English, asked by Vaswata7304, 1 year ago

Summary on narayanpur incident

Answers

Answered by NamithaBK
154
there was a procession taken by the college students to the collector's office. It was going to be peaceful. in the procession policemen appeared all along the road. some of them walked in front of students, some of their sides, but the students marched as if the police didn't exist. they walked silently. there was no slogans, no shouts, just the sound of walking feet and a low sounds of people talking quietly from the watching crowd. Babu and Manju was looking eagerly for Mohan. Mohan was holding a picture of Mahatma Gandhi. their arms would have ached holding it up for a long time but their faces were expressionless. they reached the police stations. the police officer was the DSP . there were some conversation between him and the students. the students seemed to be arguing. then, one of them handed him a piece of paper. the procession was like a declaration of war. the paper was a notice for the collector to quit India or face their problems. there was a parcel with them. this how the procession in Narayanpur went on.

this is what I wrote when I was in 8th grade
Answered by varindagarg812
3

Answer:

Concept:

The story takes place in 1942, during the 'Quit India Movement.' We learn about just a teacher who is imprisoned because he was a Gandhiji devotee at the start of the film.The teacher has a daughter and two sons. His sons were Mohan and Babu. Manju was his only child. We meet another individual named Suman, who was Mohan's friend.

Given:

Narayanpur incidents summary

Find:

write about the summary of narayanpur incident

answer:

The Narayanpur Incident is a fascinating narrative of a stormy event that shook the quiet town of Narayanpur in 1942, during in the Quit India movement. The Book's Summary On August 8, 1942, Gandhiji issues a warning to the British to leave India.The author of the Narayanapur tragedy seeks to convey to readers how many people fought the British in various ways. Thousands of Indians, including the teacher, his family, as well as other younger college students like Suman, were inspired by leaders like the Mahatma. More importantly, there have been individuals like Patil, who were part of the system but fought for independence with their hearts. Their predicament was pitiful. They would've have taken up police work just for their livelihood. But they were covertly with freedom fighters and sought to help in whatever way they could, even if it meant endangering their lives.

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