Ganga Lal Shrestha (Devanagari: गंगालाल श्रेष्ठ) (1919 - 28
January 1941) was a Nepalese revolutionary who was executed by the autocratic Rana regime. He is honored as one of the fourmartyrs of the Nepalese revolution. He was a member
of the clandestine political organization named Nepal Praja Parishad that started a movement in 1939 to remove the
Rana oligarchy and establish democracy in Nepal.
Early life
Ganga Lal was born to father
Bhakta Lal and mother Tulsi Maya Shrestha in a well-to-do family. His father Bhakta Lal
worked for the government and was stationed in Ramechhap where
he was the chief of the Revenue Office. After returning to Kathmandu, he
renounced his share of the ancestral property at Chhetrapati, and bought a
house in Pyaphal next to Kathmandu Durbar Square. Ganga Lal lived in this house
with his family and wife Hasana Devi (1918 - 2011).
Ganga Lal went to Kolkata with his uncle to study. Returning to
Kathmandu, he enrolled in Durbar High School. He is believed to have been an
intelligent student and secured first division in the Matriculation examination. After the examination, he was
admitted to Trichandra Collegewhere
he studied science.
Political career
Ganga Lal was an excellent
orator. He was an active member of organizations that sought to oust the Ranas
and establish democracy in Nepal. He had been a member of Mahabir School, whose
aim was to fill the students with patriotic feelings. He was arrested briefly
in 1939 for giving a lecture on human
rights in Asan, Kathmandu. After he met Dashrath Chand, he became involved in Nepal
Praja Parishad and its activities.
Martyrdom
The secret Nepal Praja Parishad
was exposed by one Ramji Joshi in return for a cash reward of Rs. 5,000. This
led to the arrest of many of its members on 18 October 1940. On 19 January
1941, the Ranas sentenced Ganga Lal, Dashrath Chand, Dharma Bhakta Mathema and Shukra Raj Shastri (although he was not involved in Praja
Parishad), to death. On 28 January 1941, Ganga Lal was taken to Shobha Bhagwati
on the bank of the Bishnumati River where he was shot dead along with
Chand by Nara Shumsher Rana. The other two, Mathema and Shastri, were hanged.
Ganga Lal was allowed one last
meeting with his family the day before he was executed. They went to the jail
and he was brought out from his cell with hands and feet shackled. The
emotional reunion stirred his youngest brother Pushpa Lal Shrestha to dedicate himself to fight for
democracy and equality. In 1949, he founded the Communist Party of Nepal which played a key role in removing the
Ranas.
The Rana dynasty was eventually
overthrown in February 1951, and democracy was established in Nepal. The Ranas ruled Nepal from 1846 until 1951.
During this time, the Shah
king was
reduced to a figurehead and the prime minister and other government positions
were hereditary. Jang
Bahadur Rana established
the Rana dynasty in 1846 by masterminding the Kot massacre in
which about 40 members of the nobility including the prime minister and a
relative of the king were murdered. Tyranny, debauchery, economic exploitation
and religious persecution characterized Rana rule.
Legacy
Ganga Lal is remembered as one of
the four martyrs of the revolution that brought down the Rana regime. Every
year on 30 January, Nepal celebrates Martyrs' Day to honor them.
In
1965, Nepal's Postal Services Department issued a commemorative postage stamp
featuring the portraits of the four martyrs.Ganga Path, a road in
central Kathmandu, has been named after him. Shahid
Gangalal National Heart Center is
a specialist hospital in Kathmandu. Ganga
Lal's statue is installed on Shahid Gate, a monument to the martyrs of
Nepal
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