Such strengths lives in my wings-The day will surely rise, when we are free.This land shall be ours,And the sky - Our own to claim. According to historical accounts, these powerful words were spoken by the great revolutionary, Bhagat Singh, on 23rd March—a date etched into the soul of India as Shaheed Diwas.It was the day when his voice, like his sacrifice, became immortal—igniting the fire of independence in every Indian heart. The day when Mother India lost one of her bravest sons, yet gained an eternal symbol of courage.The Dream That Became RealityThe dream of independence was realized on Indian Independence Day, when India awakened to freedom at the stroke of midnight.One cannot help but imagine Bhagat Singh’s presence in that historic moment—perhaps in the fluttering tricolour,in the echoes of the national anthem,within the halls of the Constituent Assembly,or alive in the spirit of the people celebrating on the streets.The India He EnvisionedBhagat Singh did not merely fight for freedom—he envisioned a nation built on true equality:Equality not just in theory, but in practiceA society free from caste and creed divisionsA nation where women face no unjust barriersEducation as a fundamental right, not a privilegeUnity across religions—Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, Christian—as Indians firstAn India of dignity.An India of harmony.An India that belongs to its people.Yet, he cautioned against a hollow independence—one that merely replaces“gora sahibs with bhura sahibs.”A Reflection in 2026Fast forward to today.As one walks through the corridors of modern India, listens to unheard voices, and observes the struggles of ordinary citizens seeking progress, Bhagat Singh’s warning feels strikingly relevant.His legacy urges us to reflect:Why is it important to become Bhagat Singh in our own lives?The True Meaning of His IdealsTo follow Bhagat Singh is not to embrace violence. In fact, he stood against unnecessary bloodshed.His true ideology lies in:The courage to question authorityThe freedom to think independentlyThe right to peacefully protestThe responsibility to hold systems accountableHe was, at his core, a thinker—a man shaped by circumstances, compelled to act when voices were silenced.A Call to the Present GenerationUnlike the colonial past, today’s world offers platforms for dialogue, dissent, and reform.The responsibility now lies with us—to learn from history and engage with it meaningfully. To question, not out of rebellion alone, but out of a desire for progress and justice.ConclusionAlways remember:Every unanswered question has an answer—it is not absent, only withheld. And that must change.This is how Bhagat Singh lives on—not just in memory,but in every voice that dares to question.