Why In The News?
- Remembering ‘Matangini Hazra’ on her 81st Anniversary of Martyrdom.
About Matangini Hazra:
=> Early life: – She was born on 19 October 1870, in the small village of Hogla, near Tamluk in Bengal, she was the daughter of a poor peasant and did not receive a formal education.
Role during the freedom struggle:
=> She was a revolutionary and actively participated in the Indian Independence Movement.
=> She was affectionately known as Gandhi Buri (Bengali for Old Lady Gandhi).
=> In 1905, she became actively interested in the Indian independence movement as a Gandhian. She took part in the Non-Cooperation Movement and protested for the abolition of salt tax as a part of the civil disobedience movement.
=> It was during this time that she became an active member of the Indian National Congress, and started spinning her own khadi in Gandhi’s footsteps.
=> She led a procession of 6000 protestors, mostly women as a part of the Quit India Movement.
=> She kept chanting Vande Mataram (Hail to the Motherland) during her last moments.
Post Independence:
=> Numerous schools, colonies, and streets were named after Hazra.
=> The first statue of a woman put up in Kolkata, in independent India, was Hazra’s in 1977.
=> In 2002, as part of a series of postage stamps commemorating sixty years of the Quit India Movement the Department of Posts of India issued a five rupee postage stamp with Matangini Hazra’s image.