The Shiv Sena started out as an organisation in 1960, when Bal Thackeray—a cartoonist by profession—started Marmik, a magazine in Marathi. This magazine was inaugurated by Yashwantrao Chavan, the then chief minister of Maharashtra. Back then, there was a Congress government in Maharashtra, and Thackeray had an amicable relationship with its party leaders. Through Marmik, Thackeray started taking on various issues that affected the Marathi manoos or ‘the sons of the soil’. On the sidelines, the Shiv Sena was taking shape as an organisation. In time, anti-establishment agitations or ‘tod-phod agitations’ became central to the Sena. Thackeray’s aggressive posturing started drawing in the youth. For several years, the organisation was centred in Mumbai. Slowly, Thackeray encouraged its growth in neighbouring Pune, which is closely linked to the history of the Maratha warrior king Chhatrapati Shivaji. According to a sainik who has been with Thackeray since the inception of Shiv Sena, the weaving of the Maratha ruler’s mythology into the Sena’s ideology came in much later as the organisation evolved.