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STUDENT’S SECTION – FOR PRINT
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“Swarajya is my birthright and I shall have it”
The famous quote by Lokmanya Tilak who was one of the first and strongest advocates of Swaraj ("self-rule")
and a strong radical in Indian consciousness.
Bal Gangadhar Tilak or Lokmanya Tilak (23 July 1856 – 1 August 1920), born as Keshav Gangadhar Tilak, was an
Indian nationalist, teacher, social reformer, lawyer and an independence activist. He was the first leader of the
Indian Independence Movement. The British colonial authorities called him "The father of the Indian unrest."
He was also conferred with the title of ‘Lokmanya’, which means ‘accepted by the people’.
During his lifetime, Bal Gangadhar Tilak had been tried for Sedition Charges three times by the British rulers -in
1897, 1909 and 1916. In 1897, Tilak was sentenced to 18 months in prison for inciting the people against the
British.
It was the 1909 sedition case, which is worth recalling even though over a century has passed after it.
Events leading to 1909 trial of Tilak:
*Pic source - https://twitter.com/mumbaiheritage/status/817774512724963328
On 30 April 1908, two youths, Prafulla Chaki and Khudiram Bose, threw a bomb on a carriage at Muzzafarpur,
to kill the Chief Presidency Magistrate Douglas Kingsford of Calcutta, but erroneously killed two women traveling
in it. While Chaki committed suicide when caught, Bose was hanged. Tilak, in his paper Kesari, defended the
revolutionaries and called for immediate Swaraj or self-rule. The Government swiftly charged him with sedition.
Tilak's sedition trial was held on 24 June 1908. Tilak was arrested from Bombay on a charge of sedition and 153A
IPC in respect of two articles carried in Kesari on 12 May and 9 June 1908.