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The Free Press Journal

The Free Press Journal
The Free Press Journal Cover 06-01-2012.jpg
The 1 June 2012 front page of the Mumbai edition of The Free Press Journal
Type Daily Newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) Indian National Press
Publisher Indian National Press
Editor-in-chief G. L. Lakhotia
Associate editor S. S. Dhawan
Founded 1930
Political alignment Left-wing
Language English
Headquarters Free Press House, Free Press Journal Marg, 215, Nariman Point, Mumbai 400021
Website www.freepressjournal.in

The Free Press Journal is an Indian English-language daily newspaper that was established in 1930 by Swaminathan Sadanand, who also acted as its first editor. First produced to complement a news agency, the Free Press of India, it was a supporter of the Independence movement. It is published in Mumbai, India.

The founder editor was Swaminathan Sadanand. It was founded in 1930 to support Free Press of India, a news agency that dispatched "nationalist" news to its subscribers. In the colonial context, Colaco describes it as "an independent newspaper supporting nationalist causes". She quotes Lakshmi as saying that "The nationalist press marched along with the freedom fighters". It played a significant role in mobilising sympathetic public opinion during the independence movement.

Among its founders was Stalin Srinivasan who founded Manikkodi in 1932. Bal Thackeray worked as a cartoonist for the newspaper until being removed from the job. Thackeray then founded Marmik. According to Atkins he was removed "after a political dispute over Thackeray's attacks on southern Indian immigration into Bombay" Notable cartoonist R. K. Laxman joined The Free Press Journal as a twenty-year-old. He was Thackeray's colleague. Three years into the job, he was asked by his proprietor not to make fun at communists, Laxman left and joined The Times of India.

It supported the practice of Jewish doctors who had taken refugee in Mumbai fleeing persecution in Germany, in the 1930s. Indian doctors opposed their right to practice claiming that Germany did not have reciprocal arrangements for Indian doctors. The Free Press Journal argued that this was against the "ancient Indian traditions of affording shelter from persecution".


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