P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profileg
P. Sainath

@PSainath_org

Founding editor @PARINetwork

ID:2475872178

linkhttp://psainath.org calendar_today03-05-2014 19:01:23

1,5K Tweets

77,5K Followers

21 Following

Follow People
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The amazing revolutionary Mallu Swarajyam. 1 Lakh views on PARI Instagram Reels
ruralindiaonline.org/en/articles/th…
instagram.com/reel/ChRJnjsoF…

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Delighted to partner with Penguin on this new book. It was Penguin who published Everybody Loves A Good Drought.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

8/8. We – the post-1947 generations—we need their stories. To better shape our own. To learn what they knew. That freedom and independence are not the same thing. To learn to make those coalesce. Look out for The Last Heroes: Footsoldiers of Indian Freedom.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

7/8. The freedom fighters in this book fought the British, not their fellow Indians. When imprisoned, they did not spend their time whining, whinging, or writing pitiful mercy petitions to the British monarch, promising to be collaborators of the Raj.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

6/8. They had this in common though: their opposition to the British Empire was uncompromising. They were aware of the risks they were taking. They had a vision, an idea of the freedom they were seeking. They never stoked hatred against ‘other’ communities.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

5/8. The fighters in The Last Heroes: Footsoldiers of Indian Freedom are Adivasis, Dalits, OBCs, Brahmins, Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, women, men, atheists and believers. They speak different languages, are from diverse rural regions, cultures, and backgrounds.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

4/8. The freedom fighters in this book – 8 of whom are still alive – were farmers, labourers, forest produce gatherers, homemakers, underground couriers (of food, secret letters – and bombs), carpenters, malis, even rebel members of landed gentry families.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

3/8. The youngest freedom fighter in this book is 92, the oldest 104. Ordinary people who stood up to the British, unsure if they would ever see the freedom they fought for. They never went on to be ministers, governors, presidents, or hold other high office.

account_circle
P. Sainath(@PSainath_org) 's Twitter Profile Photo

2/8. In the next 5-6 years, there will not be a single person alive who fought for this country’s freedom. Our new generations will never get to meet, see, speak, or listen to India’s freedom fighters. Never directly learn who they were, what they fought for.

account_circle