Sanyasi rebellion of Bengal.”ĭas uses the 2017 K Veeramani, an aspirant for BT assistant post in a school versus Teachers Recruitment Board case heard by the Madras High Court as a reference. Also note that the song has been taken from a Bengali novel Anandamath, written by Bankim in the backdrop of one of the earliest revolt against British i.e. Adding, “The fact that it is a Bengali song becomes clear in the later verses of the song where there are usage of pure Bengali words. Sanskritised Bengali) and also pronounced in a Sanskritised manner,” he writes. Samujjal Das, assistant employment officer, Government of Assam tries to settle the dust, “Yes, the part which we recite as our National Song sounds like Sanskrit because it is written in Tatsama Bengali (i.e. People continue to debate if it was written in Bengali or Sanskrit. This is a fact that is known to everybody, but there is still some confusion. The first two verses of the song were adopted as the National Song of India in October 1937 by the Congress Working Committee prior to the end of colonial rule in August 1947. According to historians, the poem was first sung by Rabindranath Tagore in 1896. Vande Mataram is a Bengali poem written by Bankim Chandra Chatterjee in 1870s, which he included in his 1882 novel ‘Anandamath’.
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