Dadis of Shaheen Bagh hoisted the national flag with Rohit Vemula's mother, Umar Khalid and protesters
New Delhi: Three elderly women, who have come to be known as the "dadis of Shaheen Bagh" for leading the anti-CAA agitation there, and the mother of Rohith Vemula, a hyderabad University student who allegedly committed suicide in 2016, hoisted the tricolour at the protest venue on Sunday to mark the country's 71st Republic Day.
Radhika Vemula, Rohith's mother, who was accompanied by the "dadis" and former JNU student Umar Khalid unfurled the national flag. They sang the national anthem along with thousands of people, including women and children who had gathered at Shaheen Bagh to celebrate the occasion.
Vadgam Assembly Constituency (Gujarat) MLA Jignesh Mevani was also present.
The protesters, who are opposing the contentious Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) and a proposed pan-India National Register of Citizens (NRC), have been sitting on protest at Delhi's Shaheen Bagh for over a month.
The protesters said they will continue their agitation until the government decides to rollback the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and National Register of Citizens.
From children to women, many held the national flag and sang patriotic songs to celebrate the spirit of oneness, equality and secularism. They chanted the "CAA se Azaadi, NRC se Azaadi, BJP se Azaadi (freedom from CAA, NRC and BJP)" while raising other slogans against the CAA and the NRC.
"We do not want a prime minister who cannot listen to our grievance and address our concerns. Why has the prime minister or any of his representatives not addressed us yet? Why didn't he visit us and explain the CAA and NRC?," asked 75-year-old Sarwari, one of the ''dadis'', who has been part of the protest for over a month now.
82-year-old Bilkis said, "This is our nation and our forefathers have contributed in the freedom struggle of this country. Today, if we fail to protect the constitution and the secular fabric of this country, we will fail to save the future of our nation," she said.
Recalling the violence at Jamia Millia Islamia and Jawaharlal Nehru University, she asked if this is how the government was promoting the "beti bachao beti padhao" concept?
"Are our students even safe on their campuses? Was it right to barge inside the campus and assault students in this manner? Is this "beti bachao beti padhao"?," she asked.
90-year-old Asma Khatoon was also present at the flag hoisting ceremony.
Shaheen, another protester and a resident of Jamia Nagar, said, "We will not allow this divide and rule policy to be implemented here. We have been living here in harmony since ages. Today they are trying to divide us on the basis of religion and will follow it up with caste discrimination. We cannot let this happen. And why is the government not visiting us if they are so confident about their stand on CAA and NRC?"
Another protestor, Shahzia, who joined the agitation 15 days ago, said she will continue to protest until there is an assurance from the government on the newly amended act.
"If we do not fight for our rights today, the future generation will question us tomorrow. This fight is not religion centric. It is a common fight to save our nation from the divide-rule policy of the government," she said.