Biography of bhagat singh in hindi
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Bhagat Singh: Shaheed-e-Azam in Hindi – Large Print Biography – Freedom Fighter in India
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Bhagat Singh Shaheed-e-Azam offers the inspiring tale of one of India?s most celebrated freedom fighters who fought against the British, in a picture-book format. Read the book to understand the value of freedom that came to us because of the sacrifice by Bhagat Singh through splendid illustrations, and learn many life-lessons!
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Bhagat Singh Biography: Birth, Age, Education, Jailterm, Execution, and More About Shaheed-e-Azam
"If someone else would have done this, inom would not consider him less than a traitor...", Bhagat Singh in a letter to his father, who sent an application to the Special Tribunal defending his son in the Lahore case.
Bhagat Singh was a revolutionary freedom fighter who was hanged to death by the Britishers at the age of 23 years. His early execution made him a national hero of the Indian freedom struggle against colonial rule. Fondly called Shaheed Bhagat Singh, many consider him one of the earliest Marxists of India.
PM Modi paid his tributes to freedom fighter Bhagat Singh on his 116 birth anniversary. On his X(formerly Twitter) account, he wrote:
Bhagat Singh Biography
| Birth | 28 September 1907 |
| Age | 23 years |
| Family | Kishan Singh Sandhu (Father) Vidya Vati (Mother) |
| Notable Work | Why I Am an Atheist |
| Death | 23 March 1931 (exec • Bhagat SinghIndian revolutionary (1907–1931) This article is about the Indian socialist revolutionary. For the Indian-American civil rights activist, see Bhagat Singh Thind. Bhagat Singh (27 September 1907[2][a] – 23 March 1931) was an Indian anti-colonial revolutionary[3] who participated in the mistaken murder of a junior British police officer in December 1928[4] in what was to be retaliation for the death of an Indian nationalist.[5] He later took part in a largely symbolic bombing of the Central Legislative Assembly in Delhi and a hunger strike in jail, which—on the back of sympathetic coverage in Indian-owned newspapers—turned him into a household name in the Punjab region, and after his execution at age 23 into a martyr and folk hero in Northern India.[6] Borrowing ideas from Bolshevism and anarchism,[7] the charismatic Bhagat Singh[8] electrified a growing militancy in India in the 1 |