In Shenoli, at that historic point on the railway track, we held what we thought would be a very small ceremony with a few fighters to honour the historic event. Instead, 250 people showed up at 3 p.m. on a summer afternoon. Several in their 80s and 90s were scrambling around the railway line like children in a park. For them this was a sangam , a meeting place of different streams of the freedom movement. And there were old armed struggle revolutionaries giving Gopal Gandhi a warm hug and shouting ‘Mahatma Gandhi ki jai'. Especially Captain Bhau, 95, eyes moist with tears of pride, unwell, but determined to participate. Madhavrao Mane, 94, dashing around the track like a sprightly kid, me running after him terrified he would fall. He didn't. Nor did his smile, at any time.
So we went to the vantage point, down the track, the corner at which the sainiks had blocked and boarded the train 74 years ago. There is a small memorial here – not for the revolutionaries, but one installed by the British Indian railways to mourn the attack. Perhaps it’s time to put another monument alongside, marking the true meaning of that day.
Later we went to the big programme in Kundal, seat of the prati sarkar in 1943, some 20 minutes from Shenoli. This event was organised by locals and descendants of the original fighters. By the families of G.D. Bapu Lad, of Nagnath Nayakwadi, of the legendary Nana Patil (head of the prati sarkar ). Only one of the great quartet of 1943 still lives – and so could attend in person: Captain Bhau. Also there, alive and articulate, was Nana Patil's daughter, Haunsatai Patil, herself a member of the radical underground. Captain Bhau, that grand old man, had been out on the streets just two days earlier. Yes, in support of Maharashtra's agitating farmers. Do remember: many of those freedom fighters were themselves farmers or farm labourers. As quite a few of their descendants today still are.