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At the time of the first war of independence, any number of papers
were in operation in the country. Many of these like Bangadoot
of Ram Mohan Roy, Rastiguftar of Dadabhai Naoroji and
Gyaneneshun advocated social reforms and thus helped arouse
national awakening.
It was in 1857 itself that Payam-e-Azadi started publication
in Hindi and Urdu, calling upon the people to fight against the
British. The paper was soon confiscated and anyone found with a copy
of the paper was presecuted for sedition. Again, the first hindi
daily, Samachar Sudhavarashan, and two newspapers in Urdu and
Persian respectively, Doorbeen and Sultan-ul-Akbar,
faced trial in 1857 for having
published a 'Firman' by Bahadur Shah Zafar, urging the people to
drive the British out of India. This was followed by the notroius
Gagging Act of Lord Canning, under which restrictions were
imposed on the newspapers and periodicals.
Notable Role
In the struggle against the British, some newspapers played a very
notable role. This included the Hindi Patriot! Established in
1853, by the author and playwright, Grish Chandra Ghosh, it became
popular under the editorship of Harish Chandra Mukherjee. In 1861,
the paper published a play, "Neel Darpan" and launched a movement
against the British, urging the people to stop cultivating the crop
for the white traders. This resulted in the formation of a Neel
Commission. Later, the paper was taken over by Ishwar Chandra
Vidyasagar. The paper strongly opposed the Government's excesses and
demanded that Indians be appointed to top government posts. The
Indian Mirror was the other contemporary of this paper which was
very popular among the reading public.
Yet another weekly, Amrita Bazar Patrika which was being
published from Jessore, was critical of the government, with the
result that its proprietors faced trial and conviction. In 1871, the
Patrika moved to Calcutta and another Act was passed to
supress it and other native journals.
Marathi Press
Mahadev Govind Rande, a leading leader of Maharashtra, used to
write in Gyan Prakash as well as in Indu Prakash. Both
these journals helped awaken the conscience of the downtrodden
masses. Another Marathi weekly, Kesari was started by Tilak
from January 1, 1881. He aIongwith Agarkar and Chiplunkar started
another weekly journal, Mratha in English. The Editor of the
'Daccan Star' Nam Joshi also joined them and his paper was
incorporated with Maratha. Tilak and Agarkar were convicted
for writings against the British and the Diwan of Kolhapur.
Tilak's Kesari became one of the leading media to propagate
the message of freedom movement. It also made the anti-partition
movement of Bengal a national issue. In 1908, Tilak opposed the
Sedition ordinace. He was later exiled from the country for six
years. Hindi edition of Kesari was started from Nagpur and
Banaras.
Press and the First Session of Congress
The Editors commanded a very high reputation at the time of the
birth of the Indian National Congress. One could measure the extent
of this respect from the fact that those who occupied the frontline
seats in the first ever Congress session held in Bombay in December
1885 included some of the editors of Indian newspapers. The
firstever resolution at this Session was proposed by the editor of
The Hindu, G. Subramanya Iyer. In this resolution, it was
demanded that the government should appoint a committee to enquire
into the functioning of Indian administration. The second resolution
was also moved by a journalist from Poona, Chiplunkar in
which the Congress was urged to demand for the abolition of India
Council which ruled the country from Britain. The third resolution
was supported by Dadabhai Naoroji who was a noted journalist of his
time. The fourth resolution was proposed by Dadabhai Naoroji.
There were many Congress Presidents who had either been the editors
or had started the publication of one or the other newspapers. In
this context, particular mention may be made of Ferozeshah Mehta who
had started the Bombay Chronide and Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya who
edited daily, Hindustan. He also helped the publication of Leader
from Allahabad. Moti Lal Nehru was the first Chairman of the Board
of Directors of the leader. Lala Lajpat Rai inspired the publication
of three journals, the Punjabi, Bandematram and the
People from Lahore. During his stay in South Africa, Gandhiji
had brought out Indian Opinion and after settling in India,
he started the publication of Young India; Navjeevan, Harijan,
Harijan Sevak and Harijan Bandhu. Subash Chandra Bose and
C.R. Das were not journalists but they acquired the papers like
Forward and Advance which later attained national status.
Jawaharlal Nehru founded the National Herald.
Revolutionary Movement and the Press
So far as the revolutionary movement is concerned, it did not begin
with guns and bombs but it started with the publication of
newspapers. The first to be mentioned in this context is Yugantar
publication of which was started by Barindra Kumar Ghosh who
edited it also.
When the Ghadar party was organised in Amenca, Lala Hardayal started
publication of the journal 'Ghadar'. Within one year,
millions of copies of this journal were published in Hindi, Urdu,
Punjabi, Gujarati, Marathi and English and sent to India and to all
parts of the world· where Indians were residing. In the beginning
the copies of the journal were concealed in parcels of foreign cloth
sent to Delhi. It was also planned to smuggle the printing press
into India for this purpose. But then the war broke out and it
became almost impossible to import printing machinery from abroad.
Lala Hardayal was arrested in America and deported to India. One of
his followers Pandit Ramchandra started publishing Hindustan
Ghadar in English. With the U.S. joining the war, the Ghadar
party workers were arrested by the American Government. When the
trail was on, one of the rivals of Pandit Ramchandra managed to
obtain a gun and shoot him dead in the jail itself. The death of Ram
chandra led to the closure of this paper.
In 1905 Shyamji Krishna Verma started publication of a journal
Indian Sociologist from London. It used to publish reports of
political activities taking place at the India House in London. In
1909 two printers of this journal were convicted. Shyamji Krishna
Verma left England for Paris from where he started the publication
of the journal. Later on, he had to leave for Geneva. He countinued
to bring out the journal from there for two or three years more. In
Paris, Lala Hardayal, in collaboration with Madam Cama and Sardar
Singhraoji Rana brought out Vandematram and Talwar.
After Yugantar, it was Vandematram that played a
significant role in the freedom struggle. This journal was
established by Subodha Chandra Malik, C.R. Das and Bipin Chandra Pal
on August 6, 1906. Its editor, Aurobindo Ghosh, the editor of
Sandhya, B. Upadhyay and editor of Yugantar B. N. Dutt
had to a face a trial for espousing the cause of freedom.
So far as the Hindi papers were concerned, they looked to government
for support for some time. Bhartendu Harish Chandra was the first to
start a journal Kavi Vachan Sudha in 1868. Its policy was to
give vent to the miseries of the people of India. When the Prince of
Wales visited India, a poem was published in his honour. The British
authorities were given to understand that the poem had two meanings
and that one word used in the peom could also mean that the Prince
of Wales should get a shoe-beating.
The government aid to journals like Kavi Vachan Sudha was
stopped for publishing what was objectionable from the government
point of view. Bhartendu Harish Chandra resigned from his post of an
honorary Magistrate. His two friends, Pratap Narain Mishra and Bal
Krishna Bhatt started publication of two important political
journals Pradeep from Allahabad, and Brahman from
Kanpur. The Pradeep was ordered to be closed down in 1910 for
espousing the cause of freedom.
The Bharat-Mitra was a famous Hindi journal of Calcutta which
started its publication on May 17, 1878 as a fortnighly. It
contributed a lot in propagating the cause of freedom movement. The
journal exposed the British conspiracy to usurp Kashmir. Several
other papers published from Calcutta which played an important role
in freedom struggle included Ambika Prasad Vajpayee's Swantrtmtra,
Ramanand Chatterjee's Modern Review' in English, Pravasi
Patra' in Bengali and Vishal Bharat in Hindi.
One of the foremost Hindi journalist who has earned a name for his
patriotism was Ganesh Shanker Vidyarthi. In 1913, he brought out
weekly Pratap from Kanpur. He made the supreme sacrifice in
1931 in the cause of Hindu-Muslim unity. Krishna Dutt Paliwal
brought out Sainik from Agra which became a staunch
propagator of nationalism in Western U. P. The noted Congress
leader, Swami Shradhanand, started the publication of Hindi journal
Vir Arjun' and Urdu journal Tej. After the
assassination of Swami Shradhanand, Vidyavachaspathi and Lala
Deshbandhu Gupta continued the publication of these journals. They
were themselves prominent Congress leaders.
In Lahore, Mahashaya Khushal Chand brought out Milap and
Mahashaya Krishna started publishing urdu journals which helped a
lot in promoting the national cause. In 1881, Sardar Dayal Singh
Majitha on the advice of Surendra Nath Bannerjee brought out
Tribune under the editorship of Sheetala Kant Chatterjee. Bipin
Chandra Pal also edited this paper for sometime. Later in 1917,
Kalinath Rai joined the paper as its editor.
There is not a single privince in India which did not produce a
journal or newspaper to uphold the cause of freedom struggle. A. G.
Horniman made the Bombay Chronicle' a powerful instrument to
promote militant nationalism. He himself took part in the meetings
where Satyagraha used to be planned. He published vivid accounts of
Jallianwala Bagh carnage for which one correspondent of his paper,
Goverdhan Das, was sentenced to three years' imprisonment by a
military court. Horniman too was arrested and deported to London
even though he was ill at that time. Amritlal Shet brought out the
Gujarati journal Janmabhumi which was an organ of the people
of the princely states of Kathiawad, but it became a mouthpiece of
national struggle. Similarly another Gujarati journal
Saanjvartman played a prominent role under the editorship of
Sanwal Das Gandhi, who played a very significant role in the Quit
India Movement in 1942. It was soon after independent formed a
parallel Government in Junagarh and forced the Nawab of Junagarh to
leave the country. The three editors of the Sindhi journal Hindi
Jairam Das Daulatram, Dr. choithram Gidwani and Hiranand karamchand,
were arrested, their press closed and the property of the paper
confiscated.
In Bihar the tradition of national newspapers was carried forward by
Sachidanand Sinha, who had started the publication of Searchlight
under the editorship of Murtimanohar Sinha. Dev Brat Shastri started
publication of 'Nav Shakti and Rashtra Vani'. The
weekly yogi and the Hunkar' also contributed very much
to the general awakening.
- Jagdish Prasad Chaturvedi
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