Showing posts with label Indian National Army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian National Army. Show all posts

Thursday, January 21, 2021

On the eve of 125th Celebration of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose


It was 21st January 2021, Sri Ramen Mukherjee a retired employee of Prasar Bharati contacted me over the phone. He was enquiring what is our thought on the 125th  celebration of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose, Sri Mukherrjee was with our effort to discuss the Role of Netaji Susbash Chandra Bose, INA, and East Asian Counties for India's freedom struggle, it was held in 2007 at State Central Library.

I briefed our efforts in the brief visit of Kulampur in 2007, depositing a book published in Tamil at our National Library and a survey on INA by the NCC Cadets of NCC Burdwan Group.

[10:55 AM, 1/20/2021] Sushanta De: Good morning, Are you at present in Kolkata? Are u working for a celebration for Netaji?

I am Maj S K De (R) from this city.

[11:37 AM, 1/20/2021] Min of Cult GOI Director Mukesh Jha: I m working for it but currently I m in delhi

Thank you for your reply. Is it possible to share what our GOI, MOC is planning to communicate to citizens?





 [3:06 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: Dear Sir,

I am interested to join your program on Netaji at Kolkata. I have some experience working on Netaji, I will be able to send you that. 

I have attempted to communicate through your email which has not delivered to you. 

The communication to the Institute of Social and Cultural Studies, Kolkata 

I am Maj S K De (R), Secretary The Young Explorer's Institute for Social Service, Kolkata. We organised the program at State Central Library in 2007 and RBU in 2012 the Role of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose, INA for India's freedom struggle.

[3:08 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: https://sushantade.blogspot.com/2020/09/man-i-liked-most.html

[3:08 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: https://sushantade.blogspot.com/2015/03/our-role-on-netaji-subash-chandra-bose.html

[3:08 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: https://sushantade.blogspot.com/2016/06/my-experience-in-projecting-netaji.html

[3:49 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: I have been informed by the staff of the Institute that they have received my request.

[3:52 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: The Young Explorers' Institute for Social Service had attempted more than once to organise a program at our National Library, but failed to do that. I congratulate you on your success.

[3:57 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: The document on INA which is kept at our National Archive is a private collection, it was under digitization mode, we do not know when it will available online, Is any authority to respond to that?

[3:59 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: Is any authority to inform the citizens how many ex-INA and ex Jhansi Rani are still alive in India if possible in other countries?

[4:01 PM, 1/21/2021] Sushanta De: The State Central Library has compiled books on Netaji & INA in Bengali and English, Is National Library will do for Indian languages?

[4:02 PM, 1/21/2021] Inst of Social and Cultural Studies: As the prime minister has been invited, due to security reasons the list of the invited guests had already been completed. We are sorry we are unable to 

Friday, June 17, 2016

My experience in projecting Netaji Subash Chandra Bose and Indian National Army at the Army Exhibition held in 1984 at Fort William Kolkata



I was an Officer of Territorial Army posted to 107 Infantry Battalion at Lebong, West Bengal.. I was  associated with Army Exhibition which  was held at Fort William South Eastern Side, it was called Ellenbora Ground (opposite to Race Course). As a NCC Cadet I have done Camp there in the past.

It was in  May  1984 this exhibition was held. The Territorial Group HQ was given the responsibility to arrange stalls on Bengal Contribution to India's Independence, Bengal Contribution to Indian Armed Forces. On inquiry we had come to know that Government of West Bengal is having a stall on  our freedom movement, they were requested and they participated in this exhibition.

I got a reference book in Encyclopedia of War Heroes of India, published from New Delhi, it was great help to  project the theme stall. i went to New Delhi, Ministry of Defence Photo Division to select visuals for our exhibition. It was collected from them

The Staff Officer  of TA Group HQ and my self were not happy, so far we could not displayed Netaji Subash Chandra Bose and Indian National Army. The approach was made to Netaji Research Bureau, they supplied the photos and exhibits. Those were suitably displayed. We could collect the audio cassettes  on Netaji speech from various broadcasting stations and INA Songs, the Films Divisions films were available to project.

We were happy that we could projected Netaji Subash Chandra Bose and INA in a proper manner.

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Our role on Netaji Subash Chandra Bose and Indian National Army

1.Last year the whole world heard about British Army Museum’s survey report  on ‘Battles to repel Azad Hind Fauj voted UK’s greatest”
Search result at :
2.The Ex Azad Hind Fauj settled in India they have been sanctioned pension under the following scheme.
SWATANTRATA SAINIK SAMMAN PENSION SCHEME, 1980 FORMERLY KNOWN AS FREEDOM FIGHTERS’ PENSION SCHEME, 1972. ______of dated  15th AUGUST, 1981 under Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India
3. A discussion DD News on 23rd January 2015 on Netaji & INA
4. A discussion :
5. A good number of publications have been published on this subject. Our National Net work of libraries should collect impotant publications for the benefit of Indian nationals for national interest. In the past a civil society of Salt lake, West Bengal  ‘The Young Explorers’ Institute for Social Service’ (TYEISS) approached following agencies:
a)    Raja Rammohan Roy Library Foundation, Kolkata &
b)    National Library. They should procure and arrange for availability to the readers it may be planned  under their existing policies.
6. It is proposed that all our citizens should take part to find out how and what condition they are ( Ex Azad Hind Fauj personnel )who are living in their vicinity. The Akashbani, DD and community radio stations of our country should broadcast/telecast and also up load this audio and video (s) in web so that interested citizens have the access this information. It will be our ‘Sradanjali’ to the great heroes. Indian Independence League (IIL)and Azad Hind Fauj will be 70 years after their surrender in 1945 to Allied Force. The Indian  Banks and Indian Post can take a lead to find out the living Ex Azad Hind Fauj personnel, they are drawing the pension through their branches
7. Our Historians and academicians should take up research and publications for informing the citizens

8. It will be the appropriate if our PMO Office to examine this proposal for the interest of our country. 

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Netaji Subash Chandra Bose

Netaji Subash Chandra Bose
A panel discussion on role of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose and Indian National Army (INA) for India’s Independence was  telecasted on last birth day of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose by Door Darshan News.
INA was raised by Netaji Subash Chandra Bose at Germany, the INA at Singapore was raised by Rash Behari Bose. He handed over the charge of INA after Netaji Subash Chandra Bose arrival at Singapore. He was then supreme commander of INA.
It may be the first time our public broadcaster has given due consideration and the speakers discussed the Nation’s role for not giving due importance in this regard.
A civil society of Kolkata took imitative and organised six days programme at Kolkata in State central Library in January 2007, The school students were involved for this programme. Since then this civil society has approached following agencies for organising programmes on this issue.
a)    All India Radio, b) Door Darshan,c) Song & Drama Division &
d)    DAVP to organise exhibition on Netaji, we understand an exhibition is there at Kolkata but our request to organise exhibition never even acknowledge. The matter was lodged to Public Grivance without any result.
The details of telecast
Published on Jan 23, 2015
Affectionately called 'Netaji'.......Subhas Chandra Bose, was one of the most prominent leaders of Indian freedom struggle. India's freedom struggle cannot be imagined without remembering the great sacrifice and determination and contribution of Subash Chandra Bose. He founded Indian National Army (Azad Hind Fauj) to overthrow British Empire from India and came to acquire legendary status among Indian masses.

o Category News & PoliticsRole of netaji Subash Chandra Bose for India's freedom movement


DD News, 28 mins.36 secs.



Friday, July 11, 2014

Remembering great hero of India

The Young Explorers’ Institute for Social Service (TYEISS) of Kolkata organised six days program in January 2008 on “Role of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose, Indian National Army & East Asian Countries for Indian’s freedom struggle’. The programme was supported by the following agencies :
a)      Government of India
i)                    Ministry of Information & Broadcasting (M&IB)
aa) Films Division
ab) Field Publicity Regional Office Kolkata

ii)                   National Atlas & Thematic Mapping Organisation

b)      Government of West Bengal
i)                    School Education
ii)                   State Central Library
iii)                 Sub Divisional Information & Cultural Office, Salt Lake.
iv)                 NCC Group Burdwan


The students had the scope to attain lectures,film shows,   took part in drawing, quiz & essay competitions.
An effort was made to organise an exhibition on Netaji Subash Chandra Bose holding by the Government of India, Directorate of Audio & Visual  Publicity (DAVP).
The Song & Drama Division of M&IB was requested to stage a drama on Indian National Army, it was also not arranged by them.
TYEISS took the issue with the Government of India since 2008, recently they have received a reply from the MI&B that will be a partner in such endeavor.  Under the above condition, TYEISS is keen to organise such a program at our National Library, Alipore, Kolkata 700027 for 6 days in the month of November 2014 (preferably 2nd week).
It is also proposed that the writers of recent books on Netaji Subash Chandra Bose may please be considered.



Thursday, July 19, 2012

Indian National Army (INA)

After the fall of Singapore in 1942 by the Japanese, during the World War II. The British Indian Army person nel were prisoner of war (POW). On the request of Rashbehari Bose, a great freedom fighter who left India and took shelter in Japan.The British India soldiers who were volunteered and joined Azad Hind Fauj or Indian National Army initially under Capt Mohan Singh. After the arrival of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose at Singapore from Germany the leadership was handed  over to him by Rash Behari Bose. The several publications are available in different languages including e resources.

The National Archives of Singapore is having on line exhibition on INA, you can have a look

National Archives Singaporehttp://www.subhaschandrabose.org/editorial.php?id=YWJlcmFzaWJvKDUpZmlyZQ##


Lucknow Bench order of Allhabad High Court


Article from Times of India

Government of India

Grievance Status

Print || Logout
Status as on 22 Aug 2013
Registration Number:DCLTR/E/2012/00029
Name Of Complainant:The Young Explorers Institute for Social Service
Date of Receipt:09 Mar 2012
Received by:Ministry of Culture
Forwarded to:museum 1
Officer name:Smt.Vanita Sood
Officer Designation:Under Secretary
Contact Address:Room No.333, C-Wing, Shastri Bhawan, New Delhi.
110001
Grievance Description:We might have forgotten the role played by the Indian National Army (INA) for our independence movement. Is there any requirement to preserve the materials of INA. Yes Government of India has sanctioned freedom fighter pension to them, an area has been named as INA in our capital. What about a museum ? Is Ministry of Culture will consider this issue ? It is already more than 64 years passed of our Independence. The matter was raised during the meeting at Kolkata inm 2011 where Secretary of Ministry of Culture was present.
Date of Action:04 Sep 2012




Battles to repel Azad Hind Fauj voted UK’s greatest




The Imphal War Cemetery after a British delegation paid its tribute in April 2006 to the casualties of the Second World War. (Eastern Projections)

London, April 21: The twin battles of Imphal and Kohima, when British troops defeated Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s Azad Hind Fauj and the Japanese army during World War II, have together been chosen as Britain’s greatest battle.



The 1944 Imphal-Kohima battle was picked over the more celebrated battles of D-Day and Waterloo in a contest organised by the National Army Museum.



“Great things were at stake in a war with the toughest enemy any British army has had to fight,” historian Robert Lyman said, making a case for the twin battles in a 40-minute debate at the museum.



If Lt Gen. William Slim’s army of British, Indian, Gurkha and African troops had lost, the consequences for the Allies would have been catastrophic, Lyman said. The Japanese and Netaji’s army lost 53,000 troops (dead and missing). The Allies took 12,500 casualties at Imphal and 4,000 at Kohima.



The successful British defence meant they were later able to push into Burma and beat the Japanese back from mainland Asia.



Lyman suggested that one reason the double battle is relatively un-feted is that Britain played it down because of US President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s opposition to the British empire.



“This was the last real battle of the British empire and the first battle of the new India,” he said. The Indian troops “weren’t fighting for the British or the Raj but for a newly emerging and independent India and against the totalitarianism of Japan”.



Lyman ranked it with Midway, El Alamein and Stalingrad as the turning-point battles of World War II.



Imphal-Kohima was on a shortlist of five battles that had topped a public poll. Waterloo had topped the online poll, which produced a list of 20 land battles fought since the English Civil War (1642-51). Finally, the top five were debated before an audience of more than 100 guests yesterday at the museum in Chelsea before it went to an audience vote.



Imphal-Kohima received almost half the votes, far ahead of D-Day (1944), which received 25 per cent, and Waterloo (1815), which got 22 per cent. Rorke’s Drift in the 1879 Zulu War and the Battle of Aliwal in the 1846 Anglo-Sikh war in Punjab brought up the rear.



“Imphal and Kohima... showed that the Japanese were not invincible.... The victories demonstrate this more than the US in the Pacific, where they were taking them on garrison by garrison,” Lyman said.



The Imphal battle lasted from March till July while the April-June fight for Kohima, though smaller in scale, was so intense that it has been described as the “Stalingrad of the East”. Some veterans of the battles and historians have felt the victories have since been overlooked partly because the invasion of Europe, starting with the June 6 D-Day, took place while they were still being fought.



The contest’s criteria included a battle’s political and historical impact, the challenges the troops faced, and the strategy and tactics used.



The winner was a surprise given the enduring prominence of Waterloo and D-Day in Britain. Indeed, the troops who fought in India and Burma in WWII called themselves “The Forgotten Army”.



The Japanese along with Netaji’s army had poured over the Burmese border to enter India. Fought over a vast area of jungles and mountains, it was marked by vicious hand-to-hand combat.



In one sector, only the width of the town’s tennis court separated the two sides. When the relief forces of the British 2nd Division arrived on April 18, the defensive perimeter had been reduced to a shell-shattered area only 350 metres square.



There are several memorials to the British and Indian troops who fought in the area, including the famous “Kohima Epitaph”. It reads: “When you go home, Tell them of us and say, For their tomorrow, We gave our today.”



Lyman’s adversary in the debate, former Parachute Regiment Colonel Stuart Tootal, argued for the D-Day landings and subsequent Battle for Normandy against Hitler’s Germany. Although popular culture, including movies such as Saving Private Ryan, has highlighted the US role and relegated the British to a supporting cast, the operation was under the command of Britain’s Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery.



The victory decided the outcome of World War II and denied the Russians total control of Berlin. It’s sheer scale and the risk involved made it Britain’s greatest battle, said Tootal, a veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan.



The Duke of Wellington’s victory over Napoleon’s army at Waterloo had gone into the final as favourite. Historian Iain Gale said its consequences were immense for Britain and it has “permeated our nation and its conscience”. Waterloo ended Napoleon’s attempts to dominate Europe. “It prepared the way for the British Empire and the modern world as we know it,” Gale said.



REUTERS AND PTI



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Imphal and Kohima | Britain's Greatest Battles | Online Exhibitions | National Army Museum, London













Battles to repel Azad Hind Fauj voted UK’s greatest



The Imphal War Cemetery after a British delegation paid its tribute in April 2006 to the casualties of the Second World War. (Eastern Projections)

London, April 21: The twin battles of Imphal and Kohima, when British troops defeated Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s Azad Hind Fauj and the Japanese army during World War II, have together been chosen as Britain’s greatest battle.



The 1944 Imphal-Kohima battle was picked over the more celebrated battles of D-Day and Waterloo in a contest organised by the National Army Museum.



“Great things were at stake in a war with the toughest enemy any British army has had to fight,” historian Robert Lyman said, making a case for the twin battles in a 40-minute debate at the museum.



If Lt Gen. William Slim’s army of British, Indian, Gurkha and African troops had lost, the consequences for the Allies would have been catastrophic, Lyman said. The Japanese and Netaji’s army lost 53,000 troops (dead and missing). The Allies took 12,500 casualties at Imphal and 4,000 at Kohima.



The successful British defence meant they were later able to push into Burma and beat the Japanese back from mainland Asia.



Lyman suggested that one reason the double battle is relatively un-feted is that Britain played it down because of US President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s opposition to the British empire.



“This was the last real battle of the British empire and the first battle of the new India,” he said. The Indian troops “weren’t fighting for the British or the Raj but for a newly emerging and independent India and against the totalitarianism of Japan”.



Lyman ranked it with Midway, El Alamein and Stalingrad as the turning-point battles of World War II.



Imphal-Kohima was on a shortlist of five battles that had topped a public poll. Waterloo had topped the online poll, which produced a list of 20 land battles fought since the English Civil War (1642-51). Finally, the top five were debated before an audience of more than 100 guests yesterday at the museum in Chelsea before it went to an audience vote.



Imphal-Kohima received almost half the votes, far ahead of D-Day (1944), which received 25 per cent, and Waterloo (1815), which got 22 per cent. Rorke’s Drift in the 1879 Zulu War and the Battle of Aliwal in the 1846 Anglo-Sikh war in Punjab brought up the rear.



“Imphal and Kohima... showed that the Japanese were not invincible.... The victories demonstrate this more than the US in the Pacific, where they were taking them on garrison by garrison,” Lyman said.



The Imphal battle lasted from March till July while the April-June fight for Kohima, though smaller in scale, was so intense that it has been described as the “Stalingrad of the East”. Some veterans of the battles and historians have felt the victories have since been overlooked partly because the invasion of Europe, starting with the June 6 D-Day, took place while they were still being fought.



The contest’s criteria included a battle’s political and historical impact, the challenges the troops faced, and the strategy and tactics used.



The winner was a surprise given the enduring prominence of Waterloo and D-Day in Britain. Indeed, the troops who fought in India and Burma in WWII called themselves “The Forgotten Army”.



The Japanese along with Netaji’s army had poured over the Burmese border to enter India. Fought over a vast area of jungles and mountains, it was marked by vicious hand-to-hand combat.



In one sector, only the width of the town’s tennis court separated the two sides. When the relief forces of the British 2nd Division arrived on April 18, the defensive perimeter had been reduced to a shell-shattered area only 350 metres square.



There are several memorials to the British and Indian troops who fought in the area, including the famous “Kohima Epitaph”. It reads: “When you go home, Tell them of us and say, For their tomorrow, We gave our today.”



Lyman’s adversary in the debate, former Parachute Regiment Colonel Stuart Tootal, argued for the D-Day landings and subsequent Battle for Normandy against Hitler’s Germany. Although popular culture, including movies such as Saving Private Ryan, has highlighted the US role and relegated the British to a supporting cast, the operation was under the command of Britain’s Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery.



The victory decided the outcome of World War II and denied the Russians total control of Berlin. It’s sheer scale and the risk involved made it Britain’s greatest battle, said Tootal, a veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan.



The Duke of Wellington’s victory over Napoleon’s army at Waterloo had gone into the final as favourite. Historian Iain Gale said its consequences were immense for Britain and it has “permeated our nation and its conscience”. Waterloo ended Napoleon’s attempts to dominate Europe. “It prepared the way for the British Empire and the modern world as we know it,” Gale said.



REUTERS AND PTI



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