Close X
Monday, November 25, 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

    Chandigarh Girl Is Air Force’s First Woman Flight Engineer

    The Indian Air Force today opened a new page in aviation history when Flight Lieutenant Hina Jaiswal from Chandigarh became the first woman flight engineer.

    Chandigarh Girl Is Air Force’s First Woman Flight Engineer

    Never Imagined Son Would Be Suicide Bomber: Father Of Pulwama Terrorist Adil Ahmed Dar

    Stone throwing incidents had escalated during the 2016 unrest in the Kashmir Valley in the aftermath of Hizbul Mujahideen terrorist Burhan Wani's killing.

    Never Imagined Son Would Be Suicide Bomber: Father Of Pulwama Terrorist Adil Ahmed Dar

    Pakistan Will Pay High Price: Iran Condemns Suicide Bombing On Its Soil

    Pakistan Will Pay High Price: Iran Condemns Suicide Bombing On Its Soil
    Twenty-seven of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards were killed in a suicide bombing near the border earlier this week, state television reported.  

    Pakistan Will Pay High Price: Iran Condemns Suicide Bombing On Its Soil

    Day After Launch By PM Modi, Train 18 Breaks Down 200 Km Outside Delhi, Railways Explains What Happened

    Vande Bharat Express, India's fastest train, broke down this morning, a day after its launch by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi.

    Day After Launch By PM Modi, Train 18 Breaks Down 200 Km Outside Delhi, Railways Explains What Happened

    One Kashmiri Student Expelled, Another Suspended For Offensive Facebook Posts on Pulwama Attack

    A Kashmiri student, who is in the first year of B.Sc. Medical Radiology and Imaging Technology (BMRIT) course was placed under suspension by the Dehradun-based Ras Bihari Bose Subharti University for allegedly posting objectionable content related to the Pulwama terror attack.

    One Kashmiri Student Expelled, Another Suspended For Offensive Facebook Posts on Pulwama Attack

    Country Always First, My Statement Distorted: Navjot Singh Sidhu On Pulwama Attack

    Country Always First, My Statement Distorted: Navjot Singh Sidhu On Pulwama Attack
    Sidhu also said that his statement was 'distorted' and he continues to stand by his statement that terrorism has no 'dharam, mazhab, zaat aur desh' (religion, caste or country).  

    Country Always First, My Statement Distorted: Navjot Singh Sidhu On Pulwama Attack