Benoy Badal Dinesh: The Story of Three Brave Boys Who Took The Battle to the British!
It was the 8th of December 1930. The Writer’s Building in Kolkata, the administrative nerve centre of the city, was buzzing with activity as usual.
British officers, and Bengali clerks,
were doing their regular business. It was then that three men shattered the silence, with a deafening roar that would echo through the ages.
The three men, Benoy, Badal and Dinesh Chandra Gupta, were influenced by revolutionary activities and had decided to take matters into
their own hands.
Benoy Krishna Basu was born on 11th September 1908, in the village of Rohitbhog in Munshiganj district, now in Bangladesh. After passing the matriculation exam, he enrolled in the Sir Salimullah Medical College (erstwhile Mitford Medical School). Influenced by
Hemachandra Ghosh, a Dhaka-based revolutionary, Benoy joined the ‘Mukti Sangha’, a secret society connected to the revolutionary Jugantar party.
Dinesh Gupta was born on 6th December 1911, in the tiny village of Josholong in Munshiganj district, now in Bangladesh.
While studying at the Dhaka College, he joined the Bengal Volunteers, a group mobilised by Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose in 1928, during the Calcutta session of the Indian National Congress.
Born Sudhir Gupta in the village of Purba Shimulia (East Shimulia), in Dhaka’s Bikrampur
region, Badal Gupta was inspired by Nikunja Sen, who taught at the Banaripara School of Bikrampur. He joined the Bengal Volunteers as a member, and found his calling in revolutionary activities. Badal was influenced by the revolutionary activities of his two paternal uncles,
Late Dharani Nath Gupta, and Nagendra Nath Gupta, both involved in the Alipore Bomb Case, and imprisoned along with Rishi Aurobindo Ghosh.
The Bengal Volunteers, organised by Subhash Chandra Bose, came into being during the 1928 Kolkata session of the Indian National Congress.
Led by Major Satya Gupta, the group continued its activities even after the Kolkata session of Congress ended.
Thus the Bengal Volunteers marched on in their quest to liquidate infamous British officers. Gupta spent time in Midnapore, training local revolutionaries in firearms
usage.
They were known for their revolutionary exploits.
‘Operation Freedom’ launched in 1930 protested against police repression in different Bengali Jails. In August 1930, the group planned to execute Lowman, the Police Inspector General. Benoy ultimately shot him, at the
Medical School Hospital in Dhaka, escaping to Kolkata soon after.
The three freedom fighters, Benoy, Badal and Dinesh, decided to kill N S Simpson, as well as other Britishers, to strike terror into the heart of the Raj’s official circles. This was to be an attack on
"The Writer's Building, the Secretariat", in the heart of Kolkata.
It is interesting to note that the Writer’s Building, designed by Thomas Lyon in 1777, still serves as the Secretariat Building of the state government of West Bengal."
The purpose of this construction was to
accommodate junior servants of the British Govt.
Three young men dressed in European attire came from the shadows and opened fire from their revolvers. They were after Col N S Simpson, IG Prison-Calcutta. The Britisher was known for the brutal oppression of political prisoners.
Soon, British police surrounded them, and thus ensued a brief gun battle, between the three young revolutionaries and the cops. British officers like Twynam, Prentice and Nelson suffered grievous injuries during the shooting.
Although the British managed to overpower the trio,
the men refused to surrender. Badal Gupta immediately ingested Potassium Cyanide, while Benoy & Dinesh shot themselves point blank with their firearms. Benoy breathed his last in a hospital on December 13, 1930.
Of the three bravehearts, only Dinesh survived.
Convicted, he was
sentenced to death by hanging for anti-government activities and murder. He was hanged on 7th July 1931, at the Alipore Jail, aged 19.
The cold day of 8th December 1930, saw the three young men achieve immortality.
Two of them were merely 22 years old, & the third was just 19.
They drew weapons and fired shots as soon as they saw Simpson, who died instantly.
According to Textbooks, He was a Freedom Fighter. Was he?
The true story of a Cannibal, Maulvi Syed Ahmed Barelvi & his death like a Rabid Dog.
Did you know, the concept of Jihad in Modern times had its roots in present day Rae Bareily and this Mauzvi believed his teachings,
in future will make modern Islamists in waging Jihad and attempting to create an Islamic state with strict enforcement of Shari'ah?
This Barelvi, was the first modern Islamic leader to lead a movement that was "religious, military and political," & to address the common people
and rulers with a call for Jihad.
Ahmad is widely regarded as the founder of the subcontinental Ahl-i Hadith (Jihad) movement and his teachings are highly influential amongst its members.
Born in Rae Bareli in 1786, Syed Ahmad received his initial education in his home town and
On the night of the 26/11 terrorist attacks on Mumbai, Marine Commandos of the Indian Navy (MARCOS) entered the Taj, one of the places held captive by LET. Their brief was simple—rescue the hostages and neutralize the attackers.
Praveen Kumar Teotia,
the recipient of Shaurya Chakra was leading one of the MARCOS team..
He & his team saved more than 150 innocent lives but unfortunately, Four bullets ripped through his body; a lung was punctured; four ribs were shattered and splinters scattered all over his chest; doctors
attending to him declared that his life had been cut short, that he could never swim or run. But he proved everyone wrong.
Declared Unfit For Life, Praveen Fought Back & Became A Marathon Runner & the won the prestigious #IronMan Championship.
“On January 13, 1948, I learnt that Gandhiji had decided to go on fast unto death. The reason given was that he wanted an assurance of
Hindu-Muslim Unity… But I and many others could easily see that the real motive was to compel the Dominion Govt to pay the sum of Rs 55 crores to Pakistan, the payment of which was emphatically refused by the Govt…. But this decision of the people’s Govt was reversed to suit
the tune of Gandhiji’s fast. It was evident to my mind that the force of public opinion was nothing but a trifle when compared with the leanings of Gandhiji favourable to Pakistan.
In 1946 or thereabout, Muslim atrocities perpetrated on Hindus under the Govt patronage of
Four Nehru things out of Plenty which you are not aware…
1 Pandit Nehru has always nursed the Communist Party of India with the fondness of an old woman who gave birth to her first and only child at an advanced age – Sita Ram Goel.
2 In September 1948, Nehru went to London
to attend a Commonwealth conference. On his return, he wrote to Patel that “even Lady Mountbatten was worried about” and “Members of the Parliament spoke about” Patel’s crackdown on communist leaders. In the same letter, he pointed out to Sardar that regarding RSS there was
‘”a widespread impression in England that they are Fascist communal-minded people”. So at this juncture removing the ban on RSS, he wrote to Patel, would make an impression that Indian state was encouraging “certain Fascist elements in India”.
Except Edwina, Nehru never gave