Three Tawaifs’ Were Unsung Heroines of India’s Freedom Struggle.
A brave woman who made a pivotal contribution to the Great Revolt of 1857, Azeezunbai was among the many courtesans who lived a life of intrigue and danger to fight colonial rule. Yet few Indians know their story.
More than a century ago, India was engulfed by a unifying force that helped her break away from the chains of colonisation. It was the year of the First War of Independence, 1857, echoes of which reverberated through the decades, eventually making freedom a reality for us.
But, this is a story you and I have read, heard, and been told over and over again, in history textbooks and movies. We know all about the movement, the discontent that spread through the sepoys, pushing them to take a stand for their country and the national awakening that followed. Yet we know little about the people who made it possible.
Battles such as this are not won by the few leading figures standing on a pedestal, but by the scores who decide to put the cause above their well-being. Their stories are usually lost or hidden between the wrinkled pages of history.
For some, they are even erased.
The brave ‘Tawaifs’ or courtesans of India are among those fighters, whose stories of self-sacrifice have had a few listeners and even little physical record.
And yet, the story of Azeezunbai’s bravery continues to inspire, even though only in hushed tones.
The tension was on the rise as Indian soldiers all across the country were rising against the British officials. One such incident was in June 1857, when the Indian soldiers surrounded the East India Company’s British soldiers while they were laying siege to Cawnpore (now known as Kanpur). At the time, a courtesan was said to be with the soldiers, fighting alongside the Indian soldiers.
This courtesan was Azeezunbai, who was spotted on horseback in male attire, adorned with medals and armed with a brace of pistols.
An intriguing story as this has no mention in textbooks, although parts of it live in local legends, archives, historical reports and niche research papers. A case in point is the paper by Lata Singh, associate professor at the Centre for Women’s Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University.
“While going through these sources, what has been intriguing is that despite the attempts made in mainstream history-writing to invisibilise such women, Azizun’s name figures in most colonial accounts. She also figures in the nationalist writings of V D Savarkar, and even in the work of nationalist historians like S B Chaudhury. In these writings, she is praised for her role in the Rebellion, especially for her fight for the ‘freedom of the country’. In fact, she seems to have joined in procession the day the flag was raised in Kanpur to celebrate the initial victory of Nana Sahib. In Kanpur, Azizun’s name is alive in people’s memory,” Singh writes
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