Friday, October 25, 2024

Footprints of Indian Freedom Fighters in London: 2

Encouraged by a very fruitful visit to Ambedkar House, I researched for places associated with other Indian freedom fighters in London. I found many and visited several of them. First among them was the house situated at 65 Cromwell Avenue, Highgate. Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, fondly called as Veer Savarkar or Tatyasaheb lived here from June 1906 to July 1909.

Savarkar was active in the freedom movement from a young age. He went to England on a scholarship arranged by revolutionary fighter, lawyer and journalist Shyamji Krishna Varma with additional support from Lokmanya Tilak. Savarkar enrolled at the Gray's Inn to study law. 

Krishna Varma founded India House at 65 Cromwell Avenue in 1905 with an aim to use it as a hostel for Indian students. It also functioned as headquarters of Indian Home Rule Society, soon becoming a centre for visiting Indian activists. 

Today the house stands quietly in a beautiful residential area. I visited it on a lovely day and spent a few moments looking at the blue plaque bearing Savarkar's name, imagining all the events this house must have witnessed in those times. It was quite overwhelming!
 
Another blue plaque that aroused my interest was the one put up at 23 Aldridge Road Villas in Ladbroke Grove. First deputy prime minister and home minister of India from 1947 to 1950 Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel resided at this address when he went to England to train as a barrister in 1910. This was a modest boarding house then. Patel was funding his own education using money he had saved working back home in India. He used to walk to the Middle Temple where he was enrolled for his studies. He completed his course in good time and returned to Gujarat in 1912 to start practising as a barrister.

Photos by Lata
He got involved in the freedom movement as one of Gandhiji's chief aides. He had very good organising skills. Also, he was an exceptional leader. This quality earned him the title Sardar. His contribution towards the unification of India earned him another sobriquet: Iron Man of India.

The blue plaque displayed on the house in his memory fills me with gratitude and respect for this venerable statesman. The plaque was put up by the Greater London Council in 1986. It got damaged due to some construction work. Later English Heritage replaced it with a replica in 1991.

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Footprints of Indian Freedom Fighters in London: 1

During a recent visit to London, while looking up something online, I came across some interesting information about Ambedkar House, a building where Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar, the architect of the Constitution of India had lived in 1921-1922. The house comprising a basement and ground plus two floors was purchased by the government of Maharashtra in 2015 to turn it into a museum. Later in 2023, the central government took control of the property. It is being maintained as a memorial to the great crusader, and is open to public for visits. I was thrilled with this information and made a plan to go there soon. 

It materialised on a bright sunny morning. The house is situated at 10 King Henry's Road in north London in a leafy residential neighbourhood. Standing outside the house and looking at the blue plaque (according to Wikipedia, a blue plaque is a permanent sign installed in a public place in the United Kingdom, and certain other countries and territories, to commemorate a link between that location and a famous person, event, or former building on the site, serving as a historical marker) displayed at the entrance, I was filled with awe. 

Ambedkar arrived in London somewhere around 1915 to study at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He also enrolled at the Gray's Inn to study law. In 1922, he was called to the bar by the Gray's Inn and became a barrister-at-law. Later he returned to India and started practising law in Bombay.

His stay in London, his education and his experiences must have certainly played a role in shaping his personality. This house and the well-maintained museum inside offers us a peek into his life and times. The house has a lovely garden at the back which is accessible through the basement. But unfortunately this part was closed due to maintenance work. I noticed from the first floor window that a bronze statue of Ambedkar stood in the garden. Railway tracks run just outside the boundary wall of the house.

An attendant ushers us inside the house on the ground floor. This floor features a bronze bust of Ambedkar against a large window. It is adorned with garlands and flower pots. Pictures from various events in his life are on display on the walls. It is a bright day outside and the sun streaming through the windows fills the house with positive vibes. 

We take the wooden staircase to go to the first floor. The room facing the street outside has a comfortable sofa in it. The walls are lined with shelves where books in blue covers are arranged neatly. The fireplace and more pictures on the walls give a warm and cosy feel to the place.

The other room features a large dining table. It is strewn with bound copies of the Constitution of India and laminated copies of letters written by Ambedkar to friends and associates in English and Marathi. The letters offer us a glimpse into the ideas and thoughts of this stalwart. Going through some of them gave me goosebumps. In a letter written from London on 30th December 1932 in Marathi to someone called Bhaurao, Ambedkar has expressed his deep disappointment and sadness about the fact that back home, people belonging to community A thought that he favoured community B, while people belonging to community B felt that he sided with community A. Another one addressed to the same person and written in English on the 29th October 1930 mentions the upcoming Round Table Conference on November 12. The collection of letters is quite fascinating!

Photos by Lata
The Second floor houses Ambedkar's bedroom and his personal belongings like writing pad, spectacles and clothes. A bed occupies the centre of the room. One of the pictures on the wall mentions a silver ink pot that was presented to Ambedkar by Lord and Lady Mountbatten when they had invited him and his wife for lunch. The ink pot has a portrait of the Queen of England carved on it. The House along with important documents and pictures, contains such interesting trivia giving visitors a well-rounded experience.

We leave the Ambedkar House fully satiated and impressed. 

There are many more blue plaques in London commemorating several Indians who were a part of the freedom movement decades ago. More on them in the next post!