Protesters swelled by the hour in the march, led by the JNUSU (Jawaharlal Nehru University Students Union), that began from the Mandi House circle around 2 PM and ended at Jantar Mantar, bringing traffic to a standstill in the heart of the capital.
The chain of protesters comprising students from universities across the country measured over a kilometre at one point who rent the air with the slogan 'JNU...JNU' as they marched ahead. Eminent scholar Zoya Hasan described the moment as a "critical juncture".
Prominent leaders of the left parties including CPI(M)'s Brind Karat and Mohammed Selim, apart from Swaraj Abhiyan leader Yogendra Yadav, veteran journalist P Sainath flayed the Centre for "crushing dissent" in their speeches.
Students from the Delhi University, Hyderabad University, South Asian University, Jamia Millia Islamia University raised rapturous slogans, recited poetries, sang resistance songs as they marched till Jantar Mantar with many describing it as an "epoch".
For Vishnu Nagar, a veteran journalist, the demonstration,
one of the biggest in recent times, was a "big historical moment that has helped get rid of the depression that set in over the last few days".
A student of Ramjas College, Eeshat, holding aloft a bud of rose like thousands of other students, described it as his "weapon", wielding which he has come to voice his views on "how our country should be like".
"Polemic is an old and acceptable form of debate. The nation is made up of people and it has to be seen after placing it among the people. You may not agree with slogans raised by Umar but you have no right to resort to such witchhunt," Suhansi, DU Law student, said.
Delhi School of Economics student Ayanti Ghosh said, "You can't run a dictatorship in the veil of democracy."
Addressing the protesters, Karat demanded the withdrawal of sedition charges that has been slapped against Kanhaiya and alleged that the "government is attacking the autonomy of the universities."
"It's not about JNU or Kanhaiya alone. They are symbols. The demonstartion aims to protect the soul of the country," Yadav said.
As the crowd wended its way to Jantar Mantar, where the protesters later gathered, a student, on the sidelines, was seen carrying a copy of the preface of the Constitution, lending a sense of poignancy to the agitation.
Ruchika, 20, a student of Ambedkar University Delhi, who had come to the protest site along with 50-60 other students from her university, said, "Patriotism and nationalism have been reduced to such small definitions by right-wing forces. And also even if one were to assume that if somebody objects to speeches made by a few people, then the criticism should remain focussed and not taken to gross generalisations."
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