World Radio Day| “This is the Congress Radio calling on 42.34 from somewhere in India,” the broadcasts would begin. On August 14, 1942, Usha Mehta launched the station with activists Chandrakant Babubhai Jhaveri, Vithaldas K Jhaveri, and Nanka Motwane, supported by amateur radio operator Nariman Printer. The team first went on air twice a day in Hindi and English, then shifted to a single evening broadcast while constantly changing locations to evade the police. Congress Radio carried critical updates, from traders refusing to export rice to news of leaders being arrested. In November 1942, the police raided the station after extracting information from Printer following his arrest. As officers closed in, Mehta and her colleagues made a final broadcast, playing “Vande Mataram” while the authorities broke in. The police seized the equipment and arrested Mehta along with four others. After a prolonged investigation, the court sentenced her to four years in prison, releasing her in April 1946.







