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Pandit Ramnandan Mishra (1905–1989) was an Indian nationalist who fought for India's freedom from British rule. [1]

Life

Ramnandan Mishra was born in Darbhanga in 1905. He was a member of Bihar Pradesh Congress Committee from 1927–1934. [1] He participated in the Civil Disobedience Movement and was imprisoned between 1930–31. [1] He was a founding member of the Congress Socialist Party from 1934–47 and then the Socialist Party from 1947–52. [1] He was arrested for anti-war propaganda in 1940. [1] He participated in the Quit India Movement and organized secret revolutionary centres and while visiting Madras, was arrested in Cuttack on 23 August 1942. [1] He was lodged in Cuttack jail, then in Behrampur jail. [1] When he tried to escape, he was transferred to Hazaribagh Central Jail in the last week of October, 1942. [1] He escaped from Hazaribagh Central Jail along with Yogendra Shukla, Jayaprakash Narayan and others during November, 1942. [1]

He was in charge of the revolutionary movement in Punjab where he was rearrested on 22 February 1943 and released only in 1946. [1] He was General Secretary of the Hind Kisan Panchayat, Bihar from 1949–52 [1] and became a member of the National Executive of the Socialist Party in 1949. [1]

He left politics for spiritual pursuits in 1952 and became a devotee of Lord Jagannath. [1] He died on 27 August 1989. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Srivastava, N.M.P. (2015). Anguish, Protest and Surcharged Nationalism: A Study of the Proscribed Literature in Colonial Bihar (1912-47). Bihar State Archives, Government of Bihar, Patna. ISBN  978-93-81456-36-1.