India
23/03/2025 Sunday
Shri Swami Samarth Vidya Prasarak Mandal's
Arts, Commerce & Science College, Ravalgaon
Tal. Malegaon Dist. Nashik, MS, India 423108
8275115556,
acscollegeravalgaon@gmail.com
[
Affiliated to Savitribai Phule Pune University
]
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Kakori Conspiracy
The Kakori train robbery, also known as the Kakori conspiracy case, was the largest railway heist in Indian history. Members of the Hindustan Social Republican Association (HRA), Ram Prasad Bismil and Ashfaqullah Khan, planned the theft. On August 9, 1925, the Kakori plot took place. In an attempt to achieve independence, this group was founded to carry out Revolutionary activities against the British government.
The Kakori Conspiracy Case is a well-known Indian robbery committed during the British period. The incident happened in Kakori, which was 16 km to the northwest of Lucknow, the train’s final stop. On board the train, money that was to be deposited in Lucknow had been collected from a number of Railway stops along the way.
Ten revolutionary militants under the command of Ram Prasad Bismil stopped the train, disarmed the guards and passengers inside, busted open the guards’ quarters safe, and stole the money inside in a well-planned assault. The riders were members of the militant Hindustan Socialist Republican Association, an organization recently founded with the goal of bringing about revolutions in India, including military uprisings. In order to finance its activities, the Hindustan Republican Association committed crimes, such as train heists.
On August 9, 1925, the 8-number down train was departing Shahjahanpur for Lucknow. One of the revolutionaries, Rajendra Lahari, pulled the emergency switch to halt the train as it passed Kakori and the other revolutionaries, and as a result, he was able to overpower the guard. The revolutionaries only stole bags that were stored in God’s cable, each of which held about 8000 rupees.
The Kakori conspiracy is the name given to the Kakori train heist. It also goes by the name of the Kakori railway robbery and occurred not far from Lucknow. When the number 8 down train from Shahjahanpur to Lucknow neared the town of Kakori on August 9, a revolutionary pulled the emergency switch to stop the train and passed the guard. This was the highest-profile attack planned by the Hindustan Republican Association.
Ram Prasad Bismil, Ashfaq Ullah Khan, Chandrashekhar Azad, Rajendra Lahari, Sachindra Bakshi, Keshav Chakravarti, Mukundi Lal, Banvari Lal, Kundan Lal, Pravesh Mukharji, and others were involved in the theft’s planning. According to the declared goals of the robbery, the money taken from the British government would be used to fund the HRA. Promoting a favourable image of itself among Indians was another goal of HRA in order to draw in the public.
The British government launched a massive manhunt after the event and arrested numerous revolutionaries who were HRA members or allies. The leader Ram Prasad Bismil was detained in Shahjahanpur on October 26, 1925, and Ashfaqullah Khan was detained in Delhi on December 7, 1926.
The train robbery was planned by Ram Prasad Bismil and Ashfaqullah Khan. Murari Lal, Rajendra Lahari, Mukundi Lal Gupta, Sachindra Bakshi, and Manmathnath Gupta were among the numerous revolutionaries who made up this organisation. The goal of the revolutionaries was to take over the guards’ cabin, which contained money collected from various railway stations for deposit in Lucknow.
The HRA made the decision to raid the government’s funds on August 8, 1925, in order to buy firearms. On August 9, 1925, revolutionaries assaulted the table of guards and ransacked it, derailing the 8-number down train from Shahjahanpur to Lucknow at Kakori. The British government launches a mission to track down and fund the rebels.
On September 26, 1925, colonial authorities detained Ram Prasad Bismil. The Kakori train incident trial proceeded at the Hamilton Session Court on May 21, 1926. In the middle of 1926, Ashfaqullah Khan and Sir Chandra Bakshi were detained following the conclusion of the proceedings.
At the time of the Kakori incident, everyone in India was aware of the country’s need for freedom and was looking for alternate ways to achieve it. Some leaders, like Chandrashekhar Azad and Bhagat Singh, adopted this strategy, while others, like Mahatma Gandhi, pursued the path of peace.
The intended attack actually had a much greater impact on the British Empire than it may have appeared to have. Following the Kakori plot, the British government was the subject of numerous coordinated attacks. The executions of the rebels sparked protracted protests across the country. These small-scale organised protests and disruptions caused the empire’s hold over India to quickly deteriorate, and it became very difficult for them to retain control over enraged India.
The Kakori plot changed the way the system worked. Many youthful revolutionaries, including Sukhdev, Shiv Verma, and Jaidev Kapoor, set out to recognise HRA under the leadership of Chandrashekhar Azad. The majority of the leading young revolutionaries from northern India finally gathered in Delhi on September 9 and 10, 1928, at the Feroz Shah Kotla Ground to form a new collective leadership, declare socialism as their main goal, and rename the Hindustan Republican Association as the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association. The Uttar Pradesh government has changed the appellation of the Kakori conspiracy to the Kakori train incident.
Referenced From : https://www.studyiq.com/articles/kakori-conspiracy/
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