Bhagat Singh was a revolutionary thinker, one of the earliest supporters of socialism and Marxist philosophy, partially after being influenced by the "Bolshevik revolution" of Russia. He was born on September 28, 1907. He was very good in studies and was greatly inspired by the Ghadr movement and by the young revolutionary Kartar Singh Sarabha who was hanged at the age of 19. Bhagat Singh actively participated in Gandhiji's Non-cooperation movement but became broken with his philosophy of non-violence after seeing the helplessness of laks of Indians after Gandhiji withdraw the movement. He became the secretary and principle organizer of Naujawan Bharat Sabha in 1926. He later rose to become association's leader. He next joined to Hindustan Republican Assosiation where he came in contact with revolutionaries, and soon he assumed a leadership role in HRA and renamed it to Hindustan Socialist Republican Association. It was to emphasize the organization's belief that their fight was not only to end British rule but also for political system that could establish social economic equality in India. This was because he believed that Gandhiji's passive resistance and Utopian promises of Independence through non violence was never possible and would replace one set of exploiters with another. The hunger strike brought him popularity throughout India. Bhagat Singh was a rare gem of India's freedom struggle whose ideas were backed by sound reasoning and knowledge. After his death India still struggles with the problems of Poverty, Corruption, Economic Inequalities and many more.