Kushal Konwar (কুশল কোঁৱৰ) | |
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Kushal Konwar
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Born | 21 March 1905 Sarupathar, Golaghat, Assam |
Died | 15 June 1943, Jorhat |
Residence | Gandhkarai Gaon, Sarupathar |
Nationality | Indian |
Years active | 1920-1942 |
Known for | Freedom Fighter |
Political party | Indian National Congress |
Criminal charge | conspiracy anf train sabotage against the Britis Government |
Kushal Konwar (Assamese: কুশল কোঁৱৰ) was an Indian Assamese Tai-Ahom freedom fighter from Assam and he happened to be the only martyr in India who was hanged during last phase of the Quit India Movement of 1942-43.
Kushal Konwar was born in 21 March 1905 at Balijan near Sarupathar in the present District of Golaghat in Assam. Kushal did his schooling in the Bezbaruah School. In 1921, while still at school he was inspired by Gandhiji’s clarion call for Non-cooperation movement and took active part in it. The young man inspired by Gandhiji’s ideals of Swaraj, Truth and Ahimsa, set up a primary school at Bengmai and served as its honorary teacher. Later, he joined the Balijan Tea Estate as a clerk and worked for a while. But, the spirit of independence and call of Mahatma Gandhi inspired him to dedicate himself wholeheartedly in the Independence Movement. He organised the Congress party and lead the people of Sarupathar area in Satyagraha and non-cooperation movement against the British. He was elected the President of the Sarupathar Congress Committee.
In 8 August 1942 the Congress Working Committee in its meeting in Bombay passed the "Quit India" resolution. This resolution demanded complete withdrawal of the British from the India’s soil. Mahatma Gandhi gave the call of "do or die" to the people of India. The British reacted by arresting Mahatma and all the Congress leaders and putting them in jails. Across India, this sparked widespread mass movement in against the British. Cutting across caste, creed, and religion the people came out on to the streets shouting the slogan of "Vande Mataram". In spite of Gandhiji’s appeal for peaceful non-cooperation and dharna, in many regions the movement erupted in violence with people burning offices and damaging government properties, disrupting the road, rail and telecommunication network.
People of Assam too spontaneously joined this historic movement of 1942. Two of the leaders of Assam Pradesh Congress, Gopinath Bordoloi and Siddhinath Sarma were arrested by the British in Dhubri while returning from Bombay attending the Congress Working Committee meeting. Other Congress leaders like Bishnuram Medhi, Bimala Prasad Chaliha, Md. Tayebulla, Omeo Kumar Das, Debeswar Sarma, etc., were arrested from different parts of Assam and thrown into jails. Assam too burned like the rest of India and many people leaving the path of non-violence engaged in violence.