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Ghadar Movement

The Ghadar Movement or Ghadar Party was an early 20th-century, international political movement founded by expatriate Indians to overthrow British rule in India. Many of the Ghadar Party founders and leaders, including Sohan Singh Bhakna, went on and join the Babbar Akali Movement and helped it in logistics as a party and publishing its own newspaper in the post-World War I era. The early movement was created by the revolutionaries who lived and worked on the West Coast of the United States and Canada, and the movement later spread to India and Indian diasporic communities around the world. The official founding has been dated to a meeting on 15 July 1913 in Astoria, Oregon, and the group splintered into two factions the first time in 1914, with the Sikh-majority faction known as the “Azad Punjab Ghadar” and the Hindu-majority faction known as the “Hindustan Ghadar.” The Azad Punjab Ghadar Party’s headquarters and anti-colonial newspaper publications headquarters remained in the Stockton Gurdwara in Stockton, California, and the Hindustan Ghadar Party’s headquarters and Hindustan Ghadar newspaper relocated to nearby Oakland, California.

Background
'', an early Ghadarite compilation of nationalist and socialist literature, was banned in India in 1913. Between 1903 and 1913 approximately 10,000 South Asians emigres entered North America, mostly from the rural regions of central Punjab. About half the Punjabis had served in the British military. The Canadian government decided to curtail this influx with a series of laws, which were aimed at limiting the entry of South Asians into the country and restricting the political rights of those already in the country. Many migrants came to work in the fields, factories, and logging camps of Northern California and the Pacific Northwest, where they were exposed to labor unions and the ideas of the radical Industrial Workers of the World or IWW. The migrants of the Pacific Northwest banded together in Sikh gurdwaras and formed political Hindustani Associations for mutual aid. Nationalist sentiments were also building around the world among South Asian emigres and students, where they could organize more freely than in British India. Several dozen students came to study at the University of Berkeley, some spurred by a scholarship offered by a wealthy Punjabi farmer. Revolutionary intellectuals like Har Dayal and Taraknath Das attempted to organize students and educate them in anarchist and nationalist ideas. RasBihari Bose on request from Vishnu Ganesh Pingle, an American trained Ghadar, who met Bose at Benares and requested him to take up the leadership of the coming revolution. But before accepting the responsibility, he sent Sachin Sanyal to the Punjab to assess the situation. Sachin returned very optimistic, in the United States and Canada with the aim to liberate India from British rule. The movement began with a group of immigrants known as the Hindustani Workers of the Pacific Coast. as its president. The members of the party were Indian immigrants, largely from Punjab. Many of its Members who were students at University of California at Berkeley included Dayal, Tarak Nath Das, Maulavi Barkatullah, Kartar Singh Sarabha and V.G. Pingle. == Newspaper ==
Newspaper
The party's weekly paper was The Ghadar. == Notable founding members ==
Notable founding members
Sohan Singh Bhakna (President) • Bhagwan Singh Gyanee (President, 1914) • Kartar Singh Sarabha (Editor, Punjabi Gadar) • Pt. Kanshi Ram (Treasurer) • Lala Hardayal (General Secretary & Editor, Urdu Gadar) • Udham SinghBhai ParmanandTarak Nath DasV. G. PingleMangu Ram MugowaliaAmir ChandMaulana BarkatullahHarnam Singh SainiPandurang Sadashiv KhankhojeGanda Singh PhangurehKarim BuxBaba Prithvi Singh AzadGulab KaurPt. Ram RakhaSohanlal Pathak == See also ==
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