Young India (December 1918)
The November 1918 issue of Young India (Vol 1., No. 12). The opening editorial reprints a telegram sent to President Woodrow Wilson, congratulating the U.S.
Young India (January 1920)
The January 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 1) opens with a statement on Lajpat Rai's departure from the United States on December 24 to Liverpool. The League of Oppressed Peoples marked his farewell with a dinner on November 28 at the Hotel des Artistes in New York.
Young India (February 1920)
The February 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 2) was dubbed the "Lajpat Rai" issue a month earlier, and contains tributes from several members of American progressive circles: Dudley Field Malone, Oswald Garrison Villard, Soumey Tscheng, Pethic Lawrence, B.S. Kamat, Prof. Arthur Pope, and Dr. Norman Thomas. Printed in the issue is Lajpat Rai's address to America, an essay by J.T.
Young India (March 1920)
The March 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 3). The issue commenced the new "Art Section" run by Ananda Coomaraswamy.
Young India (April 1920)
The April 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 4) featured several articles comparing the struggle for Indian freedom with America's past. Various short reports draw a connection between the U.S.
Har Dayal, "Forty-four Months in Germany and Turkey"
Published by P.S. King & Son in 1920, Forty-Four Months in Germany and Turkey records Har Dayal's impressions of the two nations. Throughout the book, Dayal criticizes German nationalism: "Some Americans defended slavery on the ground that the negroes really belonged to a different species, and could therefore be treated like animals.
Young India (May 1920)
The May 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 5) was titled the "Labor Number." The opening editorial notes focus on different figures of Indian labor (the coolie, agricultural worker, and clerk) within the colony. A note is also made of N.M. Joshi, who had visited the International Labor Conference in Washington as an Indian representative.
Saint Nihal Singh, "Dry" America: An Object-Lesson to India
Published in Madras in 1921, St. Nihal Singh's "Dry" America: An Object-Lesson to India is a study of prohibition in the United States. Singh writes in favor of prohibition, claiming that such policies would mean "greater individual and national efficiency" for India. Much of the study, however, tracks the infractions that came out of prohibition.
Har Dayal, "Our Educational Problem" (1922)
Published in Madras in 1922, Har Dayal's Our Educational Problem considers British educational policy in the Indian colony, with emphasis on issues of assimilation and the value of "Sanskrit vs. English." The preface was provided by the nationalist Lajpat Rai, who, interestingly, also spent an extended period within the U.S., founding the India Home Rule League of America in New York City.