Chapter I
Mother India
A land of ancient rivers, older gods, and a grief yet unnamed
India, at the turn of the twentieth century, was a vast and sorrowful land — ancient in memory, broken in chain. The rivers sang of kingdoms that had crumbled. The temples and mosques stood shoulder to shoulder, as they always had, while above them flew the flag of a distant island empire. The people moved through their days with a heaviness in the chest — a word on the tongue that had no name yet. That word was freedom.
In the ancient town of Shahjahanpur, in the heart of Awadh, a boy was born into a world that had forgotten it could rise. He was born into a Muslim family of nobility and poetry, where the Urdu couplet was as sacred as prayer, and the love of the land ran deeper than faith. The boy's name was Ashfaqullah — meaning He who brings compassion from Allah. And he would bring it, not through mercy, but through sacrifice.
Bharat Mata — Mother India, as imagined by her children
Chapter II
The Pain Experienced as a Child
When a young heart watches its mother nation bleed
Ashfaqullah grew up watching the humiliations that colonialism writes upon a child's eyes. He saw British officers stride through bazaars where his people bowed their heads in shame. He watched taxes bleed the farmers dry, saw railways built by Indian hands but owned by foreign profit. Every sleight, every indignity, every broken man in the street was a splinter entering his young heart — and from that pain, fire was slowly being forged.
It was in 1918, while in the seventh standard at his school in Shahjahanpur, that a police raid shook young Ashfaq awake — officers arrested a fellow student for his involvement in the Mainpuri Conspiracy. The sight of a schoolmate being dragged away by imperial hands ignited something irreversible in the boy. He began seeking out revolutionaries, asking questions that could get a man hanged, and listening to stories of resistance with a fire in his eyes that would never go out.
Shahjahanpur, Awadh — Where a revolutionary's fire was lit
Chapter III
Ashfaq & Ram — The Sacred Brotherhood
A Hindu and a Muslim walk into history as one soul in two bodies
Ashfaqullah Khan
Muslim revolutionary, Urdu poet, son of Awadh. A man of iron courage and tender heart who loved India as completely as he loved his faith. He wrote poetry under the pen name Hasrat.
Ram Prasad Bismil
Arya Samaj Hindu, poet of Hindustani fire, co-founder of the Hindustan Republican Association. His immortal anthem Sarfaroshi ki Tamanna became the song of a generation's sacrifice.
Theirs was a friendship that colonialism could never have written. Bismil, the Arya Samaj Hindu who sang Sarfaroshi ki tamanna ab hamare dil mein hai, and Ashfaq, the young Muslim who memorised those very lines and added his own fire to them. They debated, argued, laughed, planned, and prayed — each in his own way — beneath the same sky, for the same cause. The British were so threatened by their bond that they kept the two in separate jails — because when they could hear each other sing from adjacent cells, they would laugh triumphantly, and the sound of it broke their captors' will.
Where Bismil was fire, Ashfaq was iron. Where Bismil was poetry, Ashfaq was resolve. Together they were unstoppable. Their bond was a silent, shattering answer to every politician who claimed Hindus and Muslims could not be brothers. When British officers tried to use religion to turn Ashfaq against Bismil, he told them: "My religion is India. My God is freedom."
The Brotherhood — Two poets, one revolution, one India
Ram Prasad Bismil wrote of his dearest friend — "There was no one like Ashfaq. In courage, in spirit, in love for the motherland — he was beyond compare. If India ever forgets him, it forgets its own heart."
— Ram Prasad Bismil, on Ashfaqullah KhanChapter IV
The Revolutionary Fire
The moment they decided — the occupier must go back
The founding of the Hindustan Republican Association in 1924 was a declaration of war — not by armies, but by young dreamers who had made their peace with death before they had fully lived. Ashfaqullah Khan, Ram Prasad Bismil, and their comrades decided in those smoke-filled rooms that the era of petitions was over. The era of revolution had begun. From this moment on, the only way is for the occupier to go back. There would be no more begging. No more memoranda. Only thunder.
The HRA's manifesto called for a free, socialist India — where the poor farmer owned his land, where religion was a matter between a man and his God, not a tool of division. Khan was inspired by Lenin, by Bolshevik techniques, by the idea that a determined few could overturn an empire. He brought to the organisation not just courage but strategic thinking, poetic fire, and an unshakeable unity of purpose that made every man around him braver than he had been before.
The Hindustan Republican Association — Birth of the armed revolution, 1924
Chapter V
The Kakori Conspiracy
9th August 1925 — A train stopped. An empire shook.
The Kakori Train Action — 9 August 1925, near Lucknow
On the 9th of August, 1925, at a small station called Kakori near Lucknow, the 8 Down train from Saharanpur to Lucknow was stopped by a group of young revolutionaries who pulled the emergency chain and seized the government cash box. It was swift, brave, and it sent shockwaves through the British administration from Lucknow to London. When the iron chest resisted repeated blows, it was Ashfaqullah Khan who stepped forward and broke it open himself. The British called it conspiracy. History calls it courage.
The aftermath was brutal. British intelligence launched the most intensive manhunt the United Provinces had ever seen. Bismil was caught within weeks. Ashfaq evaded capture for months — fleeing to Benares, then to Daltonganj in Bihar, working as a clerk under a false name. But the informer's hand reached him at last. On 7th December 1926, a Pathan friend he had trusted reported his location. He was arrested, transferred to Faizabad Jail, and the trial that sealed his fate began.
Hindustan Republican Association Founded
Bismil, Ashfaq and comrades establish the armed revolutionary body with a vision of a free, equal, socialist India.
The Kakori Action — 9th August
The 8 Down government train is stopped at Kakori. The treasury is seized. The empire is put on notice that this generation will not bow.
Arrest & Transfer to Faizabad Jail
Betrayed by a trusted Pathan friend, Ashfaqullah Khan is arrested on 7 December. He is brought to Faizabad District Jail to await trial.
The Verdict — Death by Hanging
Ashfaqullah Khan is sentenced to death. He accepts the sentence without flinching. He smiles, for he has chosen India over life.
Chapter VI
Faizabad Jail — The Last Walls
Where a revolutionary composed his final poem and said farewell to the world
Faizabad District Jail was Ashfaqullah Khan's final home — the last walls he would know on this earth. Yet within those walls, he did not diminish. He wrote. He prayed. He composed poetry that would outlast every brick of the prison that held him. Three days before his execution, he penned an open letter expressing his anguish at political developments and his unshaken faith that freedom would come. "Tang aa kar hum unke zulm se bedad se, Chal diye suye-adam zindane Faizabad se" — Worn down by their tyranny, we depart toward nothingness from Faizabad's prison.
In those final days, British officials made their last attempts to break him — offering clemency in exchange for testimony against his comrades. Muslim officers were sent to appeal to his religious identity, to convince him that Ram Prasad Bismil was Hindu and therefore not his true brother. Ashfaq refused every approach. He was offered life. He returned the offer with silence and then with prayer. When they came for him on the morning of the 19th, he was ready. He had always been ready.
Faizabad Jail — Where the last verses were written in 1927
Chapter VII
The Man of Choice
He was given a door to live. He chose to walk through fire instead.
"Give us names. Give us secrets. Live."
The British were not content with just a body. They wanted names. They wanted the network. They wanted the man broken before they broke his neck. Ashfaqullah Khan was offered deals — his life, in exchange for the names of his comrades. He was told that one word — cooperate — would save him from the rope. He refused. Every time. Without hesitation, without drama, with the quiet dignity of a man who had made his choice long ago and was merely living its final consequence.
He chose death over submission. He chose the gallows over betrayal. He chose India over life. This was not a man who stumbled into martyrdom — this was a man who walked toward it, eyes open, chin raised, lips forming a prayer and a poem in the same breath. His manner of death was itself his greatest message — and it rang out across the subcontinent and across the century that followed.
In his final statement before the court — "We are not criminals. We are soldiers of a nation that has been enslaved. History will judge not us, but those who put us here."
— Ashfaqullah Khan, before sentencing, Faizabad Court, 1927Chapter VIII
The Martyrdom
19th December 1927 — Faizabad Jail. The lamp that lit a nation.
On the 19th of December, 1927, Shaheed Ashfaqullah Khan walked to the gallows in Faizabad Jail. He was twenty-seven years old. He performed his morning prayers with complete composure, recited Urdu verses, and walked ahead of the guards — as though it were his destination, not theirs, chosen freely. On the same dawn, Ram Prasad Bismil went to the gallows in Gorakhpur, Roshan Singh in Allahabad, Rajendra Lahiri had already been hanged two days earlier in Gonda. Four flames extinguished in one terrible morning.
But flames, when they die, do not vanish. They become the fire in every chest that sees their light. Ashfaqullah Khan became immortal the moment the rope tightened. India wept — but India also awoke. The news of the hangings spread through bazaars, through printing presses, through whispers passed between people who suddenly understood what had been sacrificed and what must still be won. His death was not an ending. It was a beginning, written in the ink of sacrifice.
19 December 1927 — A star fell. India rose.
Chapter IX
The First Muslim Hanged for Free India
A truth that must never be forgotten, never erased from the record of this nation
Let this be written plainly, in every history that follows: Shaheed Ashfaqullah Khan was the first Muslim revolutionary in India to be hanged by the British Empire for fighting for the independence of India. He did not fight for a Muslim India. He did not fight for a partitioned dream. He fought for one India — whole, free, and indivisible — where the call of the muezzin and the ringing of the temple bell were both sounds of the same motherland breathing.
In a century that would see India torn and reimagined, Ashfaqullah Khan stands as proof of what was possible — of what India always was before the architects of division arrived with their blueprints. He is the answer to every lie that claims Hindus and Muslims cannot love the same soil. He and Bismil are the answer. Their shared sacrifice, their shared poetry, their shared dream — these are the answer that no rhetoric can silence.
Chapter X
His Sacred Resting Place
Where the earth holds a revolutionary's dust, it becomes holy ground
Shaheed Ashfaqullah Khan is buried in his native city of Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh — the very soil that shaped him, the same air that carried his childhood dreams of a free land. His mausoleum, the Ashfaqullah Khan Smarak, stands as a site of quiet pilgrimage for those who know what was sacrificed in those revolutionary years. The tomb is a place where flower petals and tears mix in equal measure across generations — where schoolchildren come on Republic Day and old men come every 19th December to stand in silence and remember.
The government of Uttar Pradesh has recognised the site as a place of historical importance. The mausoleum hosts commemorations, school visits, and the quiet footsteps of those who come simply to stand near greatness. His name lives across Shahjahanpur — on roads, on schools, in the hearts of people who grow up hearing his story and understand, before they can fully articulate it, that some men are not just men. They are lanterns whose light never goes out.
The Mausoleum of Shaheed Ashfaqullah Khan, Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh
📍 The Mausoleum — For Pilgrims of History
The Ashfaqullah Khan Smarak in Shahjahanpur is open to visitors throughout the year. The district administration and the state government of Uttar Pradesh maintain this as a site of national heritage. Every 19th December, the anniversary of his martyrdom, a commemorative gathering is held at the mausoleum where students, scholars, and citizens pay homage to the man who chose India over life.
Location
Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh
District
Shahjahanpur District
Type
National Heritage Site
Nearest City
Bareilly (65 km)
Annual Commemoration
19 December
Chapter XI
Ashfaq & Ram — An Integration for the Ages
When a Hindu and a Muslim die for the same dream, all division becomes ash
Perhaps the most powerful gift that Ashfaqullah Khan and Ram Prasad Bismil gave to India was not the Kakori action, not the revolutionary literature, not even their deaths — it was their friendship itself. In an era when religious identity was weaponised by colonial powers to divide and rule, these two men stood as a living repudiation of that strategy. The Arya Samaj Hindu and the Sunni Muslim who wept for each other, quoted each other's poetry, and went to separate gallows on the same dawn — they are the soul of a plural India that the world must never forget.
Bismil's Sarfaroshi ki tamanna was Ashfaq's anthem too. Ashfaq's Urdu verses moved Bismil to tears. They edited each other's pamphlets and argued fiercely — as only the closest brothers argue. India's truest integration is not policy or the polite handshake of politicians. It is this: two young men from different faiths who looked at a suffering motherland and said, "She is ours — together — and we will die together to free her."
The Brotherhood That Became India's Greatest Answer
Chapter XII
The Message
What a man who chose the rope over surrender wishes us to know
Ashfaqullah Khan did not die shouting slogans. He died whispering prayers and singing poems — his last acts were those of a man at peace, because he had lived with integrity and died with purpose. His message to those who came after was wrapped not in anger, but in love — love for a land so deep it could only be expressed by dying for it. The message was this: Do not be afraid. Do not submit. Do not let them divide you. India belongs to all who love her.
A century after his martyrdom, his message rings with fresh urgency. Every time religion is used to tear a neighbourhood apart, Ashfaq's voice answers from the grave. Every time a young person is told their faith disqualifies them from belonging, his life contradicts the lie. He was Muslim and Indian — completely, simultaneously, without contradiction. He died for a free India. The free India he died for must be worthy of the price he paid.
His last declaration to the court — "I have no regrets. I am a patriot who loves his country. If loving India and wanting her to be free makes me guilty, then I am the most joyfully guilty man who ever stood before your court."
— Ashfaqullah Khan, Final Statement, Faizabad, 1927Chapter XIII
What India Must Learn
The living debt we owe to the dead who purchased our dawn
The 100th anniversary of Ashfaqullah Khan's martyrdom is not merely a commemoration — it is a reckoning. India today stands at a crossroads familiar to every great civilisation: the temptation to fracture along lines of faith, caste, and community, versus the possibility of becoming the united, plural republic that its greatest sons and daughters died to build. The lessons from Ashfaq's life are not historical curiosities. They are living instructions for this present moment.
Unity Is Strength, Division Is Colonial
Ashfaq and Bismil proved that Hindu-Muslim unity is India's oldest tradition. Every force that divides India by faith is following the British playbook — and betraying the martyrs who died for something better.
Choose Principle Over Survival
Ashfaq had the chance to live by informing. He chose to die with integrity. In every era, comfortable compromise is offered to those who would abandon their convictions. He teaches us what it means to refuse.
Faith and Patriotism Are Not in Conflict
He prayed five times a day and died for India. He was a devout Muslim and India's bravest revolutionary. His life demolishes every false binary between religious faith and love of country.
Young People Change History
Ashfaq was twenty-seven when he died. Bismil was thirty. The Kakori conspirators were mostly in their twenties. Youth without fear is the most transformative force any civilisation possesses.
Remember Completely or Not at All
Half-remembered history becomes propaganda. India must teach the full story of its freedom struggle — including Muslim martyrs, Dalit sacrifices, and the women revolutionaries whom dominant history has overlooked.
Freedom Is Earned Daily
Independence was not a gift — it was purchased in blood. Every generation must re-earn it by fighting for justice, equality, and the freedom of every citizen regardless of faith, caste, or origin.
Marking 100 Years of Immortality
The 100th Immortal Anniversary
19th December 2027 · Faizabad & Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India
On this day, a century after he walked to the gallows, India pauses to ask itself — are we worthy of the price he paid? Are we the India he imagined? One, plural, free, and unafraid?
Until the Centenary of His Immortality