistance and creation in the following
lines: Sabarmati se chala sant, ek ahimsadhari/ jagti mein
sannata chaya ghumi prithvi saari/ kampe kamariya haath
mein lathi ek langotidhari/ ...ghar mein ja ja alakh jagaya,
azadi ka path padhaya/ Khadi-dhari hamein banaya Bharat
tera pujari. An unknown poet of Bhojpuri has also mentioned
Gandhi’s similar effect: Maan Gandhi ke bachanwa dukhwa
ho jahiye sapanva/ tan pe utaar kapda videshi, khaddar ke
kail dharanwa. Gandhi’s influence on the public reflects in
the following folk song by Haipou Jadonang, belonging to
the Kacha Naga ethnicity and associated with the Kabui
Revolution of Northeast India, in connection with Gandhi’s
visit to Silchar in 1927: O Mahatma Gandhi! hamare raja
ban jayiye/ aayiye ji aayiye!
1942: Quit India Movement, Liberation Context of
Revolutionary Nationalism
What happened to Mahatma Gandhi in 1942 when he
was compelled to coin the slogan ‘Do or Die’? The famous
historian Shahid Amin in his article on Chauri Chaura
entitled Smriti aur itihas: Chauri Chaura, 1922-1992,
points out that at times the people or farmers wanted to see
Gandhi as a fighter who should not only be a coordinator
but also take up arms when the situation demands and
confront the enemies. Such hints are also found in some
folk poems. For instance, khwab driver ne jo dekha vah
mein karta jahir/ ek bayaban mein kuch gujar raha hai
gard-o-gubar/ aa rahi fauj hai us simat se das bees hazar/
aur hai Gandhiji fauj mein aala sardar/
aur sorajya ka is hath mein hai alam/
sare dushman ko vah karte chale aate
kalam/ har ek angrez ke jab kaan mein
pahunchi ye sada/jaisa socha kiya vah
nang dharang bhaga…
2
In the above lines, the folk poet’s
desire that Gandhi had attacked the
British as chief of the army of ten-
twenty thousand soldiers created a
distinct form of mass nationalism. It depicted him becoming
violent for the cause of Swaraj and marching with the native
army, attacking the British, and beheading them. On hearing
this news, the British army panicked. Everyone ran helter-
skelter, in whatever condition they were. Such imagery
about Gandhi was rarely seen, but the public aspiration that
he can also be violent is unimaginable and presented his
image as a warrior.
The character of Indian nationalism seen between 1857
and 1947 points toward the nationalism of the common
people, in which there is nothing other than the nation’s
liberation at the centre. The writings in Hindi literature or
folk memories also focus on political emancipation and
correspondingly raise the question of social emancipation
with aplomb, in which the issue of women and Dalit
emancipation comes up prominently. The images of
nationalism created during the Indian Independence
movement have been deeply discussed and debated by
historians and intellectuals in many fields. That is why this
period of Indian history is seen as a foundation of the Indian
nation on which India, after 1947, was built. This India is as
democratic and secular as it should be in the international
arena and whose collective consciousness is centred on the
Indian tradition of knowledge and thought process. ?
References
1. Swapna, Bihar Bandhu, 13 October , 1881
2. Kashganj Ka Khwaab, 1921; confiscated Urdu Pamphlets, No. 141,
India Office Library, London
Endnotes
1. P . C. Joshi, ed.: 2007; Rebellion 1857; National Book Trust, India, Delhi.
2. Rashmi Choudhary; 2012; Bharateey Raashtravaad Ka Nimnavargeey
Prasang; Prakashan Sansthan, Delhi.
3. Devendra Choubey, Badrinarayan and Hitendra Patel; 2008; 1857:
Bhaarat Ka Pahala Mukti Sangharsh; Prakaahan Sansthan, Delhi.
4. Shahid Amin and Gyanendra Pandey; 1995 & 2002; Nimnavargeey
Prasang, Bhaag Ek Aur Do; Raajakamal Prakashan, Delhi.
5. S. N. R. Rizvi; 2021; The Rebel World of 1857; Kalpaz Publication,
Delhi.
6. Badrinarayan, Rashmi Choudhary and Sanjay Nath; 2010; 1857 Ka
Mahaasangraam; Aadhaar Prakashan, Delhi.
7. Rashmi Choudhary and Devendra Choubey; 2016; Aadhunik Bharat
Ke Itihaas Lekhan Ke Kuchh Sahityik Srot; Ganapat Teli, Devina
Akshayavar & Khushi Patanaayak, Prakashan Sansthan, Delhi.
8. Jagmal Singh; 2020; Poorvottar Ki Janajaateey Krantiyaan;
Raashtreey Pustak Nyaas, Bharat; Delhi.
Page 4
YOJANA August 2022 43
o understand any nation and its current
contexts, it is necessary to explore the sources
present in the folk and rural areas and history.
After all, what are these references and sources
that help in understanding the makings of the Indian nation?
What would be the time for understanding them and their
history? What would be the ideology? What would be the
theory? These are some of the questions which always
trouble history scholars.
Jaishankar Prasad says about India: arun yeh madhumay
desh hamara. And then, in the collective consciousness of the
larger society of the country, the aspiration for national liberation
in the form of words resonates all over with the sentiments of
national aesthetic as– jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek
sahara/ saral tamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha
manohar/ chitka Jeevan hariyali par,
mangal kumkum sara.
Although these feelings in the
poetry of Jaishankar Prasad indicate
the traditional nationalism of the
Indian nation, writers like Bhartendu
Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Mahavir Prasad Dwivedi, and Acharya
Ramchandra Shukla, Acharya Hazari
Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma,
etc., address it by associating it with
national literature. It is also true that
these creations inspired the Indians
to stand prepared against the British
Raj and create a historical form of
nationalism in Indian society for
which the country and its people are
supreme.
Role of Hindi Literature
Devendra Choubey
The author is a Professor, Centre of Indian Languages, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. Email: devendrachoubeyjnu@gmail.com
T
The question is how to understand this form of
nationalism created between 1857 and 1947. Should it
be linked to the peasant movements of Gandhi, the Dalit
references of Ambedkar, the revolutionary socialism
of Bhagat Singh, or the radical nationalist attitude of
Subhas Chandra Bose? It is a complex question, but what
is important is the way Hindi writers like Premchand,
Ramchandra Shukla, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, etc., see
it in caste contexts. Writers like Rabindranath Tagore of
Bengal consider it as a hypothetical consciousness. Tagore
sees a deep understanding of the civilisation and cultures
of the subcontinent in that consciousness, which he tries
to understand through his novels like Gora and works like
Gitanjali. Meanwhile, Premchand sees hidden currents
of rural civilisation in it, which he tries to understand by
associating them with the agricultural
way of life.
But the folk memories and the
various versions of folk creation
imprinted in those memories help to
understand the nationalist creations
between 1857 and 1947. For example,
dividing this form of nationalism and
its historical consciousness into the
following periods of the history of
the Indian Independence movement
somewhat helps in understanding
the structure of Indian nationalism.
First, the Struggle of 1857 and its
culmination; second, 1873 and Indian
Literature, Press and Journalism;
1885, the Rise of the Congress and
the rise of a new intellectual class;
Arun yeh madhumay desh hamara.
Jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek sahara
Saral taamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha manohar
Chitka Jeevan hariyali par mangal kumkum sara.
– Jaishankar Prasad
shaPing consciousness 44 YOJANA August 2022
The Dalit renaissance also
emerged in Maharashtra
because of Savitribai Phule and
Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian
Independence and social
movements after 1920 following
Ambedkar's arrival.
1905, the Partition of Bengal, the surge of the Independence
movement; 1917, Gandhi, Ambedkar and the National stream
of the Freedom Movement; 1942, Quit India Movement,
Liberation context of Revolutionary Nationalism.
Meanwhile, 1936 brought about a different meaning to
the world of literature when the economically oppressed
and socially exploited sections became the focal point of
literature. It can be seen as nationalism of the oppressed and
deprived sections, which Premchand alludes to in his novel
‘Godan’ published in 1936. Godan is a splendid example
of peasant nationalism. Premchand, in his novel, has tried
to understand the meaning of nationalism for the deprived
and exploited society on the pretext of the characters of a
farmer, Hori and a labourer, Gobar. An important task will
be understanding nationalism and contemporary India based
on these contexts and the literary works highlighting them.
Indian Literature, Press and Journalism in 1873
What were the Rules and Acts that affected India after
1857, especially after 1873, whose resonance is perceptible
in the world of literature and journalism and against which
the consciousness of an intellectual nationalism in Hindi-
and Bengali-speaking society of North India is seen?
Among them, two Acts made in 1858 are important: one,
the Press Act, and the other, the Arms Act. It was the effect
of these Acts that in India, from 1878 to 1947, many works,
magazines, and books were banned by the British Raj,
including Balkrishna Bhatt’s Hindi Pradeep, Premchand’s
Soz-e-Watan, Sakharam Ganesh Deuskar’s Desher
Katha, etc. The deep consciousness of resistance against
the British Raj can be seen in these works. The biggest
role of these works was creating a sense of discontent
among the public against the British Raj. The Hindi writer
Bhartendu Harishchandra played a big role in this. The
poem Swapn by Mahesh Narayan, a poet of this period,
while igniting a consciousness of resistance against these
two Acts, points towards the same form of nationalism that
John Plamenatz discusses. One can feel the consciousness
of this intellectual nationalism in the following lines of
Mahesh Narayan’s Swapn: Mahadev yeh raj swadhin
karte (Mahadev would have made this kingdom free).
1
Here, the poet uses the myth of Mahadev to avoid the clause
of the British Press Act against him. It is also important
to note that many Hindi writers of
that period, including Balakrishna
Bhatt, and Pratap Narayan Mishra
have tried to understand Indianness
through such myth, which sometimes
some commentators associate with
a particular religion. However, the
reason behind using such analogies was
that the British Raj’s laws and writers
were resorting to religious notations to
protect them from these laws.
1885: Rise of the Congress and Emergence of New
Intellectuals
One reason for development of a particular stream
of Indian nationalism by poets like Mahesh Narayan or
writers like Bhartendu Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Pratap Narayan Mishra, etc., was the English education
along with the formation of the Congress in 1885. As a
counter measure, it gradually developed a deep affection in
Indians for the motherland and the native language. It was
because of the Congress, that the Indian intellectual class
also got a space, the effect of which was that after receiving
the English education, this section played a big role in the
freedom movement as a middle class, as seen in Amritlal
Nagar’s novels like Karwat and Peediyan. Simultaneously,
the Dalit renaissance also emerged in Maharashtra because
of Savitribai Phule and Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian Independence and social
movements after 1920 following Ambedkar’s arrival. The
seriousness with which Hindi writer Radhamohan Gokul
wrote on Dalit and women’s issues in Hindi around 1890
is significant. One of his works, Angrez Daku, published in
1910, was also banned by the British. But it is unfortunate
that none of his works find a mention in the history of
Hindi literature. Among the critics of Hindi, Ram Vilas
Sharma and Karmendu Shishir discuss him and consider
his works an important part of the Hindi Renaissance. After
understanding the policies of the British Raj, these writers,
through their writings, developed a deep consciousness of
patriotism in public. One can also say that the nationalist
collective consciousness of resistance against the British Raj
created by these writers on an intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in later Indian literature.
1905: Partition of Bengal and Surge of the Independence
Movement
A later example is Rabindranath Tagore’s works after
the Bengal partition in 1905. The images of the Indian
nation Tagore creates in Gitanjali and other works deeply
affect the entire world, including India. This song composed
by Tagore in Gitanjali alludes to Indian nationalism which
can be called a peasant-centered cultural nationalism and
whose development is visible in the works of Hindi writers
like Premchand after 1930. It expresses the pain of the
agrarian society of being separated from
the land that introduces us to a new form
of nationalism. The poignancy with
which Tagore expresses the sorrow of
Bengal in Gitanjali is very touching.
In this collection of poems, Bengal is
mourning after its partition, wishing for
a better future, and praying for regaining
its prosperity snatched away by the
British Raj as follows: Banglar mati,
Banglar jol, Banglar bayu, Banglar
YOJANA August 2022 45
The nationalist collective
consciousness of resistance
against the British Raj created
by these writers on an
intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in
later Indian literature.
phal/ Punyo hauk, Punyo hauk, Punyo
hauk, hey bhagoban!/ Banglar ghar,
Banglar haat, Banglar bon, Banglar
Maath. Purno hauk, Purno hauk, Purno
hauk, hey bhagoban!
It is the narrative of the Indian
Independence Movement that the
masses created with peasant nationalism.
Among the nationalist leaders, Gandhi
was the first to identify it. But its
foundation was laid back in 1905 when the people across
the nation, including Bengal, intensified their struggle
against the British Raj. As a result, eminent leaders like
Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, etc., joined
the movement after 1905 and infused a new consciousness
towards the nation, which gained immense strength after
Gandhi’s entry in 1917.
1917: Gandhian Influence
In fact, after the First World War, Gandhi went to
Champaran in 1917 as soon as he returned from Africa and
met the indigo farmers there. His meeting with the farmers
of Champaran was a national event. The impact of Gandhi’s
travels on rural society across India was profound. He
motivated farmers to join non-violent movements and be an
ally in building a free and fearless nation. A folk poet of
Khari Boli has enthusiastically described this active
state of mind of resistance and creation in the following
lines: Sabarmati se chala sant, ek ahimsadhari/ jagti mein
sannata chaya ghumi prithvi saari/ kampe kamariya haath
mein lathi ek langotidhari/ ...ghar mein ja ja alakh jagaya,
azadi ka path padhaya/ Khadi-dhari hamein banaya Bharat
tera pujari. An unknown poet of Bhojpuri has also mentioned
Gandhi’s similar effect: Maan Gandhi ke bachanwa dukhwa
ho jahiye sapanva/ tan pe utaar kapda videshi, khaddar ke
kail dharanwa. Gandhi’s influence on the public reflects in
the following folk song by Haipou Jadonang, belonging to
the Kacha Naga ethnicity and associated with the Kabui
Revolution of Northeast India, in connection with Gandhi’s
visit to Silchar in 1927: O Mahatma Gandhi! hamare raja
ban jayiye/ aayiye ji aayiye!
1942: Quit India Movement, Liberation Context of
Revolutionary Nationalism
What happened to Mahatma Gandhi in 1942 when he
was compelled to coin the slogan ‘Do or Die’? The famous
historian Shahid Amin in his article on Chauri Chaura
entitled Smriti aur itihas: Chauri Chaura, 1922-1992,
points out that at times the people or farmers wanted to see
Gandhi as a fighter who should not only be a coordinator
but also take up arms when the situation demands and
confront the enemies. Such hints are also found in some
folk poems. For instance, khwab driver ne jo dekha vah
mein karta jahir/ ek bayaban mein kuch gujar raha hai
gard-o-gubar/ aa rahi fauj hai us simat se das bees hazar/
aur hai Gandhiji fauj mein aala sardar/
aur sorajya ka is hath mein hai alam/
sare dushman ko vah karte chale aate
kalam/ har ek angrez ke jab kaan mein
pahunchi ye sada/jaisa socha kiya vah
nang dharang bhaga…
2
In the above lines, the folk poet’s
desire that Gandhi had attacked the
British as chief of the army of ten-
twenty thousand soldiers created a
distinct form of mass nationalism. It depicted him becoming
violent for the cause of Swaraj and marching with the native
army, attacking the British, and beheading them. On hearing
this news, the British army panicked. Everyone ran helter-
skelter, in whatever condition they were. Such imagery
about Gandhi was rarely seen, but the public aspiration that
he can also be violent is unimaginable and presented his
image as a warrior.
The character of Indian nationalism seen between 1857
and 1947 points toward the nationalism of the common
people, in which there is nothing other than the nation’s
liberation at the centre. The writings in Hindi literature or
folk memories also focus on political emancipation and
correspondingly raise the question of social emancipation
with aplomb, in which the issue of women and Dalit
emancipation comes up prominently. The images of
nationalism created during the Indian Independence
movement have been deeply discussed and debated by
historians and intellectuals in many fields. That is why this
period of Indian history is seen as a foundation of the Indian
nation on which India, after 1947, was built. This India is as
democratic and secular as it should be in the international
arena and whose collective consciousness is centred on the
Indian tradition of knowledge and thought process. ?
References
1. Swapna, Bihar Bandhu, 13 October , 1881
2. Kashganj Ka Khwaab, 1921; confiscated Urdu Pamphlets, No. 141,
India Office Library, London
Endnotes
1. P . C. Joshi, ed.: 2007; Rebellion 1857; National Book Trust, India, Delhi.
2. Rashmi Choudhary; 2012; Bharateey Raashtravaad Ka Nimnavargeey
Prasang; Prakashan Sansthan, Delhi.
3. Devendra Choubey, Badrinarayan and Hitendra Patel; 2008; 1857:
Bhaarat Ka Pahala Mukti Sangharsh; Prakaahan Sansthan, Delhi.
4. Shahid Amin and Gyanendra Pandey; 1995 & 2002; Nimnavargeey
Prasang, Bhaag Ek Aur Do; Raajakamal Prakashan, Delhi.
5. S. N. R. Rizvi; 2021; The Rebel World of 1857; Kalpaz Publication,
Delhi.
6. Badrinarayan, Rashmi Choudhary and Sanjay Nath; 2010; 1857 Ka
Mahaasangraam; Aadhaar Prakashan, Delhi.
7. Rashmi Choudhary and Devendra Choubey; 2016; Aadhunik Bharat
Ke Itihaas Lekhan Ke Kuchh Sahityik Srot; Ganapat Teli, Devina
Akshayavar & Khushi Patanaayak, Prakashan Sansthan, Delhi.
8. Jagmal Singh; 2020; Poorvottar Ki Janajaateey Krantiyaan;
Raashtreey Pustak Nyaas, Bharat; Delhi.
YOJANA August 2022 47
espite being a geographic entity, India,
before the advent of the East India
Company, acutely lacked in having a sense
of nationalism as its inhabitants considered
their own States of residence, as their country and not
India as a whole. The number of such States was beyond
six hundred at that point of time. With the decline of
the Mughal Empire and direct/indirect meddling of the
Company, Indian Princely States started falling prey to
the Company’s diplomacy and military advances that
culminated into British rule in India.
Much before the First War of Independence of
1857, Urdu poets had started expressing their anguish
over the decline of rule of law, rampant corruption and
loss of time testing human values.
They composed the poetic genre
‘Shahr-Aashob’ (urban unrest)
not only to record socio-political
ground realities of their time but
also to express their indignation at
the political situation that prevailed.
‘Shahr-Aashob’, penned by poets
like Shah Hatim, Ashraf Ali Fughan,
Mohammad Rafi Sauda, Mir Taqi
Mir, took lead in commenting on
the disturbing political situation
and ventured to criticise the ruling
Princes as well.
A century before 1857, with the
defeat of Shah Alam II, Mir Qasim
and the Wazir of Awadh, Shuja-ud-
Daula, in the Battle of Plassey in
1757, and Tipu Sultan’s defeat and
death in the Battle of Srirangapatna
in 1799, nationalism had started
taking shape in Urdu poetry. Many
poems were written to mourn the
death of Tipu Sultan.
The First War of Independence of
1857 became tumultuous as it stirred
Role of Urdu Literature
Dr Naresh
The author is a former Professor of Modern Literature at Panjab University & Chairman, Chandigarh Academy of Letters.
Email: dr.naresh.chd@gmail.com
Jashn-e-azadi D
the consciousness of Urdu poets whose expression of
indignation at the Company rules resulted in destroying
local industries and meddling with religious matters
of the land. The defeat of Indian revolutionaries at
the hands of the British led to an era of nationalism.
Many Urdu poets who were composing poetry to induce
courage and valour of self-sacrifice were hanged by
the British. These included, among others, Rahim-ud-
Din Ejad, Zafaryab Rasikh Dehlvi, Ghazanfar Sayeed,
Aziz Dehlavi, Suroor Gurganvi, Ghyas-ud-Din Sharar,
Qamar-ud-Din Shaida, Hadi Sambhali and Ismail Fauq.
Quite a few poets did not write revolutionary
poetry, but jumped into the battlefield against the
British. Poet Aziz Moradabadi brandished his sword
Some of the Urdu publications of DPD
Page 5
YOJANA August 2022 43
o understand any nation and its current
contexts, it is necessary to explore the sources
present in the folk and rural areas and history.
After all, what are these references and sources
that help in understanding the makings of the Indian nation?
What would be the time for understanding them and their
history? What would be the ideology? What would be the
theory? These are some of the questions which always
trouble history scholars.
Jaishankar Prasad says about India: arun yeh madhumay
desh hamara. And then, in the collective consciousness of the
larger society of the country, the aspiration for national liberation
in the form of words resonates all over with the sentiments of
national aesthetic as– jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek
sahara/ saral tamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha
manohar/ chitka Jeevan hariyali par,
mangal kumkum sara.
Although these feelings in the
poetry of Jaishankar Prasad indicate
the traditional nationalism of the
Indian nation, writers like Bhartendu
Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Mahavir Prasad Dwivedi, and Acharya
Ramchandra Shukla, Acharya Hazari
Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma,
etc., address it by associating it with
national literature. It is also true that
these creations inspired the Indians
to stand prepared against the British
Raj and create a historical form of
nationalism in Indian society for
which the country and its people are
supreme.
Role of Hindi Literature
Devendra Choubey
The author is a Professor, Centre of Indian Languages, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. Email: devendrachoubeyjnu@gmail.com
T
The question is how to understand this form of
nationalism created between 1857 and 1947. Should it
be linked to the peasant movements of Gandhi, the Dalit
references of Ambedkar, the revolutionary socialism
of Bhagat Singh, or the radical nationalist attitude of
Subhas Chandra Bose? It is a complex question, but what
is important is the way Hindi writers like Premchand,
Ramchandra Shukla, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, etc., see
it in caste contexts. Writers like Rabindranath Tagore of
Bengal consider it as a hypothetical consciousness. Tagore
sees a deep understanding of the civilisation and cultures
of the subcontinent in that consciousness, which he tries
to understand through his novels like Gora and works like
Gitanjali. Meanwhile, Premchand sees hidden currents
of rural civilisation in it, which he tries to understand by
associating them with the agricultural
way of life.
But the folk memories and the
various versions of folk creation
imprinted in those memories help to
understand the nationalist creations
between 1857 and 1947. For example,
dividing this form of nationalism and
its historical consciousness into the
following periods of the history of
the Indian Independence movement
somewhat helps in understanding
the structure of Indian nationalism.
First, the Struggle of 1857 and its
culmination; second, 1873 and Indian
Literature, Press and Journalism;
1885, the Rise of the Congress and
the rise of a new intellectual class;
Arun yeh madhumay desh hamara.
Jahan pahunch anjan kshitij ko milta ek sahara
Saral taamras garbh vibha par naach rahi tarushikha manohar
Chitka Jeevan hariyali par mangal kumkum sara.
– Jaishankar Prasad
shaPing consciousness 44 YOJANA August 2022
The Dalit renaissance also
emerged in Maharashtra
because of Savitribai Phule and
Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian
Independence and social
movements after 1920 following
Ambedkar's arrival.
1905, the Partition of Bengal, the surge of the Independence
movement; 1917, Gandhi, Ambedkar and the National stream
of the Freedom Movement; 1942, Quit India Movement,
Liberation context of Revolutionary Nationalism.
Meanwhile, 1936 brought about a different meaning to
the world of literature when the economically oppressed
and socially exploited sections became the focal point of
literature. It can be seen as nationalism of the oppressed and
deprived sections, which Premchand alludes to in his novel
‘Godan’ published in 1936. Godan is a splendid example
of peasant nationalism. Premchand, in his novel, has tried
to understand the meaning of nationalism for the deprived
and exploited society on the pretext of the characters of a
farmer, Hori and a labourer, Gobar. An important task will
be understanding nationalism and contemporary India based
on these contexts and the literary works highlighting them.
Indian Literature, Press and Journalism in 1873
What were the Rules and Acts that affected India after
1857, especially after 1873, whose resonance is perceptible
in the world of literature and journalism and against which
the consciousness of an intellectual nationalism in Hindi-
and Bengali-speaking society of North India is seen?
Among them, two Acts made in 1858 are important: one,
the Press Act, and the other, the Arms Act. It was the effect
of these Acts that in India, from 1878 to 1947, many works,
magazines, and books were banned by the British Raj,
including Balkrishna Bhatt’s Hindi Pradeep, Premchand’s
Soz-e-Watan, Sakharam Ganesh Deuskar’s Desher
Katha, etc. The deep consciousness of resistance against
the British Raj can be seen in these works. The biggest
role of these works was creating a sense of discontent
among the public against the British Raj. The Hindi writer
Bhartendu Harishchandra played a big role in this. The
poem Swapn by Mahesh Narayan, a poet of this period,
while igniting a consciousness of resistance against these
two Acts, points towards the same form of nationalism that
John Plamenatz discusses. One can feel the consciousness
of this intellectual nationalism in the following lines of
Mahesh Narayan’s Swapn: Mahadev yeh raj swadhin
karte (Mahadev would have made this kingdom free).
1
Here, the poet uses the myth of Mahadev to avoid the clause
of the British Press Act against him. It is also important
to note that many Hindi writers of
that period, including Balakrishna
Bhatt, and Pratap Narayan Mishra
have tried to understand Indianness
through such myth, which sometimes
some commentators associate with
a particular religion. However, the
reason behind using such analogies was
that the British Raj’s laws and writers
were resorting to religious notations to
protect them from these laws.
1885: Rise of the Congress and Emergence of New
Intellectuals
One reason for development of a particular stream
of Indian nationalism by poets like Mahesh Narayan or
writers like Bhartendu Harishchandra, Balkrishna Bhatt,
Pratap Narayan Mishra, etc., was the English education
along with the formation of the Congress in 1885. As a
counter measure, it gradually developed a deep affection in
Indians for the motherland and the native language. It was
because of the Congress, that the Indian intellectual class
also got a space, the effect of which was that after receiving
the English education, this section played a big role in the
freedom movement as a middle class, as seen in Amritlal
Nagar’s novels like Karwat and Peediyan. Simultaneously,
the Dalit renaissance also emerged in Maharashtra because
of Savitribai Phule and Jyotiba Phule, which appeared
on a bigger canvas in Indian Independence and social
movements after 1920 following Ambedkar’s arrival. The
seriousness with which Hindi writer Radhamohan Gokul
wrote on Dalit and women’s issues in Hindi around 1890
is significant. One of his works, Angrez Daku, published in
1910, was also banned by the British. But it is unfortunate
that none of his works find a mention in the history of
Hindi literature. Among the critics of Hindi, Ram Vilas
Sharma and Karmendu Shishir discuss him and consider
his works an important part of the Hindi Renaissance. After
understanding the policies of the British Raj, these writers,
through their writings, developed a deep consciousness of
patriotism in public. One can also say that the nationalist
collective consciousness of resistance against the British Raj
created by these writers on an intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in later Indian literature.
1905: Partition of Bengal and Surge of the Independence
Movement
A later example is Rabindranath Tagore’s works after
the Bengal partition in 1905. The images of the Indian
nation Tagore creates in Gitanjali and other works deeply
affect the entire world, including India. This song composed
by Tagore in Gitanjali alludes to Indian nationalism which
can be called a peasant-centered cultural nationalism and
whose development is visible in the works of Hindi writers
like Premchand after 1930. It expresses the pain of the
agrarian society of being separated from
the land that introduces us to a new form
of nationalism. The poignancy with
which Tagore expresses the sorrow of
Bengal in Gitanjali is very touching.
In this collection of poems, Bengal is
mourning after its partition, wishing for
a better future, and praying for regaining
its prosperity snatched away by the
British Raj as follows: Banglar mati,
Banglar jol, Banglar bayu, Banglar
YOJANA August 2022 45
The nationalist collective
consciousness of resistance
against the British Raj created
by these writers on an
intellectual level across the
country is significantly visible in
later Indian literature.
phal/ Punyo hauk, Punyo hauk, Punyo
hauk, hey bhagoban!/ Banglar ghar,
Banglar haat, Banglar bon, Banglar
Maath. Purno hauk, Purno hauk, Purno
hauk, hey bhagoban!
It is the narrative of the Indian
Independence Movement that the
masses created with peasant nationalism.
Among the nationalist leaders, Gandhi
was the first to identify it. But its
foundation was laid back in 1905 when the people across
the nation, including Bengal, intensified their struggle
against the British Raj. As a result, eminent leaders like
Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, etc., joined
the movement after 1905 and infused a new consciousness
towards the nation, which gained immense strength after
Gandhi’s entry in 1917.
1917: Gandhian Influence
In fact, after the First World War, Gandhi went to
Champaran in 1917 as soon as he returned from Africa and
met the indigo farmers there. His meeting with the farmers
of Champaran was a national event. The impact of Gandhi’s
travels on rural society across India was profound. He
motivated farmers to join non-violent movements and be an
ally in building a free and fearless nation. A folk poet of
Khari Boli has enthusiastically described this active
state of mind of resistance and creation in the following
lines: Sabarmati se chala sant, ek ahimsadhari/ jagti mein
sannata chaya ghumi prithvi saari/ kampe kamariya haath
mein lathi ek langotidhari/ ...ghar mein ja ja alakh jagaya,
azadi ka path padhaya/ Khadi-dhari hamein banaya Bharat
tera pujari. An unknown poet of Bhojpuri has also mentioned
Gandhi’s similar effect: Maan Gandhi ke bachanwa dukhwa
ho jahiye sapanva/ tan pe utaar kapda videshi, khaddar ke
kail dharanwa. Gandhi’s influence on the public reflects in
the following folk song by Haipou Jadonang, belonging to
the Kacha Naga ethnicity and associated with the Kabui
Revolution of Northeast India, in connection with Gandhi’s
visit to Silchar in 1927: O Mahatma Gandhi! hamare raja
ban jayiye/ aayiye ji aayiye!
1942: Quit India Movement, Liberation Context of
Revolutionary Nationalism
What happened to Mahatma Gandhi in 1942 when he
was compelled to coin the slogan ‘Do or Die’? The famous
historian Shahid Amin in his article on Chauri Chaura
entitled Smriti aur itihas: Chauri Chaura, 1922-1992,
points out that at times the people or farmers wanted to see
Gandhi as a fighter who should not only be a coordinator
but also take up arms when the situation demands and
confront the enemies. Such hints are also found in some
folk poems. For instance, khwab driver ne jo dekha vah
mein karta jahir/ ek bayaban mein kuch gujar raha hai
gard-o-gubar/ aa rahi fauj hai us simat se das bees hazar/
aur hai Gandhiji fauj mein aala sardar/
aur sorajya ka is hath mein hai alam/
sare dushman ko vah karte chale aate
kalam/ har ek angrez ke jab kaan mein
pahunchi ye sada/jaisa socha kiya vah
nang dharang bhaga…
2
In the above lines, the folk poet’s
desire that Gandhi had attacked the
British as chief of the army of ten-
twenty thousand soldiers created a
distinct form of mass nationalism. It depicted him becoming
violent for the cause of Swaraj and marching with the native
army, attacking the British, and beheading them. On hearing
this news, the British army panicked. Everyone ran helter-
skelter, in whatever condition they were. Such imagery
about Gandhi was rarely seen, but the public aspiration that
he can also be violent is unimaginable and presented his
image as a warrior.
The character of Indian nationalism seen between 1857
and 1947 points toward the nationalism of the common
people, in which there is nothing other than the nation’s
liberation at the centre. The writings in Hindi literature or
folk memories also focus on political emancipation and
correspondingly raise the question of social emancipation
with aplomb, in which the issue of women and Dalit
emancipation comes up prominently. The images of
nationalism created during the Indian Independence
movement have been deeply discussed and debated by
historians and intellectuals in many fields. That is why this
period of Indian history is seen as a foundation of the Indian
nation on which India, after 1947, was built. This India is as
democratic and secular as it should be in the international
arena and whose collective consciousness is centred on the
Indian tradition of knowledge and thought process. ?
References
1. Swapna, Bihar Bandhu, 13 October , 1881
2. Kashganj Ka Khwaab, 1921; confiscated Urdu Pamphlets, No. 141,
India Office Library, London
Endnotes
1. P . C. Joshi, ed.: 2007; Rebellion 1857; National Book Trust, India, Delhi.
2. Rashmi Choudhary; 2012; Bharateey Raashtravaad Ka Nimnavargeey
Prasang; Prakashan Sansthan, Delhi.
3. Devendra Choubey, Badrinarayan and Hitendra Patel; 2008; 1857:
Bhaarat Ka Pahala Mukti Sangharsh; Prakaahan Sansthan, Delhi.
4. Shahid Amin and Gyanendra Pandey; 1995 & 2002; Nimnavargeey
Prasang, Bhaag Ek Aur Do; Raajakamal Prakashan, Delhi.
5. S. N. R. Rizvi; 2021; The Rebel World of 1857; Kalpaz Publication,
Delhi.
6. Badrinarayan, Rashmi Choudhary and Sanjay Nath; 2010; 1857 Ka
Mahaasangraam; Aadhaar Prakashan, Delhi.
7. Rashmi Choudhary and Devendra Choubey; 2016; Aadhunik Bharat
Ke Itihaas Lekhan Ke Kuchh Sahityik Srot; Ganapat Teli, Devina
Akshayavar & Khushi Patanaayak, Prakashan Sansthan, Delhi.
8. Jagmal Singh; 2020; Poorvottar Ki Janajaateey Krantiyaan;
Raashtreey Pustak Nyaas, Bharat; Delhi.
YOJANA August 2022 47
espite being a geographic entity, India,
before the advent of the East India
Company, acutely lacked in having a sense
of nationalism as its inhabitants considered
their own States of residence, as their country and not
India as a whole. The number of such States was beyond
six hundred at that point of time. With the decline of
the Mughal Empire and direct/indirect meddling of the
Company, Indian Princely States started falling prey to
the Company’s diplomacy and military advances that
culminated into British rule in India.
Much before the First War of Independence of
1857, Urdu poets had started expressing their anguish
over the decline of rule of law, rampant corruption and
loss of time testing human values.
They composed the poetic genre
‘Shahr-Aashob’ (urban unrest)
not only to record socio-political
ground realities of their time but
also to express their indignation at
the political situation that prevailed.
‘Shahr-Aashob’, penned by poets
like Shah Hatim, Ashraf Ali Fughan,
Mohammad Rafi Sauda, Mir Taqi
Mir, took lead in commenting on
the disturbing political situation
and ventured to criticise the ruling
Princes as well.
A century before 1857, with the
defeat of Shah Alam II, Mir Qasim
and the Wazir of Awadh, Shuja-ud-
Daula, in the Battle of Plassey in
1757, and Tipu Sultan’s defeat and
death in the Battle of Srirangapatna
in 1799, nationalism had started
taking shape in Urdu poetry. Many
poems were written to mourn the
death of Tipu Sultan.
The First War of Independence of
1857 became tumultuous as it stirred
Role of Urdu Literature
Dr Naresh
The author is a former Professor of Modern Literature at Panjab University & Chairman, Chandigarh Academy of Letters.
Email: dr.naresh.chd@gmail.com
Jashn-e-azadi D
the consciousness of Urdu poets whose expression of
indignation at the Company rules resulted in destroying
local industries and meddling with religious matters
of the land. The defeat of Indian revolutionaries at
the hands of the British led to an era of nationalism.
Many Urdu poets who were composing poetry to induce
courage and valour of self-sacrifice were hanged by
the British. These included, among others, Rahim-ud-
Din Ejad, Zafaryab Rasikh Dehlvi, Ghazanfar Sayeed,
Aziz Dehlavi, Suroor Gurganvi, Ghyas-ud-Din Sharar,
Qamar-ud-Din Shaida, Hadi Sambhali and Ismail Fauq.
Quite a few poets did not write revolutionary
poetry, but jumped into the battlefield against the
British. Poet Aziz Moradabadi brandished his sword
Some of the Urdu publications of DPD
48 YOJANA August 2022
along with General Bakht Khan on
the battleground. Ruswa Badauni was
another Urdu poet to follow Aziz by
sacrificing his life for the cause of
motherland by fighting against the
British.
Towards the end of the 19
th
century, Indian National Congress
emerged as a major political party
leading the freedom movement.
Urdu writers and journalists boosted
up the movement through their
pen. Figures such as Munshi Sajjad
Hussain, Mirza Machhu Beg, Ratan
Nath Sarshar, Tribhuvan Nath Sapru
Hijr, Brij Narayan Chakbast, Altaf Hussain Hali, Akbar
Allahabadi and Ismail Merathi established themselves as
literary protagonists of Indian culture and independence.
In 1906, Indian National Congress, in its Calcutta
session, raised the demand for Swaraj (self-rule)
and for boycotting of foreign items. The same year,
revolutionary movement took off in Bengal that spread
over North India in a short span. Poets like Hasrat
Mohani, Chakbast, Zafar Ali Khan, Barq Dehlavi fanned
nationalism and Maulana Shibli vehemently attacked
the British. Urdu poets continued with their tirade
against the British during Home Rule Agitation, Rowlatt
Act (1918) and Jallianwala Bagh massacre (1919) and
poets like Mohd. Ali Jauhar, Dr Iqbal, Mir Ghulam
Bhik Nairang, Agha Hashr Kashmiri, and Ehsan Danish
took forward the march of freedom movement and
infused unprecedented enthusiasm in general masses.
During third decade of 20
th
century, a great number
of Urdu poets including Tilok Chand Mehroom, Josh
Malihabadi, Ravish Siddiqi, Hafeez Jalandhari, Mela
Ram Wafa, Anand Narayan Mulla, Ehsan Danish, Ali
Jawad Zaidi, Azad Ansari and to name a few, openly
supported the freedom movement and filled the heart of
their readers with absolute hatred for the foreign rule.
In 1936, the Progressive Writers’ Movement started,
which stood firm against the British rule and forcefully
advocated the cause of national independence. Hundreds
of poems, short stories, novels and articles appeared in
Urdu newspapers and magazines, and a galaxy of Urdu
poets appeared on the literary horizon. Poets such as
Asrar-ul-Haq Majaz, Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Jan Nisar Akhtar,
Moin Ahsan Jazbi, Makhdoom Mohiuddin, Ali Sardar
Jafri and Kaifi Azmi added socio-economic problems of
Indian society to the agenda for independence.
A bulk of Urdu literature is available against the
two-nation theory of Muhammad Ali Jinnah and his
idea of partition. There is no dearth of poems written to
eulogise national spirit.
A fervent ebullition for national
pride did not confine to Urdu
poetry alone. Urdu prose, rather
more forcefully, raised its voice of
indignation and protest against the
foreign rule. Urdu press, too, was
agog with editorials and articles on
the subject. Two such newspapers
deserve a mention here. These were
‘Urdu Akhbar’ edited by Maulvi
Mohammad Baqar and ‘Payam-e-
Azadi’ edited by Azimullah Khan. It
can easily be understood as to how
much these papers were impacting
the Indian minds that the rulers
looted Baqar Ali’s house and put him to death. The
British considered it a crime enough to demolish a
house from where a copy of ‘Payam-e-Azadi’ was
discovered.
Articles written by Sir Sayyed Ahmed Khan,
Maulana Hali and Shibli Nomani largely influenced
their readers towards social awakening and nation
building. Munshi Premchand, initially under the
influence of Gandhi and subsequently impressed by
Progressive Writers’ Movement, was a nationalist to the
core. His first collection of short stories, titled ‘Soz-e-
Watan’ was banned by the British and its copies were
confined to be set ablaze. Rashid-ul-Khairi, Azeem
Beg Chughtai, Sudarshan Faakir, Ali Abbas Husaini,
Sohail Azeemabadi, and Akhtar Orenvi are other Urdu
story writers who took forward the message of India’s
freedom through their writings.
Next generation of the above mentioned writers
produced noteworthy Urdu story writers like Saadat
Hasan Manto, Krishan Chander, Akhtar Ansari, Upender
Nath Ashk, Hayatullah Ansari, Ismat Chughtai and
Rajinder Singh Bedi. These writers were indisputable
in their concept of freedom from the foreign rule and
building a new secular classless social order.
Urdu is the language that gave the slogan ‘Inquilab
Zindabad’ (Long live the revolution) to Indian
populace. It was Urdu that aired Subhas Chandra
Bose’s proclamation, ‘Tum mujhe khoon do, main
tumhe azadi doonga’ (You give me blood, I will give
you freedom).
I end this article by quoting an Urdu couplet that
was popular during our freedom movement:
“Sarfaroshi ki tamanna ab hamare dil mein hai
Dekhna hai zor kitna bazoo-e-qatil mein hai”
(Now my heart urges me to pay my head as a
price for freedom. Let me see how powerful is the
killer’s hand.) ?
In 1936, the Progressive Writers’
Movement started, which stood
firm against the British rule
and forcefully advocated the
cause of national independence.
Hundreds of poems, short
stories, novels and articles
appeared in Urdu newspapers
and magazines, and a galaxy of
Urdu poets appeared on the
literary horizon.
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