Independence Day is a day when people in India
pay homage to their leaders and those who fought for India's freedom in the past. The
period leading up to Independence Day is a time when major government buildings
are illuminated with strings of lights and the tricolor flutters from
homes and other buildings. Broadcast, print and online media may have special
contests, programs, and articles to promote the day. Movies about India's freedom
fighters are also shown on television.
The president delivers the '"Address to the Nation" on the eve of
Independence Day. India's
prime minister unfurls India's
flag and holds a speech at the Red Fort in Old Dehli. Flag hoisting ceremonies
and cultural programs are held in the state capitals and often involve many
schools and organizations.
Many people spend the day with family members or close friends. They may eat
a picnic in a park or private garden, go to a film or eat lunch or dinner at
home or in a restaurant. Other people go kite flying or sing or listen to
patriotic songs.
The struggle for India's Independence began in 1857 with the Sepoy Mutiny in Meerut. Later, in the
20th century, the Indian National Congress and other political organizations,
under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi, launched a countrywide independence
movement. Colonial powers were transferred to India on August 15, 1947.
The Constituent Assembly, to who power was to be transferred, met to
celebrate India's
independence at 11pm on August 14, 1947. India gained its liberty and became
a free country at midnight between August 14 and August 15, 1947. It was then
that the free India's
first prime minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru gave his famous "Tryst with
Destiny" speech. People across India
are reminded of the meaning of this event - that it marked the start of a new
era of deliverance from the British colonialism that took place in India for more
than 200 years.
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