In a letter to The Indian Sociologist, published in 1907, he started to explore anarchist ideas, arguing that "our object is not to reform government, but to reform it away, leaving, if necessary only nominal traces of its existence." Lala Har Dayal Mathur is one of the unknown heroes of the Indian Independence Struggle, who wrote the above words in a letter, leading him in the eyes of the police. On his birth anniversary, let us read his story. Har Dayal Mathur was born in a Hindu Mathur Kayastha family in 1884 in Delhi. He did his bachelor's and master's degree in Sanskrit, while he also studied at the Cambridge Mission School. In 1905, he received two scholarships from Oxford University for his higher studies in Sanskrit. He was in California where he developed several Punjabi Sikh farmers and they were in majority in that particular area. They were receiving great hostility from the Canadians in Vancouver, they had al