Anil Nauriya: Against The Dying of The Light - Frontier Gandhi, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (1890-1988)
Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan was not merely an NWFP figure; he was, as this note shows, an all-India leader and an iconic personality of the entire subcontinent who suffered long years of imprisonment both in British Indian jails and, after 1947, in Pakistan as well.
The troubling development in Faridabad is significant for the contempt that it shows towards our composite culture. It is part of a pattern of attacks in recent decades on India’s freedom movement and its highest values. Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru have been targeted by majoritarian sectarian elements and the tirade against them has continued relentlessly. At a provincial and district level too there have been attempts to erase the memory of India’s freedom struggle and its leading figures. Sometime back, in Uttar Pradesh there was an attempt in Gorakhpur to rename a Park that memorialises Vindhyvasini Prasad Verma, an eminent lawyer who had been associated with Mahatma Gandhi since the days of the Champaran struggle of 1917 and had organised in Gorakhpur the protest against the Rowlatt legislation in 1919.
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