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A day before Arjun Rampal’s much-awaited Daddy hits the screens – a movie that Rampal insists he wanted to make without falling into the Bollywood claptrap of romanticising a gangster – it’d be interesting to know who the gangster in question really is. Daddy is a biopic of one of Mumbai’s most feared underworld dons, Arun Gawli. Here’s taking a look at his rise (and fall):
Gawli was born in Kopargaon in Ahmednagar district of Maharashtra; his father Gulabrao had moved from Khandwa in Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra in the early 1950s. Much of the Gawli clan – including Arun’s father Gulab Gawli – worked in the mill industry, but the latter was eager that his children acquire a good education.
In fact, Arun did manage to complete his matriculation – which was a big deal in the sixties and seventies – but once his father left his job, he had to look for work himself. He joined Shakti Mills in Mahalaxmi right after – but it was in 1977 that he joined Crompton Greaves and first shook hands with the burly Sadashiv Pawle (later called Sada Mama). It was in Sada Mama’s company that Galwi first turned to anti-social activities.
It was at Crompton Greaves that Gawli ran (once again) into Rama Naik, who he had gone to school with. It was in the 1980s, then, that Gawli joined the “Byculla Company” gang led by Naik and Babu Reshim, and supervised their illegal liquor dens. Their gang would go on to be called – and feared – as the B.R.A. gang (Babu, Rama and Arun).
In 1984, Naik helped the infamous Dawood Ibrahim eliminate his then arch rival Samad Khan and thus began a flurry of activities carried out in consult between Dawood’s “D-Company” and the “Byculla Company”. From ’84 to ’88, the Byculla Company supported Dawood’s local criminal activities – even as the latter himself escaped the police and settled in Dubai. In 1988, however, Naik had a major falling out with D-Company gangster Sharad Shetty and it was to Shetty that Dawood lent his support. This enraged Naik, who, in turn, insulted Dawood. In late 1988, Naik was killed in a police encounter.
Gawli now took over leadership of the Byculla Company, which had its base in Dagdi Chawl.
The battle only got more and more gruesome with each passing year. In the early 1990s when Arun Gawli’s brother Bappa Gawli was killed by Dawood Ibrahim’s men, a grief-stricken Gawli retaliated by killing Dawood’s brother-in-law Ibrahim Parkar.
Arun Gawli’s first stirrings into politics were through the Shiv Sena, or more specifically through the then chief Bal Thackeray, who, in the 1980s, criticised the Mumbai Police for taking action against Hindu gangsters like Gawli and Sai Bansod – calling them amchi muley (our boys). The Sena and Gawli fell out in the mid-90s – following which Gawli murdered a number of Shiv Sena men. He eventually formed his own political party – Akhil Bharatiya Sena – and contested Assembly elections in 2004, getting elected from Dagdi Chawl.
Gawli was arrested by the police several times – and imprisoned for 9 years under the TADA – but could not be detained for too long any of the times since most witnesses were scared of deposing against him. He was finally convicted of the murder of Shiv Sena leader Kamlakar Jamsandekar in 2012. Gawli is currently serving a life sentence in jail.
There are several fascinating interviews of Arun Gawli from the 1990s – during the lead-up to his political career – where he was constantly asked about his surreptitiously well-known gangster roots. During one interview to Rediff, Gawli argued:
He went on to state:
Gawli was also questioned, in the same interview, about wearing a Gandhian topi during his rallies. He replied saying he believed in “some Gandhian principles”.
Gawli, who became a sort of Robin Hood figure for his followers – particularly, the residents of Dagdi Chawl where he lived – was known as ‘Daddy’. It was but evident that Rampal’s production, which is a biopic of the man, would be called the same. Said Rampal in an interview after meeting Gawli:
In another interview to Firstpost, Rampal also expressed his fear of shooting in areas that were predominantly D-Company territory, while looking scarily like Gawli:
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