Freedom Fighters |
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Biographies of Great
Indians & Hindus |
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MADAME CAMA |
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Fighting in Not
One, But Ten Ways
Though Madame Cama was abroad her influence on the Indian people did not diminish. Lala
Lajpat Rai was a stalwart who was bravely fighting for India's freedom. In 1907 when he
was sent out of India,Madame Cama's call made the blood of Indian revolutionaries
boil.People rose in revolt everywhere. The number of revolutionaries deported from India
in British ships also increased. She was not satisfied with merely exhorting people. She
trained Indian revolutionaries to make bombs. As soon as her call through the 'Indian
Sociologist' edited by Shyamji Krishnavarma reached India, bombs exploded in several parts
of the country. She sent money and arms secretly to India.
In 1908 Savarkar had arranged a program to mark the golden jubilee of India's first fight
for independence. Madame Cama sent money generously to help the families of those who lost
their lives in the 1857 war.
Savarkar wrote a book called 'The First War of Indian Independence of 1857'. Even before
the book was printed, the British Government ordered that it should not be published. At
such a time Madame Cama came forward and published the book. She used secret method of
distribution so that copies could reach the right hands.To
the Indian revolutionaries the book became sacred as the Ramayana or the
Mahabharatha. Madame Cama and M.P.T. Acharya translated it from English into
French and published it. The book was later reprinted by Lala Hardayal, Subhas
Chandra Bose, Bhagat Singh and other revolutionaries. |
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