Beginning and Background:
Shree HanumanVyayam Prasarak Mandal, Amravati was founded by the
Vaidya Brothers namely Anant Krishna and Ambadas Krishna in the
year 1914, as a small Hanuman club. The Vaidya brothers may be rightly
regarded as the pioneer organizers of the movement of physical education
in Vidarbha Region. The small club thus founded by them half a century
ago has now come to be recognized as a National Institution which
has also earned some international reputation. When this club was
founded, there was a general apathy for physical education. In those
times the traditional institutions i.e. Akhadas were viewed with
suspicion as places of anti-British revolutionary movement. The
Vaidya brothers while founding the Hanuman Club had 2 clear objectives
in view. One was to link up the movement of physical education with
the national movement of Indian renaissance and the second was to
modernize and systematize the traditional Indian system of exercises
in such a way as would bring in bold relief the best and knowledgeable
elements inherent in it. They had a broad and open mind and hence
were also anxious to incorporate into the old Indian system elements
from the Western methods and systems of physical education and recreation.
Transformation into Mandal:
When Hanuman club was founded the time was not propitious for propagating
its cause openly. For some time, it had to be conducted in a secret
manner until it grew into a big institution, which could come into
the open. The First World War had ended in the success of the British
Government and some liberal reforms were introduced in the political
and social life of India. It was, therefore, in 1918-19 that the
Hanuman Club was renamed as The Hanuman Vyayam Mandir which could
openly spread its activities among the youths of Amravati as well
as those coming from other places to Amravati for educational purposes.
In short time, the daily attendance went up from 150 to 450. Several
youths trained, went back in course of time to their respective
places and began to organize gymnasiums on the lines of the training,
they had received. This development further necessitated reorganization
of the Hanuman Vyayam Mandir into Shree Hanuman Vyayam Prasarak
Mandal, which virtually means a body devoted to the organization
of gymnastic institutions. Hanuman is mythological deity of India
devoted not only to health and strength but is the very incarnation
of ideal health, strength, character and intelligence. This ideal
was, therefore, imbued in the very name of the organization.
Success and Ventures:
The efficacy and elegance of Mandal’s students was tested
in various gymnastic tournaments. In the year 1925 when Central
Province and Berar Olympic Meets were held at the District Head
Quarters of Yeotmal where provincial Olympic authorities allowed
competitions to be held in India’s traditional games and exercises.
In this meet young athletes of Mandal secured most of honours and
suddenly got a spurt of high reputation. This success encouraged
the organizers of the Mandal to launch a new scheme of popularizing
these exercises and games on a country-wide basis, so the idea of
summer vacation classes of physical training was devised & implemented.
These classes are being run every year almost uninterruptedly since
1925.
Propagating in different parts of India:
The Mandal established itself as a great training centre of the
modernized and systematized Indian system of physical education.
The efficacy of this training was by now so widely known that the
Mandal began to receive demands from several local bodies, institutions
and organizations to supply instructors, organizers and propagandists
of physical education. The Mandal had to keep itself so equipped
as to be able to make constant supply of such men whenever and wherever
demanded. Mandal has deputed many young men on this mission to several
parts of the country namely Gujrath, Mumbai, Karnatak, Madras, Uttar
Pradesh, Gwalior, Indore, Ujjain, Delhi, Punjab, Bihar, Bengal,
Assam, etc.
Liaison with National Movement of Independence :
The movement of Physical Education in India became at that time
indissolubly linked up with the national movement of independence
which assumed enormous proportions in the form of non co-operation
and civil disobedience during the years 1921 and 1930. The revolution
was making a headway on its path. Several workers of the H.V.P.
Mandal in their individual capacity plunged into the revolutionary
movement and also in the general mass movement of independence.
Some of them became martyrs by dying in sufferings, one went to
gallows and several suffered imprisonment. The Mandal also lent
its support for the organization of volunteer’s corps that
was needed for the disciplined organization of the National Movement
in the country. National leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Pt. Motilal
Nehru, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya,
Shri. N.C.Kelkar, Dr. Rajendra Prasad and Lala Lajpat Rai and many
others were attracted to the activities of the Mandal and had paid
visits to its Head Quarters on different
occasions. The encouragement given by these leaders and especially
by Mahatma Gandhi to the Mandal went a long way in popularizing
the cause of physical education in the country. The activities of
the Mandal thus did not remain confined to the solitary and disjointed
sphere of physical education but became one and unison with the
general national movement of renaissance and reconstruction.
Academic Activities and Association with Government and Local Bodies:
It may be noted here that apart from assuming the form of a big
training centre, the Mandal also took upon itself the task of educating
the people on the correct understanding of the problems of physical
education in general and on the fine-arts character of the Indian
physical culture in particular. In fact, physical culture forms
an essential part of the Indian culture which is led to be one of
the oldest and noblest cultures of the world. The Indian culture
continued to keep its vitality through the passage of several centuries
despite enormous changes and transformations that took place in
the social, economic and political life of the people. The Mandal
had devoted its efforts to discover to our people that Indian physical
culture was a living force on which depends the vitality of our
nation. Towards this end, the Mandal’s workers spoke on various
platforms, contributed several articles through the press and created
an awakening that was essential for the progress of its objectives.
Though the cadre of the Mandal’s workers was full of patriotic
persons who longed for independence and who joined the ranks of
the National Movement, the Mandal generally concerned itself with
the physical well-being activities of the younger generation. It
kept a vigilant eye on all positions of vantage from where its cause
could be pushed further. Several local bodies approached the Mandal
for schemes of physical training. The workers of the Mandal were
also taken up on most of the committees, which were formed to prepare
schemes of physical education.
Unique Propaganda Measure; Demonstration Tours
of Big Teams in India
& Abroad:
Apart from the aforementioned propaganda measures the unique and
most effective measure undertaken by the Mandal was demonstration-cum-propoganda
tours by teams consisting of 150 to 300 young boys and girls. These
big teams of the Mandal visited most of the Indian provinces and
big towns and gave displays of their performances which were usually
attended by thousands of educated people and students at every place.
These tours and consequent demonstrations had a very good effect,
in that great awakening of mass consciousness for physical betterment
was brought about in general; besides exhibiting the fine characteristics
of the Indian exercises in particular. To its own athletes-both
boys and girls-these excursions gave a nice opportunity of visiting
places of national and historical importance of gaining knowledge
of the different peoples and institutions of our own country and
of broadening out-look. The tours gave the most practical training
to them in attaining qualities like corporate life, endurance, self
help, hard labor and organization. The tours thus served to educate
the Mandal’s own youths and also educated at the same time
workers in the field of physical education in different parts of
the country. From the areas, to which these excursions were made;
came an incessant flow of trainees in the summer classes of the
Mandal.
Along with creating general consciousness in the Indian people for
physical betterment and earning a special place for the traditional
Indian System of Physical exercises and games in the country’s
schemes of physical education, the Mandal now aimed at carrying
the message of India’s physical culture to foreign countries
for higher studies had created a background for the fulfillment
of this object.
Organization of Volunteer Forces for Social Services:
The Mandal did not mean to remain an idle worshipper of strength
and to allow its workers to degenerate into vagrants who commit
unsocial acts. The Mandal therefore, rightly aimed at sublimation
of human instincts. To this end were always canalized the energies
of its workers. Opportunities of serving the people were availed
of; Whether it was fighting fire, saving lives from drowning, distributing
medicines to poor, serving as volunteers for the control and management
of crowds and big gatherings, lending assistance in the control
of anti-social elements or helping the public in any other way,
the Mandal’s workers did not hesitate to do their part of
duty. The Mandal also lent its band-troupe to play on both official
and non-official functions in the country on several occassions.
The necessity of this sort of social service was indeed very great
during the pre-independence period as it is now. It was, therefore,
with the object of creating a sense of active self-help, self-respect
and discipline among its own workers and raising the morale of the
general public that in 1932 the Mandal organized a special wing
of social workers under the title “Civic Defence Force”
(C.D.F.). The members of C.D.F. later supplied personnel to the
Government organizations such as Home guards, urban infantry, Territorial
Army, etc. The C.D.F. also gave rise to several other volunteer
organizations of similar nature in different parts of the country.
The role that the H.V.P. Mandal and these volunteer organizations
played in the national struggle for freedom has been borne out in.
“The History of the Freedom Movement” a volume officially
published by the Provincial Govt. of M.P. During war-time the Mandal
trained its workers specialy in fire-fighting and ARP and also conducted
classes in these activities for the benefit of the public. The Mandal’s
capacity to train volunteer forces was put to test when its workers
were called upon to recruit, train and organize a volunteer force
of 3000 strong including 500 women on the occasion of Tripuri Session
of the Indian National Congress held in the year 1939.
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