In the year 1906, in response to the British Government's infamous Bengal Partition Plan, leaders of the time considered creating an Indian flag. He needed to rekindle national consciousness and the spirit of organisation in every Indian citizen through the flag. However, even before this, many different types of flags were popular in India, the most prominent of which was the saffron-coloured flag. However, keeping in mind the immediate circumstances, Indian leaders considered a new type of flag to unite all religions, sects, and sects, which would become a symbol of resistance to British colonialism. The partition of Bengal was part of a plan to completely divide India communally. For appeasement, the British government decided to create a separate Muslim majority province, but Surendranath Banerjee writes in his book 'A Nation in Making Bengal' that there was a lack of unity in Bengal at the time. As a result, a flag was desi...
Chronicles of India, Hindus and the world