Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
India

Banned By British, Nanak Singh's Scathing Critique Of The Raj To Be Launched In English

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Feb, 2019 09:32 PM

    Nanak Singh, widely regarded as the father of the Punjabi novel, was present at the Jallianwala Bagh on April 13, 1919 ,when the massacre took place and to mark the centenary of the bloody event, his lost manuscript, "Khooni Vaisakhi", translated for the first time into English, will be released.


    It will be published by HarperCollins India on April 12. The publisher said that Singh was 22 years old at that time.


    "As the British troops opened fire on the unarmed gathering protesting against the Rowlatt Act, killing hundreds, Nanak Singh fainted and his unconscious body was piled up among the corpses.


    "After going through the traumatic experience, he proceeded to write 'Khooni Vaisakhi', a long poem that narrates the political events in the run-up to the massacre and its immediate aftermath.


    "The poem was a scathing critique of the British Raj and was banned soon after its publication in May 1920," said the publisher.


    After six decades, the poem was rediscovered and it has now been translated into English by the author's grandson, Navdeep Suri, an Indian diplomat, who is currently India's High Commissioner to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).


    The book will carry both the original as well as the translated texts, along with some essays.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    It Is High Time 1984 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Are Decided At Earliest: SC

    It Is High Time 1984 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Are Decided At Earliest: SC
    As 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases in Delhi continue to hang fire even after 34 years, the Supreme Court on Wednesday said it was high time that these cases were decided.

    It Is High Time 1984 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Are Decided At Earliest: SC

    Pune School Issues Diktat On Girl Students' Innerwear Colour

    Pune School Issues Diktat On Girl Students' Innerwear Colour
    Parents and student of Pune's Maeer's MIT School on Wednesday staged a protest against the school's diktat asking the girls student to wear specific colour innerwear.

    Pune School Issues Diktat On Girl Students' Innerwear Colour

    5 Foreigners Among 15 Held From Spa Centre In Gurugram For Sex Trade

    5 Foreigners Among 15 Held From Spa Centre In Gurugram For Sex Trade
    The city police on Thursday arrested 15 people, including five foreigners, from a spa centre at Sector 29 market here for their alleged involvement in sex trade.

    5 Foreigners Among 15 Held From Spa Centre In Gurugram For Sex Trade

    Anti-Sikh Riots: Top Court Seeks Sajjan Kumar's Response On Plea Against Bail

    Sajjan Kumar was granted anticipatory bail by the trial court on December 21, 2016 in two cases of killing of three Sikhs during the riots.

    Anti-Sikh Riots: Top Court Seeks Sajjan Kumar's Response On Plea Against Bail

    Inter-Faith Couple Row: Lucknow Passport Office Okays Tanvi Seth and Anas Siddiqui's Passport

    Inter-Faith Couple Row: Lucknow Passport Office Okays Tanvi Seth and Anas Siddiqui's Passport
    Days after a row erupted over issuance of passport to an interfaith couple in Lucknow, sources insist that Ministry of External Affairs followed due protocol in the case.

    Inter-Faith Couple Row: Lucknow Passport Office Okays Tanvi Seth and Anas Siddiqui's Passport

    CM Amarinder Singh Orders Mandatory Dope Test For All Punjab Government Employees

    Taking its war on drugs forward, Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Wednesday ordered a mandatory dope test on all government employees, including police personnel, from the time of their recruitment through every stage of their service.

    CM Amarinder Singh Orders Mandatory Dope Test For All Punjab Government Employees