On the event of the 153rd Mahatma Gandhi Jayanti Sunday, Congress chief Rahul Gandhi paid tributes to the Father of the Nation at Badanavalu village in Karnataka and vowed to unify India. What’s the historic significance of this small village, positioned round 33 km away from Mysore, which had pleasantly stunned even Mahatma Gandhi?
Badanavalu homes a spinning centre popularly often known as Badanavalu Khadi Kendra. Mysuru king Nalwadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar established it in 1927 as a part of the Swadeshi motion. It started operations with 4 Dalit ladies and an goal to uplift the financial situations of Dalits.
In accordance with Professor Nirmal Raj of Mangalore College, the centre, which at one level had 60 ladies and 9 male weavers and an funding of Rs 3,500, was making Khadi price Rs 50,000 by 1932. This meteoric rise of the Swadeshi institution impressed Mahatma Gandhi.
In 1932, Mahatma Gandhi visited Badanavalu and the Khadi centre working on 7.5 acres. Historians say that he got here to Badanavalu after his follower Tagadur Ramachandra Rao insisted him to and he appreciated the message the centre despatched to the society. To commemorate Mahatma Gandhi’s go to, the centre later put in his statue on the campus.
Even now, the centre produces Khadi by spinning wheels nevertheless it has misplaced its sheen. Although the Khadi demand over time has gone up, the spinning business shouldn’t be in a state to afford wages for therefore many staff.
Not too long ago, the Karnataka tourism division expressed its curiosity to develop Badanavalu on the traces of Gujarat’s Sabarmati Ashram.
In 2015, a motion to advertise and revive the Khadi sector gained momentum as personalities like social activist Medha Patkar and Bollywood actor Irrfan Khan visited Badanavalu and prolonged their assist.
In 1993, Badanavalu witnessed caste violence the place three lower-caste farmers had been killed by a bunch of upper-caste individuals resulting in a number of protests and the loss of life of two in police firing.