The year was 1535 CE. The Rajmata of Mewar, widow of Rana Sanga, was in a dilemma. On one hand was an attack from Bahadur Shah of Gujarat as a threat to her capital, Chittorgarh, and the throne of her beloved teenage son Vikramaditya. On the other hand, there was the son of her husband's archenemy, Humayun, who could be of some help. Rani Karnavati wrote a letter to Humayun, who was in the east at that time. Along with it, she sent a Rakhi, a thread of brotherhood, asking him, as a sister, for protection against the enemy. But the road was too long and time, of great essence. Humayun arrived at Chittorgarh, in response to her letter, keeping his end of the bargain but a little late. Rani Karnavati had already performed the Jauhar. They never met. Humayun established Rana Vikramaditya on the throne of Mewar, as he had promised as a brother, and returned to his post. Two dynasties, political rivals and sworn enemies, from Sanga-Babur to Pratap-Akbar and even Raj Singh-Aurangzeb, yet in between the bloodshed and enmity, a promise was made, a culture respected, and a promise upheld.
The year was 1905. India was fiery in the quest for freedom. A meeting on June 6th sealed the fate of united Bengal into a partition of the state based on faith. The majority of the state was Hindu Bengalis, whereas the Muslim Bengalis held the majority in places of Assam and Sylhet. It was a British Masterstroke to divert the organised freedom movement in Bengal into chaos and riots of religious unrest. It was finalised on the 16th of August, but massive protests from all over the state poured into the streets of the British Capital, Calcutta. Sadly, it was inevitable as a cost of freedom in 1947. In 1905, Poet and Philanthropist Rabindranath Tagore arranged a subtle way to protest. He made sure events were organised across Bengal where Hindu and Muslim brothers and sisters tie rakhi as a mark of Religious Harmony in the state. Thousands participated in the movement, from Kolkata and Dhaka, conveying a message to the Raj, whose tradition was to divide and rule. Thus, Rakhi, an otherwise non-Bengali tradition, entered the Bengali households in a reformed manner, as a mark of peace and harmony between people, not traditionally a sister asking for a brother's protection.
