In India, Savarkar's elder brother led an armed
movement against the Minto Morley reforms. Babarao
was sentenced to transportation for life to the
Andamans jail. In protest, a youth called Kanhere
shot dead the British Collector of Nasik, Mr. A.M.T.
Jackson. Savarkar was implicated in the murder of
Mr. Jackson because of his contacts with the India
House. Savarkar moved to Madame Cama's residence
in Paris. A warrant was issued and Savarkar was
arrested on March 13, 1910. In his last letters
to a close friend, he conveyed his plan to attempt
to escape from custody at Marseilles. His friend
was to be waiting there with a car. The escape attempt
at Marseilles failed. The car arrived too late.
Savarkar
was brought to Bombay on the S.S. Morea and detained
at Yeravada jail. Savarkar was tried and found
guilty on the counts of "waging war by instigation
using printed matter, and providing arms... (and)
for abetting the murder of Mr. Jackson (p.118,
Berry)." Savarkar was awarded 25 years imprisonment
on the former charge and 25 years for the latter.
A sum total of 50 years imprisonment which he
was to serve at the Andamans prison. "Veer"
Savarkar was only 27 years old at the time of
his sentencing!
Savarkar
arrived at the Andamans prison on July 4, 1911.
Life for the prisoners was very harsh. Savarkar's
day began at 5 a.m. chopping trees with a heavy
wooden mallet and then he would be yoked to the
oil mill. If prisoners talked or broke queue at
mealtime, their once a year letter writing privilege
was revoked. Savarkar withdrew within himself,
quietly and mechanically doing the tasks presented
to him. He was successful in getting permission
to start a jail library. With great effort and
patience he taught the illiterate convicts to
read and write.
In
1920, Vithalbhai Patel demanded the release of
the Savarkar brothers in the Central Legislative
Assembly. Tilak and Gandhiji also appealed for
Savarkars freedom. On May 2, 1921, the Savarkar
brothers were brought back to India on the S.S.
Maharaja.
Savarkar
remained imprisoned in Ratnagiri Jail and then
in Yeravada Jail until January 6, 1924 when he
was freed under the condition that he would not
leave Ratnagiri district and abstain from political
activity for the next five years. While in Ratnagiri
Jail, Savarkar wrote "Hindutva" which
was smuggled out and published under the pen-name
"Maharatta." On his release, Savarkar
founded the Ratnagiri Hindu Sabha on January 23,
1924 which aimed to preserve India's ancient culture
and work for social welfare.
Through
the Sabha, Savarkar worked hard to protect minority
rights. During the celebration of Hindu festivals,
Savarkar visited Muslim and Christian homes to
promote good will. He encouraged intercaste marriage
and assisted Dr. Ambedkar in the liberation of
the untouchables. He appealed for a wider use
of Hindi as the mother tongue and suggested reforms
to the Devanagiri script to facilitate printing.
While in Ratnagiri he wrote the "Hindu Padpadashashi"
and "My Transportation for Life" and
a collection of poems, plays and novels.
At
the end of his five year confinement in Ratnagiri,
Savarkar joined Tilak's Swaraj Party and founded
the Hindu Mahasabha as a separate political party.
He warned of the Muslim League's designs of partitioning
the nation. In 1937, Savarkar was elected President
of the Hindu Mahasabha. He toured the nation widely
and delivered the simple message that followers
of Vedism, Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism were
all Hindus.
At
declaration of war by Britain on Germany and the
arbitrary inclusion of India in the war, Savarkar
said that Britain's claim of safeguarding human
freedom was simply meaningless.
Savarkar
agreed to join hands with the Congress in support
of Gandhiji's Quit India movement as long as the
Congress did not compromise the unity of the nation
to the Muslim League. "The Quit India Movement
must not end in a Split India Movement!"
he thundered on a BBC broadcast of his speech.
On
August 15, 1947, Savarkar proudly unfurled the
national flag along with the saffron flag of the
Mahasabha. Pakistan invaded Kashmir in October
1947 and Gandhiji began a fast for peace and Muslim
rights on January 13, 1948. The Mahatma was assassinated
17 days later.
Gandhi's
assassin, Nathuram Godse, was once a worker of
the R.S.S. (Rashtriya Sveyamsevak Sangh), the
miliant wing of the Mahasabha. Mass arrests of
the Hindu Mahasabha and RSS workers ensued. Savarkar
was arrested on the charge of conspiring to the
murder on February 4, 1948. Godse and Apte, another
accused, denied Savarkar's involvement in the
crime. Savarkar condemned "the gruesome assassination
of Mahatma Gandhi" and denied involvement
in the crime. Savarkar was acquitted on February
10, 1949.
As
Savarkar aged, he saw his grim prophecies coming
true. China invaded India in 1962 and Pakistan
attacked India in 1965. When the Indian Army entered
Lahore, Savarkar rejoiced saying that the "best
way to win a war was to carry it into the enemy's
land (p. 136, Berry)."
"Veer"
Savarkar died on February 27, 1966. |