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Ammembala Balappa AI simulator
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Ammembala Balappa AI simulator
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Ammembala Balappa
Ammembala Balappa (23 February 1922 – 15 May 2014) was an Indian freedom fighter and socialist leader who is known for participating in the Quit India Movement in 1942. He played an important role in drafting the Declaration of land policy (Land Reforms Act) by the D. Devaraj Urs government during prime minister Indira Gandhi's tenure. He is also credited for founding the first Tulu language newspaper Tulu Siri in 1970.
Ammembala Balappa was born in Bantwal taluk of Dakshina Kannada on 23 February 1922. His father Thaniya Moolya died in childhood, his mother shifted to another village along with her children including Balappa.[citation needed]
Balappa was born in a family of potters at a time when casteism was at its peak and prevented him from studying after attending classes for just six months in Class I. Then he shifted to Mangalore to his uncle’s home. Balappa was joined to work as a helper in a British officer, who was in-charge of administrative affairs in Mangalore.His work pleased the officer and helped him get a job in sanitation department. He also learnt to speak and read English.[citation needed]
At the age of 20, he took inspiration from Mahatma Gandhi and jumped into India's freedom struggle during the Quit India Movement in 1942. With the help of some of his friends, he planted a crude bomb that burnt down the office of the District Court Complex at Light House Hill Road in Bavutagudde of Mangalore. He was arrested and jailed in Vellore Central Prison, where he shared a ward with P. V. Narasimha Rao (who later became Prime Minister of India). He learnt to speak and read the Hindi language from PV Narasimha Rao and got in touch with Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and Jayaprakash Narayan.[citation needed]
On 15 August 1947[broken anchor] Balappa hoisted tricolour flag at Sultan bateri watch tower in Mangalore. [1]
Later, he opened a school in a remote village in southern Karnataka, where he worked as a Hindi teacher during the Unification movement. He became involved in the labour movement in Mangalore, started cooperative banks to help rural folk. He was one of the main contributors to the Declaration of Land Policy (Land reforms Act) by the D. Devaraj Urs's government during PM Indira Gandhi's tenure.
Balappa was also recognized as a journalist, as he published a Kannada language newspaper called Mithra in the year 1952. He also started the first Tulu language newspaper Tulu Siri in 1970. Mangalorean Author Chris Emmanuel Dsouza makes a point in his book Bandh Samrat about Balappa's initial days of Trade union activism, he nurtured and mentored George Fernandes in Nehru Maidan, George later went on to become a supreme Trade union leader in Bombay and a Union Minister. Balappa was George Fernandes's first guru.They also organised one of the first labour strikes in Mangalore City when they called on strike against Canara Public Conveyance.
Proficient in Tulu, Konkani, English, Kannada and Hindi languages, he worked as a Hindi teacher in Karkala during Unification movement.[2]
Ammembala Balappa
Ammembala Balappa (23 February 1922 – 15 May 2014) was an Indian freedom fighter and socialist leader who is known for participating in the Quit India Movement in 1942. He played an important role in drafting the Declaration of land policy (Land Reforms Act) by the D. Devaraj Urs government during prime minister Indira Gandhi's tenure. He is also credited for founding the first Tulu language newspaper Tulu Siri in 1970.
Ammembala Balappa was born in Bantwal taluk of Dakshina Kannada on 23 February 1922. His father Thaniya Moolya died in childhood, his mother shifted to another village along with her children including Balappa.[citation needed]
Balappa was born in a family of potters at a time when casteism was at its peak and prevented him from studying after attending classes for just six months in Class I. Then he shifted to Mangalore to his uncle’s home. Balappa was joined to work as a helper in a British officer, who was in-charge of administrative affairs in Mangalore.His work pleased the officer and helped him get a job in sanitation department. He also learnt to speak and read English.[citation needed]
At the age of 20, he took inspiration from Mahatma Gandhi and jumped into India's freedom struggle during the Quit India Movement in 1942. With the help of some of his friends, he planted a crude bomb that burnt down the office of the District Court Complex at Light House Hill Road in Bavutagudde of Mangalore. He was arrested and jailed in Vellore Central Prison, where he shared a ward with P. V. Narasimha Rao (who later became Prime Minister of India). He learnt to speak and read the Hindi language from PV Narasimha Rao and got in touch with Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and Jayaprakash Narayan.[citation needed]
On 15 August 1947[broken anchor] Balappa hoisted tricolour flag at Sultan bateri watch tower in Mangalore. [1]
Later, he opened a school in a remote village in southern Karnataka, where he worked as a Hindi teacher during the Unification movement. He became involved in the labour movement in Mangalore, started cooperative banks to help rural folk. He was one of the main contributors to the Declaration of Land Policy (Land reforms Act) by the D. Devaraj Urs's government during PM Indira Gandhi's tenure.
Balappa was also recognized as a journalist, as he published a Kannada language newspaper called Mithra in the year 1952. He also started the first Tulu language newspaper Tulu Siri in 1970. Mangalorean Author Chris Emmanuel Dsouza makes a point in his book Bandh Samrat about Balappa's initial days of Trade union activism, he nurtured and mentored George Fernandes in Nehru Maidan, George later went on to become a supreme Trade union leader in Bombay and a Union Minister. Balappa was George Fernandes's first guru.They also organised one of the first labour strikes in Mangalore City when they called on strike against Canara Public Conveyance.
Proficient in Tulu, Konkani, English, Kannada and Hindi languages, he worked as a Hindi teacher in Karkala during Unification movement.[2]
