Sambhaji Brigade

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Sambhaji Brigade is a social group in the state of Maharashtra, India, who work for the rights of the Marathi people.[1] The organization is named after Sambhaji, son of the first Maratha king Shivaji,[2] and gained exposure after a 2004 attack on the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute in Pune.

[edit] History

The organization was founded by Purushottam Khedekar, also prominent in the Maratha Seva Sangh, a related organisation.

A group of brigade members[2] attacked and vandalised the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute in January 2004, in protest of helping bramhins from Institute had assisted in defaming Shivaji. The protest were prompted by the controversy over James Laine's book Shivaji: Hindu King in Islamic India (OUP, 2003); scholars from the institute had collaborated with Laine on his research for the book.[3] After the riot 72 members of the group were arrested,[4] and the director-general of police announced that a legal block on the organization was being investigated.[5]

In 2006, the organisation's activists ransacked the office of Marathi daily Loksatta, protesting that the newspaper editor who is a brahmin, judiciously published article criticising government's decision to build memorial of Shivaji Maharaj. The claim was bolstered when similar project was announced by government to build memorial of V.D.Savarkar and no protest was registered by the said newspaper.

In 2010 the group attempted to attack R. R. Patil, "a day after the Supreme Court lifted the ban" on Laine's book.[6]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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