Khooni vaisakhi : a poem from the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre 1919 / Nanak Singh
Material type: TextPublication details: India Harper Collins Publishers 2019Description: 128 pISBN:- 9789353029388
- 821 SIN-N
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 800 | General Stack (For lending) | 821 SIN-N (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 39245 |
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821 SHA-K Let it go : voices from the deep / | 821 SIB-K I witness : partial observations / | 821 SIN-J When peacocks dance : writings on the monsoon / | 821 SIN-N Khooni vaisakhi : | 821 SUB-A Love without a story / | 821 SUN-A Leaves of fall / | 821 THA-J These errors are correct : Poems / |
Jallianwala Bagh. 13 April 1919. Twenty-two-year-old Nanak Singh joins the mass of peaceful protestors agitating against the Rowlatt Act. What then turns out to be one of the worst atrocities perpetrated by the British Raj, and a turning point in India's independence movement, also becomes a life-changing experience for Nanak Singh, who survives the massacre, unconscious and unnoticed among the hundreds of corpses. After going through the traumatic experience, Nanak Singh proceeds to write Khooni Vaisakhi, a long poem in Punjabi. The poem was a scathing critique of the British Raj and was banned soon after its publication in May 1920. After sixty long years, it was rediscovered and has been translated into English for the first time by the author's grandson, Navdeep Suri. Featuring the poem in translation and in original, this bilingual book is accompanied by essays from Navdeep Suri, Punjabi literature scholar H.S. Bhatia and BBC correspondent Justin Rowlatt. Khooni Vaisakhi is not only a poignant piece of protest literature but also a historical artefact and a resurrected witness to how Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims came together to stand up to colonization and oppression in one of India's darkest moments.
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