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regular-article-logo Sunday, 12 May 2024

This month

Moplah Rebellion will be dropped from the Dictionary of Martyrs of India’s Freedom Struggle and Eastern India’s first passenger train

Team Graphic Published 29.08.21, 12:13 AM
Moplah prisoners going for trial at Calicut.

Moplah prisoners going for trial at Calicut. Wikimedia Commons

A three-member committee appointed by the Indian Council of Historic Research said names of close to 400 people associated with the 1921 Mapilla/Malabar/Moplah Rebellion will be dropped from the Dictionary of Martyrs of India’s Freedom Struggle, released by the ministry of culture in 2019.

Exactly a hundred years ago, the Malabar roiled in a many-layered conflict — peasant vs landlord, Muslim vs Hindu and coloniser vs colonised. The ruling of the Special Tribunal in the trial of Ali Musaliar, who was executed, read thus: “...it was not mere fanaticism, it was not agrarian troubles, it was not destitution... The evidence conclusively shows that it was the influence of the Khilafat and non-co-operation that drove them to their crime... Their intention was to subvert the British Government.” The ICHR panel observed that the rebellion had little to do with the independence struggle.

Wikipedia

Eastern India’s first passenger train ran from Howrah to Hooghly in 1854.

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