“I appeal to the government not to sleep…”
That was the inimitable Hausabai Patil, firebrand freedom fighter, charismatic leader, an indomitable advocate for farmers, the poor and the marginalised. Those words were from a video message she sent in to the farmers’ giant march on parliament in November 2018.
“Farmers must get better prices for their crops,” she thundered in the video. “To get this justice, I’ll come there myself” and join the march, she told the protestors. Never mind that she was already nearly 93 and not in the best of health. She warned the government “not to sleep but to wake up and work for the poor.”
On September 23, 2021, the ever awake and alert Hausabai entered her own final sleep in Sangli at age 95. How badly I will miss her.
Between 1943 and 1946, Hausabai (more often called Hausatai; 'tai' is a respectful reference in Marathi to an elder sister) was part of teams of revolutionaries that attacked British trains, looted police armouries and set ablaze dak bungalows that the British Raj used for administration purposes and even as courtrooms. She worked with the Toofan Sena ('whirlwind army'), a revolutionary group that served as the armed wing of the prati sarkar or provisional, underground government of Satara that declared independence from British rule in 1943.
In 1944, she also took part in underground action in Goa, then under Portuguese rule, floating across the Mandovi river atop a wooden box at midnight, accompanied by comrades who swam alongside. But she always insisted, “I did some little, small work in the freedom struggle... I did not do anything big or great.” Please learn about her in this – one of my own favourite stories: The unsung heroism of Hausabai.


