Subhas Chandra Bose (
listen (help·info); 23 January 1897 – 18 August 1945) was an Indian nationalist whose attempt during
World War II to rid India of
British rule with the help of
Nazi Germany and
Japan left a troubled legacy. The honorific
Netaji (
Hindustani language: "Respected Leader"), first applied to Bose in Germany, by the Indian soldiers of the
Indische Legion and by the German and Indian officials in the
Special Bureau for India in Berlin, in early 1942, was by 1990 used widely throughout India.
Earlier, Bose had been a leader of the younger, radical, wing of the
Indian National Congress in the late 1920s and 1930s, rising to become Congress President in 1938 and 1939. However, he was ousted from Congress leadership positions in 1939 following differences with
Mohandas K. Gandhi and the Congress high command. He was subsequently placed under house arrest by the British before escaping from India in 1940.
Bose arrived in Germany in April 1941, where the leadership offered
unexpected, if sometimes ambivalent, sympathy for the cause of India's
independence, contrasting starkly with its attitudes towards other
colonised peoples and ethnic communities. In November 1941, with German funds, a Free India Centre was set up in
Berlin, and soon a Free India Radio, on which Bose broadcast nightly. A 3,000-strong
Free India Legion, comprising Indians captured by
Erwin Rommel's
Afrika Korps, was also formed to aid in a possible future German land invasion of India. During this time Bose also became a father; his wife, or companion,
Emilie Schenkl, whom he had met in 1934, gave birth to
a baby girl.
By spring 1942, in light of Japanese victories in southeast Asia and
changing German priorities, a German invasion of India became untenable,
and Bose became keen to move to southeast Asia.
Adolf Hitler, during his only meeting with Bose in late May 1942, suggested the same, and offered to arrange for a submarine. Identifying strongly with the
Axis powers, and no longer apologetically, Bose boarded a German submarine in February 1943. In Madagascar, he was transferred to a Japanese submarine from which he disembarked in
Japanese-held Sumatra in May 1943.
With Japanese support, Bose revamped the
Indian National Army (INA), then composed of Indian soldiers of the British Indian army who had been captured in the
Battle of Singapore.
To these, after Bose's arrival, were added enlisting Indian civilians
in Malaya and Singapore. The Japanese had come to support a number of
puppet and provisional governments in the captured regions, such as
those in
Burma, the
Philippines and
Manchukuo. Before long the
Provisional Government of Free India, presided by Bose, was formed in the Japanese-occupied
Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Bose had great drive and charisma—creating popular Indian slogans, such as "
Jai Hind,"—and
the INA under Bose was a model of diversity by region, ethnicity,
religion, and even gender. However, Bose turned out to be militarily
unskilled, and his military effort was short lived. In late 1944 and early 1945 the
British Indian Army first halted and then devastatingly reversed the Japanese
attack on India. Almost half the Japanese forces and fully half the participating INA contingent were killed. The INA was driven down the Malay Peninsula, and surrendered with the
recapture of Singapore.
Bose had earlier chosen not to surrender with his forces or with the
Japanese, but rather to escape to Manchuria with a view to seeking a
future in the Soviet Union which he believed to be turning anti-British.
He died from third degree burns received when his plane crashed in
Taiwan. Some Indians, however, did not believe that the crash had occurred,
[23] with many among them, especially in Bengal, believing that Bose would return to gain India's independence.
The Indian National Congress,
the main instrument of Indian nationalism, praised Bose's patriotism
but distanced itself from his tactics and ideology, especially his
collaboration with Fascism. The
British Raj, though never seriously threatened by the INA, charged 300 INA officers with treason in the
INA trials, but eventually backtracked in the face both of popular sentiment and of its own end.
Early life: 1897–1921
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Subhas Bose, standing, extreme right, with his family of 14 siblings in Cuttack, ca. 1905.
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Jankinath Bose, Subhas Bose's father, was a prominent and wealthy lawyer in Cuttack.
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Subhas Bose (standing, right) with friends in England, 1920
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Bose as a student in England preparing for his Indian Civil Service entrance examination, ca. 1920. Bose ranked fourth among the six successful entrants.
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Subhas Chandra Bose was born on 23 January 1897 (at 12.10 pm) in
Cuttack,
Orissa Division, Bengal Province, to Prabhavati Devi and
Janakinath Bose, an advocate.
[30] He was the ninth in a family of 14 children.
He was admitted to the Protestant European School, like his brothers
and sisters, in January 1902. He continued his studies at this school
which was run by the Baptist Mission up to 1909 and then shifted to the
Ravenshaw Collegiate School. The day Subhas was admitted to this school,
Beni Madhab Das,
the headmaster, understood how brilliant and scintillating his genius
was. After securing the second position in the matriculation examination
in 1913, he got admitted to the
Presidency College where he studied briefly.
[31]
His nationalistic temperament came to light when he was expelled for
assaulting Professor Oaten for the latter's anti-India comments. He
later joined the
Scottish Church College at the
University of Calcutta and passed his B.A. in 1918 in philosophy.
[32] Bose left India in 1919 for England with a promise to his father that he would appear in the
Indian Civil Services (ICS) examination. He went to study in
Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge
and matriculated on 19 November 1919. He came fourth in the ICS
examination and was selected, but he did not want to work under an alien
government which would mean serving the British. As he stood on the
verge of taking the plunge by resigning from the Indian Civil Service in
1921, he wrote to his elder brother
Sarat Chandra Bose: "Only on the soil of sacrifice and suffering can we raise our national edifice."
[33]
He resigned from his civil service job on 23 April 1921 and returned to India.
[34]
With Indian National Congress: 1921–1932
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Bose at the inauguration of the India Society in Prague in 1926.
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Bose at his residence in Calcutta in the late 1920s.
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Subhas Bose, GOC (General Officer Commanding) of the Congress Volunteer Corps (in military uniform) with Congress president, Motilal Nehru, who is taking the salute. Annual meeting, Indian National Congress, December 29, 1928.
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Subhas Chandra Bose with Congress Volunteers, 1929
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He started the newspaper
Swaraj and took charge of publicity for the Bengal Provincial Congress Committee.
[35] His mentor was
Chittaranjan Das who was a spokesman for aggressive nationalism in
Bengal.
In the year 1923, Bose was elected the President of All India Youth
Congress and also the Secretary of Bengal State Congress. He was also
editor of the newspaper "Forward", founded by Chittaranjan Das.
[36] Bose worked as the CEO of the
Calcutta Municipal Corporation for Das when the latter was elected mayor of Calcutta in 1924.
[37] In a roundup of nationalists in 1925, Bose was arrested and sent to prison in
Mandalay, where he contracted
tuberculosis.
[38]
In 1927, after being released from prison, Bose became general secretary of the Congress party and worked with
Jawaharlal Nehru for independence. In late December 1928, Bose organized the Annual Meeting of the
Indian National Congress in Calcutta. His most memorable role was as General Officer Commanding (GOC) Congress Volunteer Corps. Author
Nirad Chaudhuri wrote about the meeting:
Bose organized a volunteer corps in uniform, its officers being even
provided with steel-cut epaulettes ... his uniform was made by a firm of
British tailors in Calcutta, Harman's. A telegram addressed to him as
GOC was delivered to the British General in Fort William and was the
subject of a good deal of malicious gossip in the (British Indian)
press. Mahatma Gandhi being a sincere pacifist vowed to non-violence,
did not like the strutting, clicking of boots, and saluting, and he
afterwards described the Calcutta session of the Congress as a Bertram
Mills circus, which caused a great deal of indignation among the
Bengalis.
A little later, Bose was again arrested and jailed for
civil disobedience; this time he emerged to become Mayor of
Calcutta in 1930.
[40] During the mid-1930s Bose travelled in Europe, visiting Indian students and European politicians, including
Benito Mussolini. He observed party organisation and saw communism and fascism in action.
[citation needed] In this period, he also researched and wrote the first part of his book
The Indian Struggle,
which covered the country's independence movement in the years
1920–1934. Although it was published in London in 1935, the British
government banned the book in the colony out of fears that it would
encourage unrest.
[41] By 1938 Bose had become a leader of national stature and agreed to accept nomination as Congress President.
Pasumpon Muthuramalinga Thevar known for his close friendship with Nethaji Subash Chandra Bose.
Illness, Austria, Emilie Schenkl 1933–1937
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This section requires expansion. (April 2015) |
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Bose convalescing in Bad Gastein, Austria, after surgery in early 1933.
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Bose in the Himalayan resort town of Dalhousie, India (June 1937), where he was convalescing, receiving Mirabehn, a disciple and emissary of Mahatma Gandhi,
who had been sent by Gandhi to enquire about his health. From left to
right are shown: Bose, Dr. N. R. Dharamvir (Bose's friend and
physician), Mirabehn, and Mrs. Dharamvir.
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Bose, Indian National Congress president-elect, center, in Bad Gastein, Austria, December 1937, with (left to right) A. C. N. Nambiar (who was later to be Bose's second-in-command in Berlin, 1941–1945), Heidi Fulop-Miller, Emilie Schenkl, and Amiya Bose.
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With Indian National Congress 1937–1940
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Bose,
the president-elect of the Indian National Congress, arrives in
Calcutta on 24 January 1938 after a two-month vacation in Europe where
he had spent one and a half months with Emilie Schenkl at the spa resort of Bad Gastein, and had secretly married her on 26 December 1937.
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Congress president Bose with Mohandas K. Gandhi at the Congress annual general meeting 1938.
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Bose at the Lahore City Railway Station on 24 November 1938.
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Bose
arriving at the 1939 annual session of the Congress, where he was
re-elected, but later had to resign after disagreements with Gandhi and
the Congress High Command.
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He stood for unqualified
Swaraj
(self-governance), including the use of force against the British. This
meant a confrontation with Mohandas Gandhi, who in fact opposed Bose's
presidency,
[44] splitting the
Indian National Congress
party. Bose attempted to maintain unity, but Gandhi advised Bose to
form his own cabinet. The rift also divided Bose and Nehru. Bose
appeared at the 1939 Congress meeting on a stretcher. He was elected
president again over Gandhi's preferred candidate
Pattabhi Sitaramayya.
[45] U. Muthuramalingam Thevar strongly supported Bose in the intra-Congress dispute. Thevar mobilised all south India votes for Bose.
[46]
However, due to the manoeuvrings of the Gandhi-led clique in the
Congress Working Committee, Bose found himself forced to resign from the
Congress presidency.
[47] On 22 June 1939 Bose organised the
All India Forward Bloc a faction within the Indian National Congress,
[48]
aimed at consolidating the political left, but its main strength was in
his home state, Bengal. U Muthuramalingam Thevar, who was a staunch
supporter of Bose from the beginning, joined the Forward Bloc. When Bose
visited Madurai on 6 September, Thevar organised a massive rally as his
reception When Subash Chandra Bose was heading to Madurai, on an
invitation of
Muthuramalinga Thevar
to amass support for the Forward Bloc, he passed through Madras and
spent three days at Gandhi Peak. His correspondence reveals that despite
his clear dislike for British subjugation, he was deeply impressed by
their methodical and systematic approach and their steadfastly
disciplinarian outlook towards life. In England, he exchanged ideas on
the future of India with British
Labour Party leaders and political thinkers like
Lord Halifax,
George Lansbury,
Clement Attlee,
Arthur Greenwood,
Harold Laski,
J.B.S. Haldane,
Ivor Jennings,
G.D.H. Cole,
Gilbert Murray and Sir
Stafford Cripps. He came to believe that an independent India needed socialist
authoritarianism, on the lines of Turkey's
Kemal Atatürk, for at least two decades. Bose was refused permission by the British authorities to meet Atatürk at
Ankara for political reasons. During his sojourn in England, only the Labour Party and
Liberal politicians agreed to meet with Bose when he tried to schedule appointments.
Conservative Party
officials refused to meet Bose or show him courtesy because he was a
politician coming from a colony. In the 1930s leading figures in the
Conservative Party had opposed even
Dominion
status for India. It was during the Labour Party government of
1945–1951, with Attlee as the Prime Minister, that India gained
independence. On the outbreak of war, Bose advocated a campaign of mass
civil disobedience to protest against Viceroy
Lord Linlithgow's
decision to declare war on India's behalf without consulting the
Congress leadership. Having failed to persuade Gandhi of the necessity
of this, Bose organised mass protests in
Calcutta calling for the '
Holwell Monument' commemorating the
Black Hole of Calcutta, which then stood at the corner of
Dalhousie Square, to be removed.
[49]
He was thrown in jail by the British, but was released following a
seven-day hunger strike. Bose's house in Calcutta was kept under
surveillance by the
CID.
[50]
In Nazi Germany: 1941–1943
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Bose (2nd from left) talking to Himmler and other Nazi officials.
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Bose and Himmler continuing their discussion over refreshments.
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A
photograph from the German Federal Archives, whose caption says, "The
ceremony, which took place on the occasion of the founding of the Indian
National Provisional Government of Free India Centre at the Hotel Kaiserhof
in Berlin (16 November 1943), turned out to be a flaming indictment of
the British war hunger in India. In addition to numerous leading German
personalities, the Japanese ambassador, General Oshima and the
Republican-fascist Italy, his excellence Anfuso,
attended the event. Shown here is the Secretary of State in the Foreign
Office, Keppler, bringing greetings and wishes of the Foreign Minister
von Ribbentrop."
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Bose meeting Adolf Hitler
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Bose's arrest and subsequent release set the scene for his escape to Germany, via
Afghanistan
and the Soviet Union. A few days before his escape, he sought solitude
and, on this pretext, avoided meeting British guards and grew a beard on
the night of his escape. He dressed as a Pathan to avoid being
identified. Bose escaped from under British surveillance at his house in
Calcutta on 19 January 1941, accompanied by his nephew Sisir K. Bose in
a car that is now on display at his Calcutta home.
[51][52]
He journeyed to
Peshawar with the help of the
Abwehr, where he was met by Akbar Shah, Mohammed Shah and
Bhagat Ram Talwar.
Bose was taken to the home of Abad Khan, a trusted friend of Akbar
Shah's. On 26 January 1941, Bose began his journey to reach Russia
through
British India's
North West frontier
with Afghanistan. For this reason, he enlisted the help of Mian Akbar
Shah, then a Forward Bloc leader in the North-West Frontier Province.
Shah had been out of India en route to the Soviet Union, and suggested a
novel disguise for Bose to assume. Since Bose could not speak one word
of
Pashto,
it would make him an easy target of Pashto speakers working for the
British. For this reason, Shah suggested that Bose act deaf and dumb,
and let his beard grow to mimic those of the tribesmen. Bose's guide
Bhagat Ram Talwar, unknown to him, was a Soviet agent.
[51][52][53]
Supporters of the
Aga Khan III helped him across the border into
Afghanistan where he was met by an Abwehr unit posing as a party of road construction engineers from the
Organization Todt who then aided his passage across Afghanistan via
Kabul to the border with
Soviet Russia. After assuming the guise of a
Pashtun
insurance agent ("Ziaudddin") to reach Afghanistan, Bose changed his
guise and travelled to Moscow on the Italian passport of an Italian
nobleman "Count Orlando Mazzotta". From Moscow, he reached
Rome, and from there he travelled to
Germany.
[51][52][54] Once in Russia the
NKVD transported Bose to
Moscow
where he hoped that Russia's traditional enmity to British rule in
India would result in support for his plans for a popular rising in
India. However, Bose found the Soviets' response disappointing and was
rapidly passed over to the German Ambassador in Moscow,
Count von der Schulenburg. He had Bose flown on to
Berlin in a special courier aircraft at the beginning of April where he was to receive a more favourable hearing from
Joachim von Ribbentrop and the Foreign Ministry officials at the
Wilhelmstrasse.
[51][52][55]
In Germany, he was attached to the Special Bureau for India under
Adam von Trott zu Solz which was responsible for broadcasting on the German-sponsored
Azad Hind Radio.
[56] He founded the Free India Center in Berlin, and created the
Indian Legion (consisting of some 4500 soldiers) out of Indian prisoners of war who had previously fought for the British in
North Africa prior to their capture by Axis forces. The Indian Legion was attached to the Wehrmacht, and later transferred to the
Waffen SS.
Its members swore the following allegiance to Hitler and Bose: "I swear
by God this holy oath that I will obey the leader of the German race
and state,
Adolf Hitler,
as the commander of the German armed forces in the fight for India,
whose leader is Subhas Chandra Bose". This oath clearly abrogates
control of the Indian legion to the German armed forces whilst stating
Bose's overall leadership of India. He was also, however, prepared to
envisage an invasion of India via the USSR by Nazi troops, spearheaded
by the
Azad Hind Legion;
many have questioned his judgment here, as it seems unlikely that the
Germans could have been easily persuaded to leave after such an
invasion, which might also have resulted in an Axis victory in the War.
[54]
In all, 3,000 Indian prisoners of war signed up for the Free India
Legion. But instead of being delighted, Bose was worried. A left-wing
admirer of Russia, he was devastated when Hitler's tanks rolled across
the Soviet border. Matters were worsened by the fact that the
now-retreating German army would be in no position to offer him help in
driving the British from India. When he met Hitler in May 1942, his
suspicions were confirmed, and he came to believe that the Nazi leader
was more interested in using his men to win propaganda victories than
military ones. So, in February 1943, Bose turned his back on his
legionnaires and slipped secretly away aboard a submarine bound for
Japan. This left the men he had recruited leaderless and demoralised in
Germany.
[54][57]
Bose lived in Berlin from 1941 until 1943. During his earlier visit to Germany in 1934, he had met
Emilie Schenkl, the daughter of an Austrian veterinarian whom he married in 1937. Their daughter is
Anita Bose Pfaff.
[58] Bose's party, the Forward Bloc, has contested this fact.
[59]
In 1943, after being disillusioned that Germany could be of any help
in gaining India's independence, he left for Japan. He travelled with
the German submarine
U-180 around the
Cape of Good Hope to the southeast of Madagascar, where he was transferred to the
I-29 for the rest of the journey to
Imperial Japan. This was the only civilian transfer between two submarines of two different navies in World War II.
[51][52]
In Japanese-occupied Asia 1943–1945
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The crew of Japanese submarine I-29 after the rendezvous with German submarine U-180 300 sm southeast of Madagascar; Bose is sitting in the front row (28 April 1943).
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Bose meeting Japanese prime minister Hideki Tōjō in 1943
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Bose speaking in Tokyo in 1943.
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Greater East Asia Conference
in November 1943, showing Japanese prime minister Hideki Tōjō (centre)
with heads of various Japan-supported puppet, collaborationist, or
provisional regimes, from left to right: Ba Maw (Burma), Zhang Jinghui ( Manchukuo), Wang Jingwei ( Republic of China, Nanjing), Tojo, Wan Waithayakon ( Siam), José P. Laurel ( Second Philippine Republic), Bose ( Provisional Government of Free India).
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The
Indian National Army (INA) was the brainchild of Japanese Major (and post-war Lieutenant-General)
Iwaichi Fujiwara, head the Japanese intelligence unit
Fujiwara Kikan and had its origins, first in the meetings between Fujiwara and the president of the
Bangkok chapter of the
Indian Independence League,
Pritam Singh Dhillon, and then, through Pritam Singh's network, in the recruitment by Fujiwara of a captured British Indian army captain,
Mohan Singh on the western
Malayan peninsula in December 1941; Fujiwara's mission was "to raise an army which would fight alongside the Japanese army."
After the initial proposal by Fujiwara the Indian National Army was
formed as a result of discussion between Fujiwara and Mohan Singh in the
second half of December 1941, and the name chosen jointly by them in
the first week of January 1942. .
This was along the concept of—and with support of—what was then known as the
Indian Independence League, headed by expatriate nationalist leader
Rash Behari Bose. The first INA was however disbanded in December 1942 after disagreements between the
Hikari Kikan
and Mohan Singh, who came to believe that the Japanese High Command was
using the INA as a mere pawn and propaganda tool. Mohan Singh was taken
into custody and the troops returned to the prisoner-of-war camp.
However, the idea of an independence army was revived with the arrival
of Subhas Chandra Bose in the Far East in 1943. In July, at a meeting in
Singapore, Rash Behari Bose handed over control of the organisation to
Subhas Chandra Bose. Bose was able to reorganise the fledgling army and
organise massive support among the expatriate Indian population in
south-east Asia, who lent their support by both enlisting in the Indian
National Army, as well as financially in response to Bose's calls for
sacrifice for the independence cause. INA had a separate women's unit,
the
Rani of Jhansi Regiment (named after Rani
Lakshmi Bai) headed by Capt.
Lakshmi Swaminathan, which is seen as a first of its kind in Asia.
[63][64]
Even when faced with military reverses, Bose was able to maintain support for the
Azad Hind movement. Spoken as a part of a motivational speech for the Indian National Army at a rally of Indians in
Burma
on 4 July 1944, Bose's most famous quote was "Give me blood, and I
shall give you freedom!" In this, he urged the people of India to join
him in his fight against the British Raj.
[citation needed]
Spoken in Hindi, Bose's words are highly evocative. The troops of the
INA were under the aegis of a provisional government, the Azad Hind
Government, which came to produce its own currency, postage stamps,
court and civil code, and was recognised by nine Axis states—Germany,
Japan,
Italy, the
Independent State of Croatia,
Wang Jingwei regime in
Nanjing, China, a provisional government of Burma,
Manchukuo and Japanese-controlled
Philippines. Recent researches have shown that the USSR too had diplomatic contact with the "
Provisional Government of Free India". Of those countries, five were authorities established under Axis occupation. This government participated in the so-called
Greater East Asia Conference as an observer in November 1943.
[citation needed]
The INA's first commitment was in the Japanese thrust towards Eastern Indian frontiers of
Manipur.
INA's special forces, the Bahadur Group, were extensively involved in
operations behind enemy lines both during the diversionary attacks in
Arakan, as well as the Japanese thrust towards
Imphal and
Kohima, along with the
Burmese National Army led by
Ba Maw and
Aung San.
[citation needed]
Japanese also took possession of Andaman and Nicobar Islands in 1942 and a year later, the Provisional Government and the INA were established in the
Andaman and Nicobar Islands with Lt Col.
A.D. Loganathan appointed its Governor General. The islands were renamed
Shaheed (Martyr) and
Swaraj
(Independence). However, the Japanese Navy remained in essential
control of the island's administration. During Bose's only visit to the
islands in early 1944, when he was carefully screened, by the Japanese
authorities, from the local population who
[clarification needed] at that time were torturing the leader of the Indian Independence League on the Islands, Dr.
Diwan Singh, who later died of his injuries, in the
Cellular Jail.
The islanders made several attempts to alert Bose to their plight, but
apparently without success. Enraged with the lack of administrative
control, Lt. Col Loganathan later relinquished his authority and
returned to the Government's headquarters in Rangoon.
[65][66]
On the Indian mainland, an Indian Tricolour, modelled after that of the
Indian National Congress, was raised for the first time in the town in
Moirang, in
Manipur,
in north-eastern India. The towns of Kohima and Imphal were placed
under siege by divisions of the Japanese, Burmese National Army and the
Gandhi and Nehru Brigades of INA during the attempted invasion of India,
also known as Operation U-GO. However, Commonwealth forces held both
positions and then counter-attacked, in the process inflicting serious
losses on the besieging forces, which were then forced to retreat back
into Burma.
When Japanese funding for the army diminished, Bose was forced to raise taxes on the
Indian populations of Malaysia
and Singapore. When the Japanese were defeated at the battles of Kohima
and Imphal, the Provisional Government's aim of establishing a base in
mainland India was lost forever.
[citation needed]
The INA was forced to pull back, along with the retreating Japanese
army, and fought in key battles against the British Indian Army in its
Burma campaign, notable in Meiktilla,
Mandalay,
Pegu, Nyangyu and
Mount Popa. However, with the fall of
Rangoon, Bose's government ceased to be an effective political entity.
[citation needed] A large proportion of the INA troops surrendered under Lt Col Loganathan. The remaining troops retreated with Bose towards
Malaya or made for
Thailand.
Japan's surrender at the end of the war also led to the eventual
surrender of the Indian National Army, when the troops of the British
Indian Army were repatriated to India and some tried for treason.
[citation needed]
On 6 July 1944, in a speech broadcast by the
Azad Hind Radio
from Singapore, Bose addressed Mahatma Gandhi as the "Father of the
Nation" and asked for his blessings and good wishes for the war he was
fighting. This was the first time that Gandhi was referred to by this
appellation.
[67]
His most famous quote/slogan was
Give me blood and I will give you freedom.
[68][69] Another famous quote was
Dilli Chalo ("On to Delhi)!" This was the call he used to give the INA armies to motivate them.
Jai Hind,
or, "Glory to India!" was another slogan used by him and later adopted
by the Government of India and the Indian Armed Forces. Another slogan
coined by him was "
Ittefaq, Etemad, Qurbani" (Urdu for "Unity, Agreement, Sacrifice"). INA also used the slogan
Inquilab Zindabad, which was coined by
Maulana Hasrat Mohani.
[70]
Death on 18 August 1945
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The last airplane journeys of Subhas Chandra Bose. Paths of completed flights are shown in blue. On 16 August 1945, he left Singapore for Bangkok, Siam (now Thailand). On either the 16th itself or on the 17th morning, he flew from Bangkok to Saigon, now Ho Chi Minh City. On the 17 August afternoon, he flew from Saigon to Tourane, French Indo-China, now Da Nang, Vietnam. Early next morning at 5 AM, he left Tourane for Taihoku, Formosa, now Taipei, Taiwan. At 2:30 PM on 18 August, he left for Dairen, Manchukuo,
now Dalian, China, but his plane crashed shortly after take off, and
Bose died within a few hours in a Japanese military hospital. Had the
crash not occurred the plane would have dropped off Bose at Dairen and
proceeded to Tokyo along a flight path shown in red.
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The Mitsubishi Ki-21 twin-engine heavy bomber ( Allies code name Sally) that Subhas Chandra Bose and Habibur Rahman boarded at Saigon airport around 2 PM on 17 August 1945.
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Clipping from Japanese newspaper, published on 23 August 1945, reporting the death of Bose and General Tsunamasa Shidei of the Japanese Kwantung Army in Japanese-occupied Manchuria.
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A memorial to Subhas Chandra Bose in the compound of the Renkōji Temple,
Tokyo. Bose's ashes are stored in the temple in a golden pagoda. Bose
died on 18 August 1945. His ashes arrived in Japan in early September
1945; after a memorial service, they were accepted by the temple on 18
September 1945.
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In the consensus of scholarly opinion, Subhas Chandra Bose's death
occurred from third-degree burns on 18 August 1945 after his overloaded
Japanese plane crashed in Japanese-occupied
Formosa (now
Taiwan).
[23]
However, many among his supporters, especially in Bengal, refused at
the time, and have refused since, to believe either the fact or the
circumstances of his death. Conspiracy theories appeared within hours of his death and have thereafter had a long shelf life, keeping alive various martial myths about Bose.
In
Taihoku,
at around 2:30 PM as the bomber with Bose on board was leaving the
standard path taken by aircraft during take-off, the passengers inside
heard a loud sound, similar to an engine backfiring. The mechanics on the tarmac saw something fall out of the plane. It was portside engine, or a part of it, and the propeller. The plane swung wildly to the right and plummeted, crashing, breaking into two, and exploding into flames. Inside, the chief pilot, copilot and Lieutenant-General
Tsunamasa Shidei,
the Vice Chief of Staff of the Japanese Kwantung Army, who was to have
made the negotiations for Bose with the Soviet army in Manchuria, were instantly killed. Bose's assistant
Habibur Rahman was stunned, passing out briefly, and Bose, although conscious and not fatally hurt, was soaked in gasoline. When Rahman came to, he and Bose attempted to leave by the rear door, but found it blocked by the luggage. They then decided to run through the flames and exit from the front. The ground staff, now approaching the plane, saw two people staggering towards them, one of whom had become a human torch. The human torch turned out to be Bose, whose gasoline-soaked clothes had instantly ignited. Rahman and a few others managed to smother the flames, but also noticed that Bose's face and head appeared badly burned.
According to Joyce Chapman Lebra, "A truck which served as ambulance
rushed Bose and the other passengers to the Nanmon Military Hospital
south of Taihoku." The airport personnel called Dr. Taneyoshi Yoshimi, the surgeon-in-charge at the hospital at around 3 PM. Bose was conscious and mostly coherent when they reached the hospital, and for some time thereafter.
Bose was naked, except for a blanket wrapped around him, and Dr.
Yoshimi immediately saw evidence of third-degree burns on many parts of
the body, especially on his chest, doubting very much that he would
live. Dr. Yoshimi promptly began to treat Bose and was assisted by Dr. Tsuruta. According to historian
Leonard A. Gordon, who interviewed all the hospital personnel later,
A disinfectant, Rivamol,
was put over most of his body and then a white ointment was applied and
he was bandaged over most of his body. Dr. Yoshimi gave Bose four
injections of Vita Camphor and two of Digitamine
for his weakened heart. These were given about every 30 minutes. Since
his body had lost fluids quickly upon being burnt, he was also given Ringer solution
intravenously. A third doctor, Dr. Ishii gave him a blood transfusion.
An orderly, Kazuo Mitsui, an army private, was in the room and several
nurses were also assisting. Bose still had a clear head which Dr.
Yoshimi found remarkable for someone with such severe injuries.
Soon, in spite of the treatment, Bose went into a coma. A few hours later, between 9 and 10 PM (local time) on Saturday 18 August 1945, Subhas Chandra Bose, aged 48, was dead.
Bose's body was cremated in the main Taihoku crematorium two days later, 20 August 1945. On 23 August 1945, the Japanese news agency Do Trzei announced the death of Bose and Shidea.
On 7 September a Japanese officer, Lieutenant Tatsuo Hayashida, carried
Bose's ashes to Tokyo, and the following morning they were handed to
the president of the Tokyo Indian Independence League, Rama Murti.
On 14 September a memorial service was held for Bose in Tokyo and a few
days later the ashes were turned over to the priest of the
Renkōji Temple of
Nichiren Buddhism in Tokyo. There they have remained ever since.
Among the INA personnel, there was widespread disbelief, shock, and
trauma. Most affected were the young Tamil Indians from Malaya and
Singapore, both men and women, who comprised the bulk of the civilians
who had enlisted in the INA.
The professional soldiers in the INA, most of whom were Punjabis, faced
an uncertain future, with many fatalistically expecting reprisals from
the British. In India the
Indian National Congress's official line was succinctly expressed in a letter
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi wrote to
Rajkumari Amrit Kaur. Said Gandhi, "Subhas Bose has died well. He was undoubtedly a patriot, though misguided." Many congressmen had not forgiven Bose for quarrelling with Gandhi and for collaborating with what they considered was
Japanese fascism. The Indian soldiers in the British Indian army, some two and a half million of whom had fought during the
Second World War, were conflicted about the INA. Some saw the INA as traitors and wanted them punished; others felt more sympathetic. The
British Raj, though never seriously threatened by the INA, tried 300 INA officers for treason in the
INA trials, but eventually backtracked.
Ideology
Bose advocated complete unconditional independence for India, whereas the
All-India Congress Committee wanted it in phases, through
Dominion status. Finally at the historic
Lahore Congress convention, the Congress adopted
Purna Swaraj
(complete independence) as its motto. Gandhi was given rousing
receptions wherever he went after Gandhi-Irwin pact. Subhas Chandra
Bose, travelling with Gandhi in these travels, later wrote that the
great enthusiasm he saw among the people enthused him tremendously and
that he doubted if any other leader anywhere in the world received such a
reception as Gandhi did during these travels across the country. He was
imprisoned and expelled from India. Defying the ban, he came back to
India and was imprisoned again.
[citation needed]
Bose was elected president of the
Indian National Congress for two consecutive terms, but had to resign from the post following ideological conflicts with
Mohandas K. Gandhi
and after openly attacking the Congress' foreign and internal policies.
Bose believed that Gandhi's tactics of non-violence would never be
sufficient to secure India's independence, and advocated violent
resistance. He established a separate political party, the
All India Forward Bloc
and continued to call for the full and immediate independence of India
from British rule. He was imprisoned by the British authorities eleven
times. His famous motto was: "
Give me blood and I will give you freedom".
[68][69]
His stance did not change with the outbreak of the
Second World War,
which he saw as an opportunity to take advantage of British weakness.
At the outset of the war, he left India, travelling to the
Soviet Union,
Nazi Germany and
Imperial Japan,
seeking an alliance with each of them to attack the British government
in India. With Imperial Japanese assistance, he re-organised and later
led the
Azad Hind Fauj or
Indian National Army (INA), formed with Indian
prisoners-of-war and plantation workers from
British Malaya,
Singapore, and other parts of Southeast Asia, against British forces.
With Japanese monetary, political, diplomatic and military assistance,
he formed the
Azad Hind Government in exile, and regrouped and led the
Indian National Army in failed military campaigns against the allies at
Imphal and
in Burma.
His political views and the alliances he made with Nazi and other
militarist regimes at war with Britain have been the cause of arguments
among historians and politicians, with some accusing him of fascist
sympathies, while others in India have been more sympathetic towards the
realpolitik that guided his social and political choices.
Subhas Chandra Bose believed that the
Bhagavad Gita was a great source of inspiration for the struggle against the British.
[84] Swami Vivekananda's
teachings on universalism, his nationalist thoughts and his emphasis on
social service and reform had all inspired Subhas Chandra Bose from his
very young days. The fresh interpretation of the India's ancient
scriptures had appealed immensely to him.
[note 1]
Many scholars believe that Hindu spirituality formed the essential part
of his political and social thought throughout his adult life, although
there was no sense of bigotry or orthodoxy in it.
[85] Subhas who called himself a socialist, believed that socialism in India owed its origins to Swami Vivekananda.
[86]
As historian Leonard Gordon explains "Inner religious explorations
continued to be a part of his adult life. This set him apart from the
slowly growing number of atheistic socialists and communists who dotted
the Indian landscape.".
[87]
Bose's correspondence (prior to 1939) reflects his deep disapproval
of the racist practices of, and annulment of democratic institutions in
Nazi Germany.
[88]
However, he expressed admiration for the authoritarian methods (though
not the racial ideologies) which he saw in Italy and Germany during the
1930s, and thought they could be used in building an independent India.
[49]
Bose had clearly expressed his belief that democracy was the best option for India.
[89] The pro-Bose thinkers believe that his authoritarian control of the
Azad Hind was based on political pragmatism and a post-colonial doctrine rather than any anti-democratic belief.
[citation needed]
However, during the war (and possibly as early as the 1930s), Bose
seems to have decided that no democratic system could be adequate to
overcome India's poverty and social inequalities, and he wrote that a
socialist state similar to that of Soviet Russia (which he had also seen
and admired) would be needed for the process of national re-building.
[90]
Accordingly, some suggest that Bose's alliance with the Axis during the
war was based on more than just pragmatism, and that Bose was a
militant nationalist, though not a Nazi nor a Fascist, for he supported
empowerment of women, secularism and other
liberal
ideas; alternatively, others consider he might have been using populist
methods of mobilisation common to many post-colonial leaders.
[49]
Bose never liked the Nazis, but when he failed to contact the Russians
for help in Afghanistan, he approached the Germans and Italians for
help. His comment was that if he had to shake hands with the devil for
India's independence he would do that.
[citation needed]
5 April 1944, the "Azad Hind Bank" was inaugurated at
Rangoon. It was on this occasion that Netaji used this chair for the first time.
Legacy
On 23 August 2007,
Japanese Prime Minister,
Shinzo Abe visited the Subhas Chandra Bose
memorial hall in
Kolkata.
[91][92] Abe said to Bose's family "The Japanese are deeply moved by Bose's strong will to have led the
Indian independence movement from British rule. Netaji is a much respected name in Japan.
[91][92]
Infosys Technologies founder-chairman
N. R. Narayana Murthy,
delivering the annual Netaji oration, said, "We have not paid him due
respect. It is time this is corrected." Adding, "If only Netaji had
participated in post-independence nation building."
[93][undue weight? – discuss]
A museum, archive and library on Bose are housed in
Netaji Bhavan.
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