August revolution: revolutionaries hoisted the tricolor at the police station\, gave freedom to Bevar for one day

August revolution: revolutionaries hoisted the tricolor at the police station, gave freedom to Bevar for one day

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Bevar's revolutionaries liberated Bevar for a day on 14 August 1942. The revolutionaries chased the British police and shouted slogans and hoisted the tricolor at the police station. On August 15, 1942, three revolutionary martyrs, including a student of Bever, died in the firing on the revolutionaries by the British police and army.

The country gained independence on August 15, 1947, but it was only by the first independence movement that a spark against the British rule started in the region. In the national revolution of August 1942, the people of Bever region rose to become a warrior for freedom, on the call of Mahatma Gandhi to do or die and the British quit India. On 14 August 1942, after capturing the Bevar police station, the British police were repulsed and hoisted the tricolor at the police station. For a day Bever was freed from the slavery of the British.

On 15 August 1942, the British police and army, who came from outside, fired indiscriminately at the revolutionaries present at Bevar police station. Revolutionary students of Bevar, Krishna Kumar, Sitaram Gupta, Jamuna Prasad Tripathi were killed by firing bullets on the chest while fighting the British police and army. Every year on August 14, the three freedom-loving revolutionaries are remembered at Bevar on every occasion.

Martyr's memorial reminds

The martyr memorial has been constructed in Bevar in memory of the immortal martyrs who freed Bever from slavery to the British. Statues of the three martyrs and pictures of the martyrs from all over the district have been installed taking iron from the British. The revolutionaries are remembered at Bever on 14 August.

A fair is held in memory of the martyrs

The process of celebrating sacrifice day started from 1948 to 15 August at the sacrifice site of the martyrs at Bevar. The fair started in Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose's birthday on 23 January 1986. In the Shaheed Mela held every year, the descendants of freedom fighters across the country have been honored by the fair convener Raj Tripathi.