Remembering Vasant and Rajab: The forgotten martyrs who died to protect India’s soul from communal hatred
How much do we truly know about the real history of Ahmedabad, Gujarat’s royal city? July 1st marks a date that shines a light on two of its noblest sons—Vasant and Rajab—whose legacy lives on as a powerful reminder of secular unity and fearless sacrifice.
Vasant Rao Hegiste and Rajab Ali Lakhani were inseparable comrades in the freedom struggle, brought together in the mid-1940s by a shared dream of an independent, inclusive India. Vasant, born in 1906 into a family of Maharashtrian origin settled in Gujarat, was a respected athlete and Seva Dal worker in Ahmedabad. Rajab, born in 1919 in a Gujarati Khoja Muslim family originally from Limdi and settled in Karachi, joined the national movement during his student years in Bhavnagar, where his activism combined both political engagement and grassroots work.
They didn’t just shout slogans like "Karenge ya Marenge" (Do or Die) or "Takli nathi pan teer chhe, Gandhi amaro veer chhe" (It’s not a spinning wheel but an arrow, Gandhi is our hero)—they lived them. From organizing Gandhi’s Salt March route from the Sabarmati Ashram to Aslali, to leading cleanliness drives during epidemics, they represented the spirit of service, non-violence, and sacrifice that defined the freedom movement.
As India inched closer to independence, the communal divide, sharpened by Jinnah’s call for Direct Action, began to boil over. On July 1, 1946, during the Rath Yatra procession in Ahmedabad, the city exploded in communal violence. In those volatile hours, Vasant and Rajab made a fateful decision: not to hide, not to retaliate, but to step into the fire with the power of peace.
They saved a Muslim driver from a Hindu mob and stopped a Muslim group from attacking a Hindu-run business. Then news came from Jamalpur: a mob was advancing to burn Harijan slums near Khand ni Sheri. Without hesitation or transport, they ran to the scene. There they found a mob, armed and enraged. “Stop, we have come for peace,” they said. The response was chilling: “Interfere and we’ll finish you too.” Vasant and Rajab replied, “If killing us will douse this fire, do it. We won’t resist.” They lay down in the mob’s path, becoming human shields.
Some in the crowd paused. Others didn’t. The two were mercilessly killed. In that moment, they became not just victims but symbols of an India that could have been—an India of courage, compassion, and unity.
That evening, as monsoon rain fell on Ahmedabad, India was still a year away from formal independence. But perhaps the skies wept not just rain, but sorrow—for two young men who died trying to hold the nation together before it had even fully come into being.
In Harijan Bandhu, Gandhiji reflected on their sacrifice: “It would be shameful for me to sit at home and send others to die. That would not be an example of non-violence… In such intense violence, for non-violence to emerge, many sacrifices like mine are needed.”
Today, as communalism and opportunism corrode public life and ideals vanish under the weight of self-interest, Vasant and Rajab stand as moral compasses. Their sacrifice wasn’t just for a free India, but for a just one.
On this July 1, let us gather—not just at the Vasant-Rajab Memorial Square in Ahmedabad, but within our own consciences—and remember two young men who chose to die for unity rather than live in division. Let their story not be a forgotten footnote, but a call to reclaim the secular soul of our nation.
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This article is based on a Gujarati piece by late human rights leader Gautam Thakar, written on July 1, 2012
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