She grew up in Bhind, a town in the heart of MP’s Chambal ravines. The daughter of an ayurdevic doctor -an RSS worker -Pragya Singh Thakur was tomboyish as a teenager. She wore Tshirts and jeans, cropped her hair and rode motorbikes. There was a vigilante side to her too. She loved thrashing eve-teasers.
A story goes that she and her sister once beat up some goons so badly that they pleaded for pardon.
A post-graduate in history, Pragya, now 45, was always associated with right-wing organisations. She was an ABVP member and involved with Durga Vahini, the VHP women’s wing. As a young activist, she got noticed for her fiery, often inflammatory, speeches.In 2002, she set up the Jai Vande Mataram Jan Kalyan Samiti. In an interview to a news magazine, her father once said this organisation “rescued” girls who eloped with boys of another community Under Swami Avadheshanand Giri, a guru who had among his followers several influential politicians, she recast herself in a new avatar: Sadhvi Purna Chetanand Giri Sharma. Later she set up the Rashtriya Jagran Manch in Indore. During this period, she often moved from one town to another-Jabalpur, Indore, Surat. A motorcycle registered in her name led the ATS to her after the blast. Subse quently, she was picked up in 2008 by the Maharashtra ATS.
“Waise to kai log apna muh bajate rehte hain, us se humay farak nahi padta (There are many who keep boasting we are least bothered),” Pragya told TOI recently when asked if she was hopeful of getting out of jail. “The people who know the definition of justice will come forward, but there are many who keep talking for nothing,” she said at a Bhopal hospital on July 2, 2015 where she had gone to meet her ailing mother. She had been released for just an hour by a Dewas court. Now with NIA dropping charges, the stage could be set for her release from jail.
The NIA dropping names of Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur and five others in the Malegaon case evoked angry reactions from residents of the textile town. Many took to the streets to protest. Around 200 people were detained. As soon as the news got out, the residents of Malegaon gathered at Hemant Karkare chowk and Bhiku chowk. “The development has raised doubts that NIA might have functioned under the government’s pressure,” said Congress MLA Asif Shaikh, who led the protests.