--- layout: default title: Students for Peace description: Account of the Students for Peace initiative founded by Sunil Abraham in 1993, promoting unity and non-violence among students in Bangalore after the Ayodhya and Bombay riots. categories: [Sunil Abraham] created: 2025-11-02 --- {% include under-construction.html %} **Students for Peace** was a brief, grassroots student movement in Bangalore, India, launched in early 1993 as a response to the communal violence that followed the demolition of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya and the subsequent riots in Bombay (now Mumbai). Organised by engineering student [Sunil Abraham](https://sunilabraham.in/sunil) together with convener Ravindra Walters, the initiative sought to create an apolitical platform where young people could stand together for peace and secular values. It culminated in a candlelight demonstration on 13 February 1993 along Mahatma Gandhi Road, drawing around 5,000 students from schools and colleges across the city. ## Contents 1. [Background](#background) 2. [Formation and aims](#formation-and-aims) 3. [The demonstration (13 February 1993)](#the-demonstration-13-february-1993) 4. [Scale and scope](#scale-and-scope) 5. [Organisation and conduct](#organisation-and-conduct) 6. [Reception](#reception) 7. [References](#references) ## Background The early 1990s were a turbulent period in India. On 6 December 1992, the Babri Masjid was demolished in Ayodhya, sparking violent clashes across the country. In January 1993, Bombay experienced especially severe rioting with extensive loss of life and property. These events unsettled communities even in southern cities such as Bangalore, which, though spared large-scale violence, felt the strain of political polarisation and inter-community mistrust. In that atmosphere, Sunil Abraham, then a second-year student at Dayananda Sagar College of Engineering under Bangalore University, began reaching out to his peers. Together with Ravindra Walters and other volunteers, he initiated 'Students for Peace' as a non-partisan collective dedicated to promoting unity through symbolic, non-violent action. ## Formation and aims Students for Peace took shape in early February 1993 through word-of-mouth and campus visits. A printed letter was sent to principals across Bangalore, setting out the aims and logistics for a student-led candlelight vigil. The conveners, Ravindra Walters and Sunil A. Abraham, emphasised that the campaign was entirely volunteer-driven and unaffiliated with any political or religious organisation. Roughly eighty volunteers joined the organising team, taking responsibility for publicity, permissions, and crowd coordination. Dignitaries, political parties and prominent citizens were deliberately kept out to avoid any shift in focus, ensuring that the campaign remained an initiative of students alone.
## The demonstration (13 February 1993) The main event took place on Saturday, 13 February 1993, at Mahatma Gandhi Road in central Bangalore. Participants began assembling near the Gandhi statue at about 5:30 pm. At 6:30 pm sharp, four ten-year-old children lit a single 'peace candle' at the foot of the statue and passed the flame to four older students from different religions. From there the light was relayed along the line until hundreds of candles glowed in succession down the boulevard towards Brigade Road and Trinity Circle. Students, most of them dressed in white, sang familiar peace songs such as *We Shall Overcome* and *Shanthi Do*, while others quietly repeated the phrase 'We want peace'. The police cooperated with organisers to keep traffic moving smoothly and allowed the event to proceed with minimal obstruction. At one point an anonymous threat prompted temporary barricades around the Gandhi statue, but students were later permitted to approach under supervision and light the main candle.
Deccan Herald, 14 February 1993 — report titled 'Holding a candle for peace' describing the Students for Peace demonstration in Bangalore.