<P> Following Cama's 1907 Stuttgart address, the flag she raised there was smuggled into British India by Indulal Yagnik and is now on display at the Maratha and Kesari Library in Pune . In 2004, politicians of the BJP, India's nationalist party, attempted to identify a later design (from the 1920s) as the flag Cama raised in Stuttgart . The flag Cama raised--misrepresented as "original national Tricolour"--has an (Islamic) crescent and a (Hindu) sun, which the later design does not have . </P> <Ul> <Li> Sethna, Khorshed Adi (1987), Madam Bhikhaiji Rustom Cama, Builders of Modern India, New Delhi: Government of India Ministry of Information and Broadcasting </Li> <Li> Kumar, Raj; Devi, Rameshwari; Pruthi, Romila, eds. (1998), Madame Bhikhaiji Cama, (Women and the Indian Freedom Struggle, vol. 3), Jaipur: Pointer, ISBN 81 - 7132 - 162 - 3 . </Li> <Li> Yadav, Bishamber Dayal; Bakshi, Shiri Ram (1992), Madam Cama: A True Nationalist, (Indian Freedom Fighters, vol. 31), New Delhi: Anmol, ISBN 81 - 7041 - 526 - 8 . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Sethna, Khorshed Adi (1987), Madam Bhikhaiji Rustom Cama, Builders of Modern India, New Delhi: Government of India Ministry of Information and Broadcasting </Li> <Li> Kumar, Raj; Devi, Rameshwari; Pruthi, Romila, eds. (1998), Madame Bhikhaiji Cama, (Women and the Indian Freedom Struggle, vol. 3), Jaipur: Pointer, ISBN 81 - 7132 - 162 - 3 . </Li>

Who is known as mother of indian revolution