No Hanging, Please Shoot Us
  • Digital List Price: USD 1.99
  • Offer Price: USD 0.99
  • ISBN/ASIN: 9789391181000
  • SKU/ASIN: B09FQ9F98C
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: Digital Fire

No Hanging, Please Shoot Us

Bhagat Singh

Shaheed Bhagat Singh’s important writings and letters have been complied as ‘No Hanging, Please Shoot Us’.
It includes the red pamphlets that were thrown in the Central Assembly Hall, New Delhi at the time of the throwing voice bombs.
It also has one letter that he wrote to authorities about his point of view on his sentence, after getting death penalty in Lahore Conspiracy Case.

BEST DEALS

Lost Innocents
Lost Innocents Patricia MacDonald Offer Price: USD 2.49

There's More to Life Than This
There's More to Life Than This Theresa Caputo Offer Price: USD 1.99

If You Tell
If You Tell Gregg Olsen Offer Price: USD 2.49

Becoming
Becoming Michelle Obama Offer Price: USD 12.99

Educated: A Memoir
Educated: A Memoir Tara Westover Offer Price: USD 9.99

12 Years A Slave
12 Years A Slave Solomon Northup Offer Price: USD 0.99

The Diary of a Young Girl
The Diary of a Young Girl Anne Frank Offer Price: USD 0.99

Lucifer was Innocent : The Red Pill
Lucifer was Innocent : The Red Pill Tirth Raj Parsana Offer Price: INR 179.00

Commandant of Auschwitz
Commandant of Auschwitz Rudolf Hoess Offer Price: USD 2.99

How I Made $2,000,000 in the Stock Market
How I Made $2,000,000 in the Stock Market Nicolas Darvas Offer Price: INR 51.45

Gitanjali
Gitanjali Rabindranath Tagore Offer Price: INR 43.20

About the Author

Bhagat Singh (born September 27, 1907, Lyallpur, western Punjab, India [now in Pakistan]—died March 23, 1931, Lahore [now in Pakistan]) revolutionary hero of the Indian independence movement.
Bhagat Singh attended Dayanand Anglo Vedic High School, which was operated by Arya Samaj (a reform sect of modern Hinduism), and then National College, both located in Lahore. He began to protest British rule in India while still a youth and soon fought for national independence. He also worked as a writer and editor in Amritsar for Punjabi- and Urdu-language newspapers espousing Marxist theories. He is credited with popularizing the catchphrase “Inquilab zindabad” (“Long live the revolution”).
In 1928 Bhagat Singh plotted with others to kill the police chief responsible for the death of Indian writer and politician Lala Lajpat Rai, one of the founders of National College, during a silent march opposing the Simon Commission. Instead, in a case of mistaken identity, junior officer J.P. Saunders was killed, and Bhagat Singh had to flee Lahore to escape the death penalty. In 1929 he and an associate lobbed a bomb at the Central Legislative Assembly in Delhi to protest the implementation of the Defence of India Act and then surrendered. He was hanged at the age of 23 for the murder of Saunders.


 
Top