Shukra Raj Shastri (Devanagari: शुक्रराज शास्त्री)
(born Shukra Raj Joshi) (1894-24 January
1941) was a Nepalese intellectual
and fighter for democracy who was executed by the autocratic Rana dynasty. He is one of the four martyrs of the Nepalese revolution that toppled the Rana regime. The other
three are Dashrath Chand, Dharma Bhakta Mathema and Ganga Lal Shrestha.
Shastri was also a
social reformer and author who wrote a number of books in Nepali and Nepal Bhasa
Early life
Shastri was born
in Varanasi, India where his father Madhav Raj and mother
Ratna Maya Joshi were living in forced exile due to political reasons. Madhav
Raj was a leader of the Arya Samajin Nepal. The Joshis were originally from Lalitpur.
Shukra Raj was
schooled in India, and he acquired the title Shastri after earning a Shastri
degree from Dehradun. He became better
known by this name than his actual surname Joshi.
Democracy fighter
Returning to
Nepal, Shastri joined the democracy struggle. During a demonstration organized
atIndra Chok, Kathmandu by the Citizens' Rights Committee, he spoke
out strongly against the Rana regime and demanded the people's rights. For this
act, he was arrested and sentenced to six years' imprisonment. He was
subsequently sentenced to death, and on 24 January 1941, he was hanged from a
tree on the side of the road at Teku, Kathmandu.
The Ranas were
eventually overthrown in February 1951, and democracy was established in Nepal.The Rana oligarchy ruled Nepal from 1846
until 1951. During this time, the Shah kingwas 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.
Writer
Shastri was one of
the leaders of the Nepal Bhasa renaissance.He wrote a grammar of the language
entitled Nepal Bhasa Vyakaran which was published from Kolkata in 1928. He was the first to produce
children's literature. His other works include Nepal Bhasa Reader,
Books 1 and 2 (1933) and Nepali Varnamala (1933).
It is believed
that Shastri was executed more for his work in social reform and efforts to
develop his mother tongue Nepal Bhasa than his involvement in politics. Shastri
did not belong to any political party unlike the other three martyrs who were
members of Nepal Praja Parishad.
Legacy
Shastri and the
other martyrs are honored on Martyrs Day which is observed annually on 30
January across the country.Shukra Path, a street in downtown Kathmandu,
is named after him.Shastri's statues have been erected at a
number of places, and the Postal Service Department has issued commemorative
postage stamps depicting his image.A monument known as Shahid Gate containing
the busts of the four martyrs and King Tribhuvan was built in central Kathmandu
in 1961.
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