| 1. Bagha Jatin, hailing from the Bengal Presidency, was an Indian freedom fighter. |
| 2. He found inspiration in Swami Vivekananda and his beliefs. |
| 3. In the year 1900, Jatin helped establish the Anushilan Samiti. |
| 4. Bagha Jatin took charge of multiple revolutionary movements against British authority. |
| 5. The year 1915 marked the tragic end of Bagha Jatin in a firearm confrontation with British officers in Balasore. |
| 6. He earned the title 'Bagha' (Tiger) after defeating a Royal Bengal tiger in 1906 with a Gorkha dagger (Kukri) after a three-hour struggle. |
| 7. Swami Vivekananda guided Bagha Jatin towards the noble cause of freedom. |
| 8. He was implicated in the Alipur Conspiracy Case in 1908 but was later acquitted. |
| 9. During World War I, he coordinated efforts with the Indian Independence Party in Berlin and German backing for an armed insurrection against British rule. |
| 10. His armed struggle during World War I is considered a precursor to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's efforts with the Indian National Army during World War II. |
| 11. He was a principal leader of the Jugantar party, the central association of revolutionary independence activists in Bengal. |
| 12. In April 1908, at Siliguri railway station, he fought with English military officers, leading to legal proceedings. |
| 13. He leased lands in the Sundarbans through Justice Sarada Charan Mitra to shelter revolutionaries. |