Jatindra Nath Das | |
|---|---|
যতীন্দ্রনাথ দাস | |
Jatin Das inc. 1929 | |
| Born | Jatindra Nath Das (1904-10-27)27 October 1904 |
| Died | 13 September 1929(1929-09-13) (aged 24) |
| Cause of death | Hunger strike |
| Other names | Khedu,Jatin Da |
| Occupation | Revolutionary |
| Employer | Hindustan Socialist Republican Association |
| Known for |
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| Signature | |
Jatindra Nath Das (Bengali:যতীন্দ্রনাথ দাস; 27 October 1904 – 13 September 1929), better known asJatin Das, was an Indian freedom fighter andrevolutionary who worked to make India independent from theBritish Raj and was a member of theHindustan Socialist Republican Association. He died in the Borstal Jail, Lahore[1] after a long 63-dayhunger strike for the rights of political prisoners of India's freedom struggle.[2] He was only 24 years old when he died. His death proved to be a major incident in India's struggle for independence with more than five lakhs people attending his funeral.[3][1]
Das was born in 1904 atCalcutta to Bankim Behari Das and Smt. Suhasini Debi. Suhasini Debi passed away when Jatin Das was nine years old. He was a brilliant student and passed the matriculation in the First Division in 1921.[4] He joined theAnushilan Samiti, a revolutionary group inBengal, and also participated inMahatma Gandhi'snon-cooperation movement in 1921, was convicted for picketing foreign cloth shops in Burrabazar in Calcutta and lodged in Hoogly Jail.[4][5]
He joined South Suburban College(now called Ashutosh College) in 1922 and passed the Intermediate in First Division in 1924. He participated in the North Bengal Flood relief activities during this time. In November 1925, while studying for aB.A. at Vidyasagar College in Calcutta, Das was arrested for his political activities and was imprisoned at the jail inMymensingh. While interned there, he went on a 21 dayhunger strike to protest the ill-treatment meted out to the political prisoners. He along with Panna Babu was transferred to Dacca Central Jail and then to the notorious Mianwali Jail(now in Pakistan) as a punishment for the Mymensingh Jail incident. Jatin was brought back to Bengal and released by the end of October, 1928.[4]
On 14 June 1929, he was arrested for making the 'bomb' which was thrown by Bhagat Singh and Batukeswar Dutt at the Assembly hall during a session. It must be noted that the 'bomb' was made only to make a sound and draw attention and not to harm anyone.[6][7] He wasimprisoned inLahore Jail to be tried under the supplementaryLahore Conspiracy Case, by the colonial government.[8]
InLahore Jail, Das began anotherhunger strike along with other revolutionary fighters, demanding equality for Indian political prisoners with those from Europe. The conditions of Indian inhabitants of the jails was deplorable.[9] The uniforms that Indian prisoners were required to wear in jail with were not washed for several days, andrats andcockroaches roamed thekitchen area making the food unsafe to eat. Indian prisoners were not provided with any reading material such as newspapers, nor paper to write on. The condition of the British prisoners in the same jail was strikingly different.
Das's hunger strike started on 13 July 1929 and lasted 63 days. The jail authority took measures to forcibly feed him and the other independence activists. Eventually, the jail authority recommended his unconditional release, but the government rejected the suggestion and offered to release him on bail.
His medical report of 12 September 1929 read:
'Das has fever- temperature morning 100 degrees, evening 99 degrees, pulse is 130 p.m.-very rapid. Vomitted only once in the day. Retching and hiccup still persists though less in frequency and duration. Mentally still clear. Taking water to which glucose is added without his knowledge.'[10]
Jatin Das died on 13 September 1929, Friday, at the lap of his brother Kiron Das at 1.00 pm.[11] The bier was carried on shoulders byDr. Gopi Chand Bhargava, Dr. Muhammad Alam,Dr. Saifuddin Kitchlew, Sardar Sardul Singh Caveseer, Dr. Benarasi Das, Sardar Kishan Singh(Bhagat Singh's father) and Lala Duni Chand.[4]
It is reported that Das used to sing Rabindranath Tagore's poem “Ekla chalo re,” in his final days.[12]
Durgawati Devi led the funeral procession, which went fromLahore toCalcutta by train. Sardar Kishan Singh, Bhagat Singh’s father, and Kiron Das, Jatin Das's younger brother accompanied the coffin.[13] Thousands of people rushed to therailway stations to pay homage to Das. A two-mile long procession in Calcutta carried the coffin to the cremation ground.Subhash Chandra Bose (along with Smt. Basanti Devi -widow of C.R. Das, Mrs Kamla Nehru, Dr B.C. Roy, Shayama Prasad Mukerji and Maulvi Shamasuddin) received the coffin of Das atHowrah railway station.[4] Bose led the funeral procession to the cremation ground.
The hunger strike of Das in prison was a crucial moment in the resistance against illegal detentions.[14]


After his death, the Viceroy informed London that "Mr. Das of the Conspiracy Case, who was on hunger strike, died this afternoon at 1 p.m. Last night, five of the hunger strikers gave up their hunger strike. So, there are onlyBhagat Singh andBatukeshwar Dutt who are on strike."[15]
Tributes were paid by almost every leader in the country. Mohammad Alam andGopi Chand Bhargava resigned from the Punjab Legislative Council in protest.Motilal Nehru proposed the adjournment of the Central Assembly that was in session as a censure against the inhumanity shown against the Lahore prisoners. The censure motion was carried by 55 votes against 47.Jawaharlal Nehru said "Another name has been added to the long and splendid roll of Indian martyrs. Let us bow our heads and pray for strength to act to carry on the struggle, however long it may be and whatever consequences, till the victory is ours".
Prosecution Lawyer Carden Noad said:
"I desire on behalf of us all to express sincere regret and genuine sorrow which we feel on account of the untimely death of Jatinder Nath Das. There are qualities which compel admiration of all men alike and the prominent among them are qualities of courage and constancy in pursuit of an ideal. Although we do not share the ideals which he followed, we can not but admire the unwavering fortitude and firmness of the purpose he displayed".[4]
Bose described Das as the "youngDadhichi of India", referring to the well known mythological yogiDadhichi who sacrificed his life for the sake of killing a demon.
Later that year, Jawaharlal Nehru began his famous Presidential Speech at Lahore Congress (on 29, December 1929) with a homage to Jatin Das along with Burmese freedom fighter Vizaya[16]
In honour of Jatin DasTagore wrote:
"All meanness is devoured by the fire of your anger—
O God, give us strength, have mercy on your devotees.
Sweep away, Almighty, what is false and petty—
May death be dwarfed by the ecstasy of life.
By churning the depths of suffering will be found immortality,
Those who fear death will be freed of their terror.
Your resplendent scorching power will melt and let flow
Freed of the chain of stones, a stream of sacrifice"[17]

TheJatin Das Park metro station on theKolkata Metro is named after him.
Tamil writerKi. Rajanarayanan's semi-historical novelGopallapurathu Makkal (1989) makes a reference to Das.
In the 2002 filmThe Legend of Bhagat Singh, the character of Das was played byAmitabh Bhattacharjee.[18] A 35-minute documentary film titledImmortal Martyr Jatin Das was released in 2009.[19]
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