[While Modi is known for playing with facts just right, left and centre
and, hence, the moniker he pretty rightfully earned, the ugliest of all, is
the way he cooked up a charge of *treason*, nothing less, against his
predecessor and the previous Vice President of the nation just to garner
some extra votes in a medium-sized state poll, which'd be retracted by
Jaitley later on the floor of the parliament, after the Gujarat poll is
well over and the intended purpose served: <
https://twitter.com/officeofrg/status/946038581306441728?lang=en>.

(Pls. visit all the three sites by clicking on the respective links.)]

I/II.
https://www.facebook.com/DrunkJournalist/videos/2078499472421288/?t=18

(Two video clips juxtaposed:
i. Modi's ugly charge that Sonia and Rahul stayed away from congratulating,
before the TV camera, the new government in the wake of the 2014 general
election.
ii. The clip showing Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi doing precisely that.)

II.
A.
https://www.altnews.in/pm-modi-claims-no-congress-leader-visited-bhagat-singh-in-jail-whats-the-truth/

PM Modi claims no Congress leader visited Bhagat Singh in jail. What’s the
truth?

By Arjun Sidharth -10th May 2018

“When Shaheed Bhagat Singh, Batukeshwar Dutt, Veer Savarkar, greats like
them were jailed fighting for the country’s independence, did any Congress
leader went to meet them? But the Congress leaders go and meet the corrupt
who have been jailed”, said Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an election
rally in Bidar, Karnataka on May 9. In a no holds barred attack on the
Congress party, PM Modi asserted that no Congress leader had visited Bhagat
Singh, B K Dutt and Vinayak D Savarkar when they were under imprisonment
during British rule. Congress leaders instead choose to visit those who
have been jailed for corruption.


narendramodi_in
✔
@narendramodi_in
 When Shaheed Bhagat Singh, Batukeshwar Dutt, Veer Savarkar, greats like
them were jailed fighting for the country's independence, did any Congress
leader went to meet them? But the Congress leaders go and meet the corrupt
who have been jailed: PM @narendramodi

8:24 PM - May 9, 2018
734
386 people are talking about this
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Karnataka votes on May 12 and the run up to the election has witnessed
fierce campaigning. PM Modi had earlier been caught on the wrong foot when
in a poll rally, he made the false claim that General Thimayya had been
insulted by former PM Jawaharlal Nehru in 1948. The Prime Minister has now
once again made a reference to history in his speech at Bidar. Alt News
fact checked PM Modi’s claim.

Is it true that no Congress leader met these jailed freedom fighters?
India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in his autobiography ‘Toward
Freedom: The Autobiography of Jawaharlal Nehru’ recalls his meeting with
Bhagat Singh when the latter was imprisoned in Lahore jail in 1929. It may
be recalled that Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt were arrested after they
exploded bombs inside the Central Legislative Assembly in Delhi in April,
1929. Nehru writes:

“I happened to be in Lahore when the hunger strike was already a month old.
I was given permission to visit some of the prisoners in the prison, and I
availed myself of this. I saw Bhagat Singh for the first time, and
Jatindranath Das and a few others. They were all very weak and bedridden,
and it was hardly possible to talk to them much. Bhagat Singh had an
attractive, intellectual face, remarkably calm and peaceful. There seemed
to be no anger in it. He looked and talked with great gentleness, but then
I suppose that anyone who has been fasting for a month will look spiritual
and gentle. Jatin Das looked milder still, soft and gentle like a young
girl. He was in considerable pain when I saw him. He died later, as a
result of fasting, on the sixty-first day of the hunger strike.”


Source: Twitter
In fact, this event of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru visiting Bhagat Singh and
Batukeshwar Dutt who were lodged in Lahore jail was reported by The Tribune
in its editions of August 9 and August 10, 1929. It may be noted that in
1929, The Tribune was based in Lahore. The reports that appeared in The
Tribune regarding the said event are reproduced below from The Tribune
archives.

The report of August 9, 1929 states, “Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, accompanied
by Dr. Gopi Chand, M.L.C, visited the Lahore Central and Borstal Jails
today and interviewed the hunger strikers in the Lahore conspiracy case.
Pandit Jawahar Lal first went to the Central jail where he met Sardar
Bhagat Singh and Mr. B K Dutt with whom he held conversations about the
hunger strike. After meeting these two prisoners he went to the Borstal
jail where he met the other hunger strikers including Jatin Das, Ajoy Ghosh
and Shiv Varma who were lying in hospital.”


Source: The Tribune
The report of August 10, 1929 carried Pandit Nehru’s statement expressing
his views and serious concern about the health of the hunger strikers.


Source: The Tribune
Alt News spoke to Professor Chaman Lal who is a retired professor at
Jawaharlal Nehru University and author of the book, Understanding Bhagat
Singh. Professor Lal said, “Bhagat Singh’s relationship with the Congress
was a love-hate relationship. Bhagat Singh’s family was part of Congress.
His father was a Congress activist. Bhagat Singh had also attended Congress
sessions with his father. Bradley Hall in Lahore where the Punjab Congress
headquarters was based was used by Bhagat Singh and others for the Punjab
Naujawan Bharat Sabha meetings. Both Jawaharlal Nehru and Motilal Nehru had
met Bhagat Singh numerous times during the Lahore trial. Motilal Nehru had
even formed a committee to press for the demands of the prisoners lodged in
jail who had begun a fast unto death seeking humane conditions. Also, Jatin
Das who became a martyr when he succumbed to his fast-unto-death, was
attended to by Dr. Gopichand Bhargav who was Punjab Congress President and
a regular visitor at the prison. There is no doubt that Bhagat Singh and
Congress had very strong differences, but the Prime Minister’s claim is not
true at all.”

While it is true that Bhagat Singh’s ideology and methods were not in
consonance with Congress’s strategy which relied heavily on the Gandhian
method of mass struggle, it is a fact that Jawaharlal Nehru had met Bhagat
Singh when the latter was imprisoned by the British in 1929. Thus, there is
no substance to PM Modi’s claim that no Congress leader had visited the
heroes of the freedom struggle when they were jailed by the British.

B.
https://www.indiatoday.in/elections/karnataka-election-2018/story/narendra-modi-jawaharlal-nehru-bhagat-singh-congress-karnataka-election-1231140-2018-05-10

Was Modi right about Congress leaders not meeting Bhagat Singh in jail? |
FACT CHECK

Kumar Vikrant Singh

New Delhi
May 10, 2018
UPDATED 01:24 IST

HIGHLIGHTS
India Today accesses Tribune report from 1929
Nehru did meet Bhagat Singh in jail in Lahore, report confirms
Shocked by PM's statement, says JNU historian

PHOTOS | Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressing an election rally in
Karnataka (Reuters)/Picture of a report in the 10th August 1929 evening
edition of the Tribune newspaper (Accessed from the Nehru Memorial Museum
and Library, New Delhi)

Even before the controversy over Narendra Modi's remark about Jawaharlal
Nehru and Krishna Menon humiliating General Thimayya could fade away, the
prime minister once again dragged the Congress - and history - into the
electoral battlefield of Karnataka.

On May 9, at a public rally in Karnataka's Bidar*, Modi asked, "When
Shaheed Bhagat Singh, Batukeshwar Dutt, (and) Veer Savarkar were jailed
fighting for the country's independence, did any Congress leader go to meet
them?"

"But the Congress leaders meet the corrupt people who have been jailed",
the prime minister said, probably referring to Rahul Gandhi's recent
meeting with Lalu Prasad Yadav at AIIMS in Delhi.

But do historical facts back Modi's remarks?

The answer is no.

It's well documented that Nehru met Bhagat Singh in Lahore jail on August
8, 1929, when several inmates - including Singh - were on a hunger strike,
protesting ill-treatment by prison authorities.

Many on social media have pointed this out. To check the authenticity of
these reports, India Today accessed a verified copy of the Tribune
newspaper's 10th August 1929 edition from the Nehru Memorial Museum and
Library in New Delhi.

Bhagat Singh had an attractive, intellectual face, remarkably calm and
peaceful. There seemed to be no anger in it. He looked and talked with
great gentleness, but then I suppose that anyone who has been fasting for a
month will look spiritual and gentle.
- Jawaharlal Nehru, in his autobiography
On the front page of its evening edition (published in Lahore), the paper
printed news of a meeting between Jawaharlal Nehru, Bhagat Singh and
Batukeshwar Dutt (among others). The headline: Pt. Jawaharlal Interviews
Hunger Strikers.

Here's a close-up photograph of that edition. It clearly reads:

"Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru, accompanied by Dr. Gopi Chand, M.L.C., visited
the Lahore Central and Borstal Jails today and interviewed the hunger
strikers in the Lahore Conspiracy Case. Pandit Jawahar Lal first went to
the Central Jail where he met Sardar Bhagat Singh and Mr. B. K. Dutt with
whom he held conversations about the hunger strikes..."


A picture of a report in the 10th August 1929 evening edition of the
Tribune newspaper. (Accessed from the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library,
New Delhi)
'HE TALKED WITH GREAT GENTLENESS'

Nehru himself mentioned the meeting in his autobiography, and described how
impressed he was with Bhagat Singh.

"I happened to be in Lahore when the hunger strike was already a month old.
I was given permission to visit some of the prisoners in the prison, and I
availed myself of this," Nehru wrote. "I saw Bhagat Singh for the first
time, and Jatindranath Das and a few others."

"They were all very weak and bedridden, and it was hardly possible to talk
to them very much. Bhagat Singh had an attractive, intellectual face,
remarkably calm and peaceful. There seemed to be no anger in it. He looked
and talked with great gentleness, but then I suppose that anyone who has
been fasting for a month will look spiritual and gentle."


Rahul Gandhi holding a bust of Bhagat Singh in Mohali in September 2008.
(Photo: Reuters)
SHOCKED, SAYS J.N.U HISTORIAN

Jawaharlal Nehru University historian Mridula Mukherjee said she was
"shocked" by the prime minister's statement.

"It is a known fact how Nehru and Bhagat Singh were fond of each other.
When Bhagat Singh and other revolutionaries were in jail, he not only
visited them, but also wrote a letter and gave an open statement after
visiting them," she said.

"They had mutual admiration for each other."

Chaman Lal, another well-known historian, who has penned renowned books on
Bhagat Singh, said there's no truth in what Modi said.

"There were certainly many differences between the revolutionaries and
Congress leaders who followed Gandhi's principles. But they also had great
respect for each other. Particularly Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra
Bose were held in high regard by the revolutionaries," he said.

* NOTE | The picture in the lead image is from a rally in Bengaluru.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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