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Maia Ramnath - Decolonizing Anarchism.pdf - Libcom

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Noles I 271<br />

books on the revolutionary movements of the world as well as<br />

the glories ofIndian history and civilization. He also had them<br />

train in self-defense, boxing, fencing, wrestling, shooting revolvers<br />

and rifles, cartridge making, and "how to recruit, organize<br />

and train terrorists." Darisi Chenchiah, "History of the Freedom<br />

Movement in India: The Ghadar Movement, 1913-1918;' 4-6,<br />

box 4:3, SANA ; L. P. Mathur, Indian Revolutionary Movement in<br />

the Un ited States if America (Delhi: S. Chand, 1970), 21; Sareen,<br />

Select Documents, 72.<br />

24. Chenchiah, "History of the Freedom Movement."<br />

25. Lal, cited in Sareen, Select Documents, 31.<br />

26. March 27, 1914, cited in Brown, Ha r Dayal, 112.<br />

27. La!, cited in Sareen, Select Documents, 30.<br />

28. Savitri Sawhney, I Shall Never Ask Fo r Pardon (New<br />

Delhi: Oxford India, 2008), 226-249.<br />

29. Brown, Har Dayal, 107.<br />

30. Brooks, Autobiography, 210. This description could easily<br />

evoke Nechayev or Nikolay Chernyshevsky as much as Bakunin.<br />

31. Chenchiah, "History of the Freedom Movement;' 6. See<br />

also F. C. Isemonger and J. Slattery, An Account ofthe Ghadar<br />

Conspiracy, 1913-1915 (repr., Berkeley, CA: Folklore Institute,<br />

1998), 10.<br />

32. Brown, Har Dayal, 112-14.<br />

33. Sareen, Select Documents, 38.<br />

34. Har Dayal to Brooks, December 23, 1913, letter and<br />

enclosed leaflet, Van Wyck Brooks Correspondence, Van Pelt<br />

Library, Rare Documents Collection, University of Pennsylvania.<br />

Also cited in Brown, Ha r Dayal, 114-16.<br />

35. Har Dayal to Brooks, December 23, 1913.<br />

36. Ibid. PC meant "Post Commune," a reference to Paris 1871.

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