Revolutionary Nationalism vs Gandhian Non-Violence
Two major ideological strands shaped India's freedom struggle:
| Feature | Revolutionary Nationalism | Gandhian Non-Violence |
|---|---|---|
| Method | Armed struggle, "propaganda by deed" | Satyagraha, civil disobedience |
| Belief | Violence justified to achieve freedom | Non-violence as moral and practical principle |
| Inspiration | Irish Sinn Fein, Russian nihilism, Mazzini | Tolstoy, Thoreau, Jain ahimsa |
| Key figures | Bhagat Singh, Azad, Surya Sen, Bose | Gandhi, Nehru (later), Rajagopalachari |
| Target | Direct confrontation with British authority | Mass mobilisation and moral pressure |
| Outcome | Martyrdom as propaganda; INA trials | Mass political awakening; independence via negotiation |
Both streams were complementary — revolutionary martyrdoms mobilised public opinion that Gandhian campaigns channelled into political pressure.
Early Revolutionary Groups — Bengal
Bengal was the cradle of revolutionary nationalism in India:
Anushilan Samiti (est. 1902):
- Founded by Satish Chandra Bose and P. Mitra in Calcutta
- Initially a fitness and cultural organisation that evolved into a revolutionary body
- Promoted physical training as preparation for armed resistance
- Two branches: Calcutta Anushilan (moderate) and Dhaka Anushilan (more militant)
- Produced revolutionaries like Aurobindo Ghosh, Bagha Jatin (Jatin Mukherjee)
- Participated in the Partition of Bengal (1905) agitation and Swadeshi movement
Yugantar (est. 1906):
- Militant wing that split from Anushilan Samiti
- Yugantar (meaning "New Age") — a Bengali revolutionary newspaper that became the movement's voice
- Key figure: Bagha Jatin (Jatindranath Mukherjee) — died in the famous Balasore Battle (1915)
- Alipore Bomb Case (1908): Aurobindo Ghosh tried; acquitted; retired to spiritual life in Pondicherry
Hindustan Republican Association (HRA) and HSRA
| Feature | HRA (1924) | HSRA (1928) |
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 1924 (Kanpur-Allahabad area) | 1928 (renamed/reorganised) |
| Founders | Sachindra Sanyal, Ram Prasad Bismil, Bhagat Singh | Bhagat Singh, Chandrashekhar Azad, Sukhdev |
| Ideology | Republican nationalism, anti-imperialist | Added socialist dimension — "Hindustan Socialist Republican" |
| Objective | Armed overthrow of British rule; establishment of Federal Republic | Federal Democratic Republic + social revolution |
| Key actions | Kakori Train Action (1925) | Saunders assassination (1928); Assembly bombing (1929) |
Kakori Conspiracy (1925)
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | 9 August 1925 |
| Location | Kakori, near Lucknow (Saharanpur–Lucknow railway line) |
| Organisation | Hindustan Republican Association (HRA) |
| Action | Looting of a train to raise funds for revolutionary activities |
| Key participants | Ram Prasad Bismil, Ashfaqullah Khan, Rajendra Nath Lahiri, Chandrashekhar Azad, Sachindra Bakshi, and others (~10 revolutionaries) |
| Arrests | Bismil arrested 26 October 1925; Ashfaqullah Khan arrested 7 December 1926 |
| Verdicts | Bismil, Ashfaqullah Khan, Thakur Roshan Singh hanged 19 December 1927; Rajendra Nath Lahiri hanged 17 December 1927 |
| Chandrashekhar Azad | Escaped arrest; went underground |
Significance: The Kakori Conspiracy galvanised a new generation of revolutionaries. Bhagat Singh was deeply influenced by the martyrdom of Bismil and Ashfaqullah Khan (notable for their Hindu-Muslim unity in death).
Bhagat Singh and the Lahore Conspiracy Case
Background
- Born: 27 September 1907, Lyallpur, Punjab
- Inspired by Kakori martyrs; joined HRA → HSRA
- Founding member of the reorganised Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA, 1928)
Key Actions
Saunders Assassination (1928):
- Lala Lajpat Rai died after a police lathi charge during anti-Simon Commission protests (October 1928)
- HSRA decided to avenge his death
- On 17 December 1928, Bhagat Singh, Shivaram Rajguru, and others shot John P. Saunders (Assistant Superintendent of Police, Lahore) outside the District Police Headquarters — intending to kill J.A. Scott (Superintendent of Police), who had ordered the lathi charge
Central Legislative Assembly Bombing (April 1929):
- On 8 April 1929, Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt threw two low-intensity smoke bombs in the Central Legislative Assembly, Delhi, to protest the passage of the Public Safety Bill and Trade Disputes Bill
- They did not flee; courted arrest; shouted "Inquilab Zindabad" (Long Live the Revolution)
- Bhagat Singh's statement: "It takes a loud noise to make the deaf hear" — referring to the British government
- The bombing was intended for publicity, not casualties; none were injured
Hunger Strike (1929):
- While in jail, Bhagat Singh and other revolutionaries undertook a prolonged hunger strike demanding political prisoner status
- The hunger strike lasted 63 days; Jatindra Nath Das (fellow prisoner) died on 13 September 1929 after 63 days of fasting — his martyrdom shocked India
Execution:
- Convicted in the Lahore Conspiracy Case for Saunders' murder
- Sentenced to death along with Sukhdev Thapar and Shivaram Rajguru
- Hanged on 23 March 1931 at Lahore Central Jail — the hanging was advanced by 11 hours to avoid public protests
- Bhagat Singh was 23 years old at the time of his martyrdom
Chandrashekhar Azad
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Birth | 23 July 1906, Bhavra village, Madhya Pradesh |
| Name meaning | "Azad" (Free) — pledged never to be arrested; refused to reveal his father's name as "Azad" (free) when caught by police in Kakori aftermath |
| Death | 27 February 1931 — shot himself at Alfred Park, Allahabad (now Chandrashekhar Azad Park) to avoid capture; never captured alive |
| Famous quote | "I am Azad (free), I am the son of freedom, and freedom is my address" (paraphrased; actual statement to police: "Mera naam Azad, mere Baap ka naam Swatantrata aur mera ghar jail") |
| Role | Military commander of HSRA; trained young revolutionaries; mastermind of operational aspects |
Chittagong Armoury Raid (1930)
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | 18 April 1930 |
| Leader | Surya Sen ("Master da" — a schoolteacher, hence "Master") |
| Organisation | Indian Republican Army, Chittagong Branch |
| Location | Chittagong (now Bangladesh) |
| Action | Raiders seized the police armoury and auxiliary forces armoury; cut telephone/telegraph wires; disrupted rail movements; hoisted the national flag and proclaimed a Provisional Revolutionary Government |
| Limitation | Failed to find ammunition in the armoury |
| Aftermath | Surya Sen evaded capture for nearly 4 years; arrested 16 February 1933; hanged 12 January 1934 |
| Significance | Most significant armed uprising between 1857 and 1942; inspired Bengali revolutionary spirit; women (Pritilata Waddedar, Kalpana Datta) played key roles |
Subhas Chandra Bose — Early Career
| Milestone | Details |
|---|---|
| Birth | 23 January 1897, Cuttack, Orissa |
| ICS (1920) | Passed the Indian Civil Service examination in England; resigned to join the freedom struggle |
| Influence | Deeply influenced by Swami Vivekananda; mentor was C.R. Das (Bengal Congress) |
| Bengal Congress | Leader of Bengal Congress, becoming its President |
| Imprisonment | Arrested multiple times by British; deported to Mandalay (Burma) 1924–1927 |
| Haripura Session (1938) | Elected President of the Indian National Congress at the Haripura Session (Gujarat), February 1938 |
| Tripuri Session (1939) | Re-elected Congress President at Tripuri (Madhya Pradesh) in March 1939 against Gandhi's candidate Pattabhi Sitaramayya; Bose won by 1,580 votes to 1,377 |
| Resignation (1939) | Resigned as Congress President in April 1939 after the entire Congress Working Committee resigned in protest; Gandhi said Sitaramayya's defeat was "his own defeat" |
| Forward Bloc (1939) | Founded the All India Forward Bloc on 3 May 1939 to consolidate the left and radical nationalist forces within Congress; later became an independent party |
| Arrest and Escape (1940–41) | Arrested in July 1940; placed under house arrest in Calcutta; escaped on 26 January 1941 disguised as an Afghan named Muhammad Ziauddin (Pathan traveller); left Calcutta through Peshawar |
Bose in Europe (1941–1943) and Japanese Connection
Berlin (April 1941 – February 1943):
- Arrived in Nazi Germany via the USSR and Afghanistan
- Met Hitler once (May 1942) — the meeting was unproductive; Hitler gave no concrete help
- Organised the Free India Centre (Azad Hind) in Berlin
- Broadcast anti-British messages on Azad Hind Radio
- Formed Indian Legion (Indische Legion) — a unit of ~3,000 Indian POWs from North Africa, under German command
Transfer to Japan (1943):
- Undertook a dangerous submarine journey — German U-boat to Japanese I-boat handover in the Indian Ocean (April–May 1943)
- Arrived in Southeast Asia (Tokyo, then Singapore) in July 1943
Indian National Army (INA) / Azad Hind Fauj
First INA (1942)
- Formed by Captain Mohan Singh from Indian POWs captured after the fall of Singapore (February 1942)
- Organised under Rash Behari Bose (an older revolutionary who had fled to Japan in 1915) at the Indian Independence League
- First INA collapsed by December 1942 after Mohan Singh was arrested by the Japanese due to tensions over the INA's autonomy
Second INA (1943) — Bose's INA
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Date | July 1943 (Bose takes command) |
| Strength | ~45,000 soldiers at peak (Indian POWs + civilian volunteers from Malayan Indian community) |
| Composition | Three Brigades: Subhas Brigade, Gandhi Brigade, Azad Brigade; Rani of Jhansi Regiment (all-women unit, ~1,500 soldiers, commanded by Capt. Lakshmi Sahgal) |
| "Give me blood" | Bose's famous speech in Singapore (5 July 1943): "Give me blood, and I shall give you freedom!" (Tum mujhe khoon do, main tumhe azadi dunga) |
| Motto | "Ittehad, Itmad, Qurbani" (Unity, Faith, Sacrifice) |
| War cry | "Jai Hind!" — later adopted as India's national salutation |
Azad Hind Government (1943)
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Formal declaration | 21 October 1943 at Cathay Cinema Hall, Singapore |
| Head of State | Subhas Chandra Bose (Head of Government and Supreme Commander) |
| Diplomatic recognition | Germany, Japan, Italy, Thailand, Burma, Manchukuo, Philippines, and Wang Jingwei's China — 9 countries |
| Territory | Andaman and Nicobar Islands (renamed Shaheed Dweep and Swaraj Dweep) — Japanese-occupied but transferred to Azad Hind |
| Currency, stamps | Issued its own currency and postage stamps |
| Declared war | Declared war on Britain and the USA on 23 October 1943 |
| Significance | First government-in-exile of free India; had diplomatic recognition; organised armed forces; challenged British legal authority over India |
INA Campaigns — Imphal and Kohima (1944)
The INA, together with the Japanese Army, launched the Imphal-Kohima Campaign (codenamed Operation U-Go / "March on Delhi") in March 1944:
- INA and Japanese forces crossed from Burma into Manipur
- Moirang (Manipur) — INA hoisted the Indian national flag on 14 April 1944 — the first raising of the tricolour on Indian soil by an Indian force (though under Japanese aegis)
- The battles of Imphal and Kohima (March–July 1944) were among the largest land battles of WWII
- Japanese and INA forces were defeated due to supply failures, British air superiority, and the monsoon
- Retreat from Imphal-Kohima was catastrophic — thousands died of starvation and disease
- The campaign effectively ended the INA's offensive capability
INA Trials (1945–46)
After Japan's surrender (August 1945), ~20,000 INA soldiers surrendered or were captured by British forces.
Red Fort Trials:
- The British government decided to try INA officers for treason and war crimes at Red Fort, Delhi (November 1945 onwards)
- First batch: Shah Nawaz Khan (Muslim), P.K. Sahgal (Hindu), Gurbaksh Singh Dhillon (Sikh) — deliberately chosen to represent communal unity
- Defence counsel: Bhulabhai Desai (Congress) led the defence; assisted by Jawaharlal Nehru and Tej Bahadur Sapru; Nehru wore his barrister's gown for the first time in decades
Public reaction:
- Massive public outrage across India — INA soldiers seen as heroes, not traitors
- "INA Defence Fund" raised crores
- Congress officially supported the INA soldiers
- The trials became a propaganda disaster for the British — every trial hearing amplified anti-British sentiment
- The British eventually released all INA prisoners and abandoned prosecutions
Royal Indian Navy (RIN) Mutiny — 1946
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | 18 February – 23 February 1946 |
| Starting point | HMIS Talwar (signals training ship), Bombay |
| Spread | Quickly spread to 78 ships and shore establishments; 20,000+ sailors ("Ratings") participated |
| Causes | Racial discrimination by British officers, poor food (rotten food served to Indian sailors while Europeans ate better), low pay, inspired by INA trials and rising nationalism |
| Demands | Equality with British counterparts; release of INA prisoners; release of INA accused; Indian independence |
| Leadership | Ratings' Central Strike Committee; M.S. Khan and Madan Singh among leaders |
| Resolution | Called off on 23 February 1946 after Congress and Muslim League persuaded sailors to stand down; demands not fully met |
| Significance | Demonstrated that British military loyalty could no longer be assumed; directly influenced Attlee's decision to accelerate the independence transfer process |
Clement Attlee later stated that the "activities of the Indian National Army and the RIN mutiny" were among the key reasons that convinced his government that British rule in India was no longer tenable.
Bose's Disappearance — Commissions of Inquiry
| Commission | Year | Finding |
|---|---|---|
| Shah Nawaz Committee | 1956 | Bose died in plane crash at Taihoku (Taipei), 18 August 1945 |
| Khosla Commission | 1970 | Confirmed plane crash death |
| Mukherjee Commission | 2005 | Dissented — concluded Bose did not die in the crash; ashes at Renkoji Temple (Tokyo) do not belong to Bose |
| Government's response | 2006 | Government of India rejected the Mukherjee Commission's findings |
The official position remains that Bose died from burns sustained in the Taihoku plane crash on 18 August 1945. The Mitsubishi Ki-21 bomber crashed on takeoff from Taihoku Airfield (modern Taipei, Taiwan). His ashes are preserved at Renkoji Temple, Tokyo.
Impact and Legacy of Revolutionary Nationalism
- Psychological impact: Martyrdoms of Bhagat Singh, Azad, and Bismil inspired a generation; British brutality made them national heroes
- INA trials as turning point: The trials made British military hold over India uncertain; the loyalty of the Indian Army to the Crown was shaken
- RIN mutiny: Confirmed that the British military apparatus in India was crumbling
- Attlee's admission: Britain accelerated the independence transfer (Mountbatten Plan, 1947) partly because of these developments
- Azad Hind legacy: Bose's "Jai Hind!" became the national salutation; "Give me blood" remains the most famous speech of the independence movement
- Women's participation: Rani of Jhansi Regiment (INA) — Capt. Lakshmi Sahgal — showed women's combat capability; a milestone in feminist history of the freedom struggle
Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
Prelims
-
With reference to the period of extremist nationalism in India, which of the following statements is/are correct? (a) Lal, Bal, Pal were the major leaders of extremism (b) The Partition of Bengal (1905) was the immediate cause (c) The extremists advocated Swaraj, Swadeshi, Boycott and National Education (d) All of the above (UPSC CSP 2012 — adapted)
-
Who among the following organised the Kakori Conspiracy (Train Action) of 1925? (a) Chandrashekhar Azad and Bhagat Singh (b) Ram Prasad Bismil and Ashfaqullah Khan (c) Surya Sen and Batukeshwar Dutt (d) Subhas Chandra Bose and Rash Behari Bose (UPSC CSP 2014 — adapted)
-
Consider the following statements about the Indian National Army (INA):
- The INA was first formed by Captain Mohan Singh in 1942
- Subhas Chandra Bose took command of the INA in 1943
- The INA Rani of Jhansi Regiment was an all-women unit Which of the above statements are correct? (UPSC CSP 2017 — adapted)
-
The Provisional Government of Free India (Azad Hind Government) was formally declared on: (a) 21 October 1943, Singapore (b) 8 August 1942, Bombay (c) 26 January 1930, Lahore (d) 18 February 1946, Bombay (UPSC CSP 2020 — adapted)
Mains
-
"The revolutionary nationalists made a significant, though indirect, contribution to India's independence." Critically examine. (UPSC GS1 2015)
-
How did the Indian National Army (INA) trials of 1945–46 hasten India's independence? What was the role of the Royal Indian Navy Mutiny in the same context? (UPSC GS1 2016)
-
Assess the contributions of Subhas Chandra Bose to India's freedom struggle, with particular reference to the formation of the Azad Hind Government and the campaigns of the INA. (UPSC GS1 2022)
Exam Strategy
For Prelims:
- Kakori Train Action: 9 August 1925; HRA; Bismil and Ashfaqullah Khan hanged 19 December 1927
- HSRA founded 1928; added "Socialist" to HRA
- Assembly bombing: 8 April 1929 (not 1928); Bhagat Singh + Batukeshwar Dutt
- Bhagat Singh hanged: 23 March 1931 (advanced by 11 hours from 24 March)
- Chandrashekhar Azad died: 27 February 1931, Alfred Park, Allahabad
- Chittagong Raid: 18 April 1930; Surya Sen (Masterda); hanged 12 January 1934
- Haripura Congress: 1938; Tripuri: 1939; Forward Bloc: 3 May 1939
- Bose escaped: 26 January 1941 (same date as Republic Day — coincidence worth noting)
- Azad Hind Government: 21 October 1943, Singapore
- "Give me blood" speech: 5 July 1943, Singapore
- INA Red Fort trials: November 1945; defence by Bhulabhai Desai + Nehru
- RIN Mutiny: 18–23 February 1946
For Mains:
- Revolutionary nationalism and Gandhism were complementary, not contradictory — use this framing
- The INA trials are the single most important event linking revolutionary nationalism to independence — British realised their military hold was uncertain
- Distinguish the two INAs: Mohan Singh's (1942, collapsed) and Bose's (1943, actual campaigns)
- For 250-word answers, structure: background → action → trial → impact on British policy
- Bose's legacy is contested — address the Axis collaboration issue while contextualising it as "enemy of my enemy" realpolitik
- Women in INA (Rani of Jhansi Regiment, Capt. Lakshmi Sahgal) is a strong example for gender in freedom struggle answers
BharatNotes