How did he try to prove that HRSA was not a terrorist organisation
Answers
Explanation:
This article was first published on September 13, 2017 and is being republished on September 28, 2019, Bhagat Singh's birth anniversary.
In the mid 1920s, the Kakori Conspiracy
Case left the revolutionary movement
headless, as all its front-ranking leaders
were arrested and sent to the gallows or to
jail. The following generation of militants - who were to revive the movement was of a different kind. The strongest personality in this group, Bhagat Singh, is proof of this. Born in Lyallpur, Punjab, to a Sikh family that came under the influence of the Arya Samaj and the Ghadr Party - his uncle Ajit Singh had been deported to Mandalay along with Lajpat Rai when he was a child - Bhagat Singh was trained at the National College of Lahore. He was particularly shocked by the Jallianwallah Bagh massacre in Amritsar in 1919, where General Dyer killed hundreds of people. He then took part in the non-cooperation movement and like many others, joined the revolutionary movement after Mahatma Gandhi suspended the non-cooperation struggle. In 1926, he started the Naujawan Bharat Sabha and tried to draw the youth from the province into its fold, in order to develop a socialist and non-religious organisation. If the British were naturally the chosen target of Bhagat Singh, he also put the blame on his compatriots, paralysed by superstitions.