…In support of a living language, authority for correct sense and words, is always at our elbow, in the chat of our domestics or in the converse of the passengers at our street door, in colleges of learned and in stables of menials; in lanes of a city and in remote hamlets. Therefore phrases and idioms of people are easily available. That is not the case in respect of a dead language which has many pitfalls. Words and phrases of a dead language, are exercises in reconstruction of history, they are passages to times past and pathways to the sociology and culture of the ages gone by. The Dictionary of the Pali language taken up by Dr. Ambedkar for compilation when he was past 50, shows his indomitable spirit to look into the past, in order to know the present and to see the light for the future.” [1]



…See how Manohar Nagarale has described Babasaheb: ‘He is the beloved of our hearts, the crown on our heads, He lives and will live tomorrow, our Ambedkar. There will be words of gold and his name will remain Whenever our history is written.’
…In these poetry parties Mahars, Ropemakers, Sweepers, Muslims, and people of all castes were included. In everyone’s mind an unbroken faith in Ambedkar was created, One Muslim poet wrote a very memorable verse on Babasaheb: ‘Whenever we faced difficulties in the time of darkness, we remembered the wisdom of your eyes.’
…Manohar Nagarale in Bhankhed won people’s attention with his qawwalis and singing from 1942 onwards. Since his primary and middle school education was in Urdu, he gave speeches in pure Urdu and easily composed songs in it. While he was a volunteer of the Samata Sainik Dal, he got the chance to sing a song before Babasaheb. The two-line poem he sang became a proverb that spread from house to house: “The boy who died for freedom was victorious, / Hold high the standard of the Independent Labour Party…
…In Pahadganj, the oil market of Delhi, Hakim Kishan Shay’s daughter Kumari Devi Nandkumar published around 1940 or 1941 a book in Urdu. The name of the book was ‘Pistol with a Hundred Rounds’” [8]
References
- Volume 16 of BAWS [Babasaheb Ambedkar Writings and Speeches]
- My Life with Dr. Ambedkar by Dr. Savita Ambedkar, from pages 73-74.
- Preface to Who Were Shudras, Volume 7 of BAWS.
- Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar His Life and Work by Dr. M. L. Shahare
- I thank Mangesh Dahiwale sir for sharing this valuable information
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0239E4bvCeAVJxFVQw8dzLaPsRb9cWvdWjAdbbfbzgx1EQ5tSmnWVVgnZqnN8UYjuMl&id=536779201&mibextid=Nif5oz - See Volume 23 Of BAWS and also Ambedkar studies at Heidelberg by Maren Bellwinkel-Schempp
https://franpritchett.com/00ambedkar/timeline/graphics/germanvisit.pdf - https://baws.in/books/baws/EN/Volume_12/pdf/690
- Growing up Untouchable in India by Vasant Moon, translated by Gail Omvedt.