This article was first published 18 years ago

History unfolds at Red Fort

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Last updated on: May 11, 2007 11:46 IST

India on Friday paid glowing tributes to the spirit of bravery, daring and courage of the martyrs of 1857 at the historic Red Fort in Delhi, which was a mute witness to the great uprising 150 years ago.

Invoking Vivekanand's immortal Uttishtha Jagrut Prapya Varannibodhat -- Arise, Awake and stop not till the goal is achieved -- to the youth, President A P J Abdul Kalam called upon them to join in the nation's 'second people's struggle' and strive relentlessly to achieve success, like the freedom fighters who struggled for almost a century to attain Independence.

In consonance with the tradition, Kalam, in his speech in Hindi from the Red Fort ramparts, reminded them of the sacrifices that earned the long cherished Independence, even as rich pageantry and colourful dance-drama depiction of the freedom struggle unfolded across eleven stages by 2,000 folk artists from country's seven zonal cultural centres.

"I want to offer a mission to my countrymen -- of making India politically, economically and socially strong and saving its independence from internal and external interference," he told a gathering of over 36,000 youth who marched to Delhi from Meerut to remember the 150 years of the first war of India's independence, and a host of dignitaries, including Vice-President B S Shekhawat, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi.

"A daring national movement is needed in which people from all walks of life should participate and specially the youth in the political process... On this historic day of May 11, I call upon all of you to pledge to participate in the second 'freedom struggle' to achieve the goal of a strong, developed and happy India by 2020," the President observed.

Photograph: Rashtrapati Bhavan | Text: UNI

Also see:
Who killed India's 1857 legacy?
Images: Heroes of a historic march
Special: The first war of independence

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