Tilak voice recording unearthed from Karachi collection

Pune: A rare audio recording of Lokmanya Tilak done 97 years ago, believed to be the only one of its kind, has now come to light for hearing the voice of the "father of Indian unrest" who passed away in 1920 after initiating the country`s freedom struggle against the British rulers. While a vast collection […]

Pune: A rare audio recording of Lokmanya Tilak done 97 years ago, believed to be the only one of its kind, has now come to light for hearing the voice of the "father of Indian unrest" who passed away in 1920 after initiating the country`s freedom struggle against the British rulers.

While a vast collection of the Lokmanya`s articles and books has been carefully preserved over the momentous years at the `Kesari` trust library here, the audio of his voice was not available as of now, according to Dipak Tilak, the great grandson of the Lokmanya , who had famously declared "Swarajya is my birthright ".