Savarkar: Echoes from a Forgotten Past, 1883-1924

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • I chat with Vikram Sampath about his book "Savarkar: Echoes from a Forgotten Past, 1883-1924".
    You can buy the book here www.amazon.in/...
    You can check Vikram's work on his website here www.vikramsampa...
    Follow Vikram:
    Twitter: @vikramsampath
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Комментарии • 259

  • @mso2802
    @mso2802 4 года назад +96

    Veer Savarkar should be studied and taught in schools. We should be glad that Veer Savarkar has finally found a voice through the eloquent Dr. Vikram Sampath.
    Patriotism and love for matribhumi Bharat has never found a better and soulful expression than through "Sagara Pran Tadamadala"! Every Indian deserves to know about him.

  • @shivambajpayee7040
    @shivambajpayee7040 4 года назад +87

    Savarkar's views on Issues are more Relevant in today's point of time than Gandhi's. He was much ahead of his time in a much more Real sense than any of his contemporaries.

    • @ninadk30
      @ninadk30 4 года назад +9

      Even with the benifit of hindsigt, I am compelled to follow Savarkar. And I have given a great thought towards Gandhi. But Gandhi had an ideology which was diametrically opposite to Savarkar and it culmminated into mistakes for which we have payed dearly. Savarkar was the warning bell

    • @shivambajpayee7040
      @shivambajpayee7040 4 года назад

      Savarkar wasn't a politician he was a reformer. Gandhi was a smart politician just read the early works of him his opinions and ideas were totally different after becoming a politican he successfully masked himself into being secular but in real life he was disgusted even with an idea of A hindu women marrying a muslim man. In One thing that Gandhi was class apart than anyone was his wisdom but again his wisdom might be fit for 'Satyuga' definitely not for 'Kalyuga'. Hence savarkar Ideas are much more pragmatic to follow in current time.

    • @ninadk30
      @ninadk30 4 года назад +8

      @@shivambajpayee7040 I agree. TBH I have never questioned the motives of Gandhi or even of Nehru to an extent. But I don't agree with their approach. It was really stupid. They even managed to turn a moderate like Jinnah into a radical.

    • @anandisrinivasan8704
      @anandisrinivasan8704 2 года назад

      @@ninadk30 you can talk later on the day and then you will come home

    • @anandisrinivasan8704
      @anandisrinivasan8704 2 года назад

      Hi baby baby how’s it how’s work going for

  • @vishalsorout
    @vishalsorout 4 года назад +38

    I have been to the cellular Jail/Kalapani at port Blair in the Andamans and the way vikram described his own experience is bang on. It was extremely overwhelming and humbling to roam around that Jail and feel the screams and screeches of our heroic ancestors.

    • @adityanarayandubey4080
      @adityanarayandubey4080 3 года назад +3

      It was some visit for me too. Saw Savarkar's cell there, and the light and sound show too besides other things. Much respect for Savarkar.

  • @dharma2025
    @dharma2025 4 года назад +25

    Savarkar is above hate or love. You get inspired tremendously the moment you start reading his books. I bet those who criticize him have not read even a single line of what he has written! For that matter, I also bet those who attack savarkar have also not read even a single line of what Gandhi has written. Recommend reading Savarkar's books in original in marathi. For that, even learning marathi won't be a waste of time!

    • @ankurgaikwad7252
      @ankurgaikwad7252 3 года назад +5

      So true! I read his 'Essentials of Hindutva' book. It's too evident how he wanted to generate the sense of brotherhood among Indians through common history and common civilisational struggle during Islamic rule. Especially the middle section where he expresses history through poets.

    • @aditya-rt4zb
      @aditya-rt4zb 2 года назад +1

      @@ankurgaikwad7252 I don't find hindutva to be that great work. I rather liked hindu rashtra darshan. Especially the 3-4th chapter. Man kya kya gajab arguments deta hai banda

  • @chinmaypurohit3431
    @chinmaypurohit3431 4 года назад +37

    Thank you Vikram, your book also allowed me to declutter a lot of beliefs I hold for Savarkar.

  • @AnaBiswaz
    @AnaBiswaz 4 года назад +32

    Great choice of guest. He is amazing.

  • @patmclaughlin107
    @patmclaughlin107 4 года назад +28

    Thank you, Vikram, for writing this book. I am looking forward to reading it.

  • @lalitmulay2851
    @lalitmulay2851 4 года назад +25

    Savarkar vision on India's internal & external security needs to be studied. His analysis of predicting threats much earlier sometimes 5 years sometimes even 15-20 yrs earlier was awesome. I am sure vikram will cover that in 2nd Vol.

  • @ankur1213
    @ankur1213 4 года назад +40

    And don't forget that the jailer who executed all the tortures was a fanatic Muslim who hated Savarkar for being a Hindu.

    • @newworld2086
      @newworld2086 4 года назад +6

      I think you meant to write fanatic and not fantastic.

    • @sumedhchaudhary8730
      @sumedhchaudhary8730 3 года назад +1

      @@newworld2086 well even if someone says fantastic muslim.. even that wont be a compliment in the civilised world

  • @thelongroad8569
    @thelongroad8569 4 года назад +15

    Wonderful conversation. Kudos to Kushal for all these podcasts once again. Vikram made a great point about how we as a nation are ignorant of our history, of the contributions of the people who made great sacrifices for the nation. And a major reason for this ignorance is that we aren't taught about them. They've been deliberately omitted from our text books and national discourse by the ruling class in post independence India to keep the power concentrated in their own hands. But a lot of people have felt a disconnect with this narrative and it's only in this age of internet and social media, the other side has become accessible to the masses and now we can see the whole picture.
    Thanks to Vikram Sampath for all the effort he's put into bringing this book out and also the conversations he's having on various platforms to spread awareness about Savarkar, who's been a very influential figure in colonial India, but has been relegated to stupid trashy memes these days.

  • @chintanpurohit8225
    @chintanpurohit8225 4 года назад +9

    This was a wonderful talk. When I went to the cellular jail for the first time, I couldn't do anything for the next two days. I had read and heard enough about it but the aura of the place is so haunting. Thank you Kushal Mehta nd Vikram Sampath.

  • @ughatpande
    @ughatpande 3 года назад +4

    I come from a generation and a state of Maharashtra where history book had separate chapter on Savarkar also have had a parents who gave us access to his writings a man ahead of his time indeed must thank Mr Sampath for writing his biography

  • @itsRohitJain
    @itsRohitJain 4 года назад +5

    Thanks Vikram, I am ashamed that I have not yet visited Kaalapani. But I made sure I educated my children about him and his beliefs

  • @VVV-wx3ui
    @VVV-wx3ui 4 года назад +12

    Very informative and unknown facts/history came out in this talk. Thanks much to Vikram and keep bringing such credible authors, history writers on to your channel Kushal. Similarly you could bring someone to talk about Gandhi, especially his non-violence stance. He is okay with sending millions to World wars to fight for British and okay with Hindus maphla atrocity but stood aginst those who wanted armed-struggle against British. His non-violence stand is inconsistent.

  • @nickshills
    @nickshills 4 года назад +8

    Finally a podcast on savarkar 🙌 happy Ganesh Chaturthi 🙏🏽

  • @hitesh8354
    @hitesh8354 4 года назад +10

    This is the Best of thing I've seen on RUclips.

  • @mayankkr2192
    @mayankkr2192 4 года назад +11

    I admire savarkar. He was a great person

  • @shivamdutta5737
    @shivamdutta5737 4 года назад +12

    Nobody cared enough before Vikram Sampath!

  • @gaursunilk
    @gaursunilk 4 года назад +14

    Excellent and enlightening.

  • @NoVideo2024
    @NoVideo2024 5 месяцев назад

    Savarkar's work will find more popularity in coming decades and he will be alive again for centuries to come. He was a polymath who deserves only respect 🙏 and gratitude 🙏

  • @26268083
    @26268083 3 года назад +2

    I think this is a truly great & only revelation abt Savarkar. With all the Lies & Myths created around this man, this podcast truly exposes the reality with facts and in turn exposes those propagandists out in the open. Thank you for bringing this to mainstream. 👍

  • @anandshethi8742
    @anandshethi8742 3 месяца назад

    For Vinayak the historical legacy of India was an important aspect of all his writings(page # 127).
    SAVARKAR
    ECHOES FROM A FORGOTTEN PAST(1883-1924).
    VIKRAM SAMPATH
    #VeerSavarkar
    #Vikramsampath
    🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @sapnavermakhandelwal8554
    @sapnavermakhandelwal8554 3 года назад +1

    I saw podcast 2 first and then hunted down this video. And I cannot wait to grab my copy.
    Thanks guys.

  • @cosmorebreak121
    @cosmorebreak121 3 года назад +5

    I am marxist but I feel like Savarkar is misunderstood .... He is such fearless man and hid poem's just wow

  • @Temüjin_3162
    @Temüjin_3162 3 года назад +1

    I am here after the release of second book...Vikram sir you are an inspiration, and I have decided what I will do in my life.

    • @brisingr12
      @brisingr12 3 года назад

      And what would that be ?

  • @rajhegde5955
    @rajhegde5955 3 года назад +2

    Just finished this book of such a great leader who never got his due in his lifetime.
    Very very sharp mind, tactical and strategical mind and such clarity of thought in arriving of providing an identity to Indian
    Hats of to Vikram. Waiting for 2nd volume 😀
    Veer Savarkar ideals are more relevant today than the hypocratic ideals of the MKG and Cha-Cha JN. Bogus of Non violence and non cooperation is completely exposed today with India investing so much money on military arms 😂

  • @brijeshchandrakar
    @brijeshchandrakar 4 года назад +5

    While going through this book, I felt that Savarkar Nehru aur Gandhi ka baap tha in both intellectual levels as well as leadership qualities. Just like SC Bose. That's why he was targeted the most by the Britishers and they made sure he never became the leader that he really should have been. Although in the end, India's freedom was achieved through Savarkar's script of War of 1857.

    • @rajhegde5955
      @rajhegde5955 3 года назад

      Well articulated sir. Completely agree.
      He was , is and will be an ever relevant leader to India than the pseudo hypocrites like MKG and JN. Look at the very hypocracy of Ahimsa and non violence proposed MKG and Cha-cha JN and todays India buying so much of military arms 😂😂

  • @suyashpednekar360
    @suyashpednekar360 3 года назад +4

    This podcast is tight slap on people like Aakash Banerjee.

  • @amanpandey7035
    @amanpandey7035 3 года назад +1

    This channel is a blessing.

  • @IceQeen1011
    @IceQeen1011 2 года назад

    I will definitely get this book now. Not only is Vikram a phenomenal, honest academician, he's also such a sweetheart. And it gives me a special sense of glee when I see that his instagram has hundreds of thousands of followers compared to Audrey Truschke's abysmal 1000s or less. That's because Audrey fights for $$ and we fight for our civilization!

  • @sivakumarnaidu4277
    @sivakumarnaidu4277 6 месяцев назад

    No one introduced vikram as beautiful as Kushal

  • @Dariusdagr8
    @Dariusdagr8 3 года назад

    Vikram Sampath Sir you are a national treasure. I don't have words to express my gratitude.

  • @orwelltheorem
    @orwelltheorem 4 года назад +40

    In Nehru vs Savarkar, Savarkar might well have the last laugh.

    • @nickbytes
      @nickbytes 4 года назад +1

      Yes, Nehru didn't know how to apologize.

    • @SamvedIyer
      @SamvedIyer 4 года назад +12

      @@nickbytes Savarkar did not apologize, for your kind information.

    • @SamvedIyer
      @SamvedIyer 4 года назад +5

      Savarkar's prophecy comes true: www.opindia.com/2020/08/veer-savarkar-congress-ram-mandir-janeu/#:~:text=Veer%20Savarkar%27s%20prophecy%20comes%20true%20as%20Congress%20leaders,of%20Ram%20Temple%20in%20Ayodhya%20%7C%20OpIndia%20News

    • @SK-ro8dn
      @SK-ro8dn 4 года назад +10

      Nehru never got kalapani and that also for fifty years.

    • @ninadk30
      @ninadk30 4 года назад +8

      @@nickbytes Yes but his father did. So did one of the stalwarts of the Communist party of India. And yes Sarvarkar didnt. Read the book

  • @satympal6935
    @satympal6935 3 года назад

    Huge applause to Vikram & Kushal by extension in bringing out Savarkar from brink of being forgotten

  • @newworld2086
    @newworld2086 4 года назад

    Thank you Mr. Sampath for this amazing book.Every Veer Savakar hater must read this and every Veer Savarkar admirer too as many of his thoughts were way ahead of time even by today's developments

  • @mukundbr3844
    @mukundbr3844 4 года назад +4

    Great discussion.

  • @vineetyadav276
    @vineetyadav276 3 года назад +2

    Great podcast!

  • @RadhaVallabhVrindavan
    @RadhaVallabhVrindavan 4 года назад +3

    That is an amazing podcast.

  • @adarshraghuram6858
    @adarshraghuram6858 3 года назад +1

    Nice conversation with Anil Kumble

  • @nikhildeshpande6308
    @nikhildeshpande6308 4 года назад +17

    Idk why you don’t get subscribers!😓

    • @SuperAshishd
      @SuperAshishd 4 года назад +3

      Share it with more nd more friends ✌🏻

    • @nikhildeshpande6308
      @nikhildeshpande6308 4 года назад +2

      ash s I already do that! But, I think his honesty and bluntness of his words is the reason why hard right and hard left, both, don’t own him. That is what makes this guy special though!

  • @sumedhchaudhary8730
    @sumedhchaudhary8730 3 года назад +1

    wonderful wonderful podcast.. !!!

  • @vineethegde696
    @vineethegde696 4 года назад +1

    Excellent and enlightening in simple words.

  • @theorder1548
    @theorder1548 3 года назад

    विक्रम संपत जी आपका कोई जवाब नही !👍💐!

  • @gayathrinarendra7522
    @gayathrinarendra7522 4 года назад +2

    Sir, great talk with the author. I am really surprised, why your subscription is so low in numbers.

  • @TheHarharmahadev
    @TheHarharmahadev 4 года назад +2

    Very good conversation 👍

  • @pratimakaranth9225
    @pratimakaranth9225 3 года назад

    Thoroughly enjoyed this one. Thanks Kushal and Vikram.

  • @gayathrinarendra7522
    @gayathrinarendra7522 4 года назад +5

    Is it possible to bring True indology to your podcast Please 🙏🏼

  • @sairampv1
    @sairampv1 4 года назад +4

    Maybe we can develop a culture of developing anime type culture so that a group of artists can animate these revolutionaries, so we don't have to rely on the bollywood kabal or the web series to develop these stories.

  • @laya0srinivas
    @laya0srinivas 3 года назад

    My most waited topic. Amazing.

  • @maitri98
    @maitri98 4 года назад +6

    I have no idea why but I could never believe Gandhi the real reason for our freedom. He was the prime reason I found history as a subject in my textbooks unreal and full of shit as everything real in my experience of life hinted otherwise with respect to human nature and cultures.

  • @deepika2644
    @deepika2644 2 года назад

    Great podcast

  • @uklhyd5192
    @uklhyd5192 4 года назад +1

    Super Great Effort

  • @sugatasenmazumdar7704
    @sugatasenmazumdar7704 2 года назад

    History is a little more complicated than 140 characters!!!ABSOLUTE genius. SALUTE

  • @indiancoder8301
    @indiancoder8301 4 года назад +5

    Savarkar asked Nehru to invest in Nuclear War Technology in 1947
    It took us 5 decades and a courageous PM to give scientists the green signal and accept The testing of a ThermoNuclear Device

  • @prajication
    @prajication 3 года назад

    I have read the book...cant wait for the 2nd part

  • @ajonverge
    @ajonverge 4 года назад

    Fanfuckintastic. I have ordered his book. My views on Savarkarji were exactly like his. That is the man who has suffered the most for freedom. True hero. Main unke pairo ki dhool bhi nahi. In wept watching and listening to this because I was so glad there is someone else recognising this. Savarkar was a badass visionary and he will live on forever. Bhagwan unki aatma ko shanti de. Our youth jinko free me freedom mila hai need to know about the horrors Vinayakji went thro to get it. Love and utmost respect o a true Revolutionary.
    Jay Hind.

  • @Berar24365
    @Berar24365 4 года назад +2

    Sir I would like to know the answer of in which freedom movement of India Mr.Ambedkar ever participated throughout his life span ?

    • @123xyzabccba
      @123xyzabccba 3 года назад

      The movement to free 85% of Bahujans from the yoke of devious bammanism …

  • @gaganyadav6779
    @gaganyadav6779 2 года назад +1

    Good discussion

  • @Pasdpawn
    @Pasdpawn 4 года назад +1

    Please start uploading on spotify or google podcast or soundcloud at least

  • @GautamBuddhaSiddarth
    @GautamBuddhaSiddarth 5 месяцев назад

    Watch the movie Savarkar of Randeep hudda

  • @balaji1980
    @balaji1980 3 года назад

    The torture inflicted by the Britishers at Kalapani, Andamans is a greater atrocity than even the Jalianwala Bagh massacre.

  • @timetraveler7533
    @timetraveler7533 3 года назад +1

    m bhi savarkar 🚩

  • @hitechpoint7276
    @hitechpoint7276 2 года назад

    50:00

  • @ramapithecussophians1122
    @ramapithecussophians1122 3 года назад

    Sarvakar

  • @Nayan-ic3ig
    @Nayan-ic3ig 7 месяцев назад

    Here after watching apple vision pro unboxing 😅

  • @roozbehgazdar7003
    @roozbehgazdar7003 2 года назад

    Of course, Gandhi, Nehru and many other leaders were not sentenced to the Andaman jail, because the nature and severity of the 'crime' they were tried for, did not warrant that as per the British legal system.
    But sentences they did serve, often spending a major chunk of their lives in jail -- with great and admirable personal sacrifices and hardships to their families.
    A simple and fundamental question remains -- they too were political prisoners, many of them were lawyers too. Have many petitions did they write, apologizing and swearing allegiance to the British if they were released?

  • @deepika2644
    @deepika2644 2 года назад

    🙏🧡

  • @KejriwalBhakt
    @KejriwalBhakt Год назад

    To the Congress gulam I challenge them to stay in Kalapani even for the 10 percentage of time that Savarkar was or be as inhumanely treated as Bhagat Singh and then comment about such braveheart.
    As for me I am ready to stay in jail with similar conditions as was provided to Nehru and Gandhi.
    Accept the challenge and show your allegiance.
    I proudly say I love Savarkar.

  • @shahrags
    @shahrags 3 года назад

    🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @roozbehgazdar7003
    @roozbehgazdar7003 2 года назад

    Go through one interview of Sampath on his book and you've gone through them all. The same reference-points, same examples, almost in the same words, repeated ad nauseum...

  • @kunalseth6437
    @kunalseth6437 3 года назад

    👍

  • @rudra22
    @rudra22 4 года назад

    De di hame aazadi
    Bina khadg bina dhal
    Sabarmati ke sant tune kar diya kamal 🤔

  • @shikharsahu2122
    @shikharsahu2122 2 года назад

    We truly are one such ungrateful nation. The so called libertarians sobbing over removal of Mughal history from history text books just don't have the spine to acknowledge what people went through to get independence. I strive to learn more about the true history and not the one manipulated by so called Brit bred minds.

  • @adityanarayandubey4080
    @adityanarayandubey4080 3 года назад

    For the algorithm

  • @SuperAdobeFlash
    @SuperAdobeFlash 4 года назад +2

    Muslim appeasement overstretched.

  • @ashoks5317
    @ashoks5317 3 года назад

    Thanks Vikram. Has any body made a film on Vir Savarkar?

  • @dormadoom
    @dormadoom 4 года назад +1

    Were you farting at 34:20

  • @jcd776
    @jcd776 4 года назад +1

    Did he just say ARSE AWARD at 0:50?? Lmao

  • @kpmuhammed786
    @kpmuhammed786 4 года назад +1

    🇬🇧👞👅

    • @gouravsaha6037
      @gouravsaha6037 4 года назад +1

      Just like Gandhi supported British in ww1

    • @akshaykaushik8728
      @akshaykaushik8728 4 года назад +1

      Why are you saying Nehru was a bootlicker?

  • @shekharbanerjee3951
    @shekharbanerjee3951 4 года назад

    Stop your overacting burbaka kushal

  • @lf7081
    @lf7081 4 года назад +1

    Good attempt. Everyone knows the amount of funds diverted to create these kind of narratives. The host is a joke. And, Vikram himself is not talking with conviction when the petition subject comes-up.

    • @ankurgaikwad7252
      @ankurgaikwad7252 4 года назад +7

      @V B In addition, These are the same people who'll file petitions for Memon and Kasab. This is their love for the nation.

  • @sherlock3478
    @sherlock3478 4 года назад +1

    Lol ! I'd rather watch ben sharpio than hear these guys justify savarkar

    • @shekarnt
      @shekarnt 4 года назад +6

      Vikram was talking about the ungrateful people like you. You are a disgrace to mankind. If don't u want to hear, please don't. No need specify that.

    • @sherlock3478
      @sherlock3478 4 года назад

      @@shekarnt ya as this is a public platform i can express my views you cant decide what i can say or not we all know how ungrateful savarkar was 😂 gimme a break

    • @shekarnt
      @shekarnt 4 года назад +5

      @@sherlock3478 I too have expressed my views about the unnecessary expression of views.

    • @sherlock3478
      @sherlock3478 4 года назад

      @@shekarnt ya then dont use the words like 'dont' .its a command

    • @shivamkumarroy8714
      @shivamkumarroy8714 4 года назад +6

      @@sherlock3478 plz don't tell anyone "don't use the words like don't".it's a command

  • @prakar
    @prakar 4 года назад +1

    Stopped listening around 30 minutes, when excessive hand-wringing about the cruelty of kalapani started, and it distracted and devalued the message. Two things. First, cellular Jail wasn't a holiday resort. British were sending people there TO SUFFER, the point of torture being the pain. You guys were reviewing a jackhammer and cribbing that it breaks stones and makes noise. Second (and not that there should be a competition about this, but if there was, kalapani would only be an average cruelty score) compare kalapani to siberian gulags or Devil's Island ("the world's harshest prison") where french did the torturing. Or Vasco's torture. Zara perspective rakho.

    • @aamodpethe
      @aamodpethe 4 года назад +10

      I think the point is that the other congress political prisoners weren’t tortured as much. In fact Nehru wrote books in jail. He’s not comparing this to Siberia. Again, the point is that the British were seriously concerned with Savarkars methods and hence wanted to set an example for his type of freedom fighters

  • @nickbytes
    @nickbytes 4 года назад +3

    Veer apologizer.

    • @nickbytes
      @nickbytes 4 года назад

      @Coffee Flush apologizer.

    • @mr.a9267
      @mr.a9267 4 года назад +23

      Oh if Veer Savarkar apologized British & sided with them, then what about congress slavery that in the both World wars, congress easily allowed Our soldiers to die in foreign wars, what about discrediting Netaji Bose INA STRUGGLE in WW2
      Bootlicking western slavery mindset of congress didn't let India free, it was early Revolutionaries efforts & finally the RIN MUTINY inspired from INA under Bose which dreaded British in 1947 to flee from the Indian shore...
      Just read about letters of the then British PM C.ATLEEY on Gandhi vs Bose....

    • @manvendrasingh7292
      @manvendrasingh7292 4 года назад +11

      @@nickbytes Nabha jail ka naam suna hai?

    • @SK-ro8dn
      @SK-ro8dn 4 года назад +11

      Nehru was getting soft punishment. If he would have been given 50 years kalapani
      then the litmus would have been tested. And someone dies inside a prison without putting effort to come out - that can not be called bravery. Fighting for survival is called bravery.

    • @SK-ro8dn
      @SK-ro8dn 4 года назад +10

      Nehru was getting soft punishment. If he would have been given 50 years kalapani
      then the litmus would have been tested. And someone dies inside a prison without putting effort to come out - that can not be called bravery. Fighting for survival is called bravery.