Muharram has long been a symbol of shared heritage and collective respect.
The Tazia processions of the early 1950s beautifully reflected this spirit, with Hindus and Muslims coming together in reverence, devotion, and harmony. These moments remind us that faith can inspire not only remembrance but also unity across communities.
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HeritageTimes.in
This is official page of www.heritagetimes.in - a website which is trying to explore and bring the less known heritage from the history to the world.
21/06/2026
The then Vice President of India, Dr. Zakir Husain (a Muslim) and the Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri (a Hindu) listen to Pope Paul VI as the Archbishop of Bombay Valerian Cardinal Gracias looks on during the Pope’s visit to Mumbai in 1964.
This was the first visit of any Pope to India. He was in India to attend the 38th Eucharistic Congress but stayed for more interactions with slum dwellers and Indian Christian missionaries.
PM Shastri called him a very impressive and polite person after the meeting. He gave $80,000 in charities and considered population control as a humanitarian issue after visiting the slums in Mumbai. President Radhakrishnan lauded Pope’s efforts in attaining “one common family of God”.
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Mahatma Gandhi’s Historic Press Conference
On 30 April 1931, Mahatma Gandhi gave his first recorded interview to Fox Movietone News.
Preserved in the Fox Movietone archives, this remarkable footage captures a pivotal moment in India’s freedom struggle.
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This original archival reel features rare excerpts from the historic 1977 speech of Jayaprakash Narayan (Loknayak JP), delivered after the Sampoorna Kranti (Total Revolution) movement.
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Before Nehru Maulana Barkatullah was the Prime Minister of India
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04/06/2026
Maulana Barkatullah was a forerunner of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and led one of the most important movements of the Indian Freedom Struggle
“Another Moulvi, but a different type entirely was Barkatullah whom I first met in Berlin. He was a delightful old man, very enthusiastic and very likeable.” The first Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, recalled his first meeting with Maulana Barkatullah Bhopali in 1926 with these words.
Maulana Barkatullah, born on 7 July, 1854, was one of the earliest Indian revolutionaries who had used the foreign soil to militantly attack the British rule in India. A method later adopted by a number of revolutionaries, the most famous being Subhas Chandra Bose.
A Madarsa graduate, Maulana later attended a Christian Missionary School to get English education as well. In 1887, Maulana went to England where he was exposed to new ideas and revolutionaries like Gopal Krishna Gokhale. In London, he also spent time with Shyamji Krishna Verma, a prominent father figure of several Indian revolutionaries.
In England, Maulana took up the job of teaching Arabic at Oriental University, Liverpool. Here, he started meeting anti-colonial activists from across the world which helped him develop an anti-colonial nationalist world view. Maulana later went to the USA and taught for six years there. Meanwhile, he started preaching against the British empire among the Indian diaspora there. By now, Maulana had become a well known name among the Indian nationalists. People started recognising him as one of the popular leaders of the nationalist cause.
Around this time Maulana also developed his idea of nation, community and freedom struggle. In his Risala Hindu wa Musalman dar Hindustan, Maulana wrote,
“There are two duties of the Musilms residing in India. One is the duty for the country and the other of their religion. The love for the country demands that one should not shirk in serving the country with wealth and his own life. The history of mankind stands witness that he who has no love for the country is devoid of humanity……… The fulfillment of these religious and country’s duties depends upon only one action, the complete unity between the Hindus and Indian Muslims.”
Taking his nationalist message with him, Maulana would go to Japan where he taught for sometime while preaching his message alongside. Interestingly, the foundation laid down by him was later used by Rash Behari Bose and Subhas Chandra Bose for establishing Japan as a centre of Indian Freedom Struggle. In 1913, he returned to the USA and formed the Ghadar Party along with Lala Har Dayal.
In 1914, the First World War started and Germany was fighting against the British. Many Indian soldiers of the British army were captured by Germany at different war frontiers. Barkatullah, along with other revolutionaries, formed the Berlin Committee of Indian Independence League to persuade these Prisoners of War (PoWs) to fight against the British. This model of recruiting the PoWs was later executed by Subhas Chandra Bose more successfully. The plan was to attack India through Afghanistan with these soldiers. As part of the plan, Barkatullah with Mahendra Pratap and other revolutionaries visited Afghanistan to pursue its King for support.
The plan met initial success as a Provisional Government of Free India was formed in Kabul, in 1915. Raja Mahendra Pratap was chosen as its President, Barkatullah was the PM and Maulana Obaidullah Sindhi was the Home Minister. The model of forming a Provisional Government, and then attacking the British territories with the help of PoWs was later adopted by Subhas Chandra Bose when he formed Arzi Hukumat Azad Hind and raised Azad Hind Fauj to attack India. Interestingly, Subhas also tried to forge an alliance with Germany first and shifted towards Japan afterwards.
Meanwhile, Turkey and Germany started facing reverses in the war. The political situation in Afghanistan and India also changed drastically. In India, Gandhi emerged as a new leader with a doctrine of Non-Violence, which contradicted the ideology of revolutionaries like Barkatullah. The situation in Europe and elsewhere did not allow these revolutionaries to attack India from outside.
Still, a nationalist like him would not accept defeat. A man can be killed, but can never be defeated. Barkatullah and Raja Mahendra, after the World War went to Moscow and met Lenin to garner the support of the United States of Soviet Russia (USSR). In a statement Barkatullah stated that though he was not a communist but being an anti-colonial revolutionary he was a ‘natural ally’ of the USSR.
With assurance from the USSR, they returned to Kabul. While they were still preparing for a final blow on the British Empire, the Afghanistan government signed a pact with the British. It was a big blow to the hopes of the revolutionaries.
After this for the next six years, Barkatullah kept campaigning for the Indian cause in central Asia, Europe and USA. He breathed his last on 27 September, 1927, in San Francisco where he was campaigning for the Ghadar Party.
This great son of India remained outside the country, away from his home, with a hope that he would see his motherland free. But, as Iftekhar Arif puts it,
Azaab ye bhi kisi aur par nahi aaya
Ke ek umr chale aur ghar nahi aaya
(This punishment was not inflicted upon anyone else
I did not reach home, after travelling a lifetime)
Photo: The tribute to Barkatullah paid in the journal of Ghadar Party published in 1927.
01/06/2026
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar with Shankarrao Deo to pay last homage to Mahatma Gandhi on 30 January 1948 at Birla House, New Delhi after he was killed by Nathuram Godse.
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01/06/2026
Photograph shows the crowd at the funeral of C R Das in Kolkata being led by Mahatma Gandhi in 1925. Das was considered a mentor of Subhas Chandra Bose, who later wrote, “unfortunately for us with the death of Deshabandhu C.R. Das and Pandit Motilal Nehru of hallowed memory in 1925 and 1931 respectively – there disappeared from the Indian scene two political giants who might have saved India from the political mess in which she now finds herself.”
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30/05/2026
During the Second World War, this was the British Defence Council in 1942. The caption reads,
RULERS OF BRITISH INDIA, gathered around Viceroy Lord Linlithgow (front center), are (first row): Bhopal's Nawab, Gwalior's Maharaja, Bikaner's Maharajadhiraja, Nawanager's Maharaja who is Chancellor of the Chamber of Princes, Viceroy, Bahawalpur's Prime Min-ister, Madras' ex-Officiating Governor, Dharbhanga's Maharajadhiraj, Punjab assembly woman and reformer; (second row): Chhatari's Nawab, Cooch Behar's Maharaja, Rampur's Nawab, Patiala's Maharaja, Jodhpur's Maharaja, Bombay Parsi, Khallikote's Raja, Punjab assembly man, leader of the Madras opposition, and Berar delegate to Chamber of Princes. Last row includes (center) two of Viceroy's secretaries. These 30 men and one woman constitute India's National Defense Council. They rule British India's 280,000,000 people, plus some of the 562 Indian states of the semi-independent princes who have backed Britain to the limit.
🕌 Delhi, 1957 — Eid at Jama Masjid
Rare scenes of Id-Il-Zuha prayers, crowded streets, and joyful fairgrounds outside the mosque capture the spirit of Old Delhi in a timeless era. ✨🎡
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