“Death is knocking at my door. My mind is flying away towards infinity … this is the moment to myself to embrace death as the dearest of friends. In this happy, sacred and crucial moment, what am I leaving for you all? Only one thing, my dream, a golden dream, the dream of a Free India. Dear friends, march ahead; never retrace your step. Days of servitude are receding. Freedom’s illuminating ray is visible over there. Arise and never give way to despair. Success is sure to come.”
Category Archives: My India
Proclamation of the Provisional Government of Azad Hind
On October 21, 1943, Subhas Chandra Bose announced the formation of the Provisional Government of Azad Hind. Mission Netaji is thankful to The Netaji Centre, Kuala Lumpur for the text of the proclamation.
After their first defeat at the hands of the British in 1757 in Bengal, the Indian people fought an uninterrupted series of hard and bitter battles over a stretch of one hundred years. The history of this period teems with examples of unparalleled heroism and self-sacrifice. And, in the pages of that history, the names of Sirajuddaula and Mohanlal of Bengal, Haider Ali, Tippu Sultan and Velu Tampi of South India, Appa Sahib Bhonsle and Peshwa Baji Rao of Maharashtra, the Begums of Oudh, Sardar Shyam Singh Atariwala of Punjab and last, but not the least, Rani Laxmibai of Jhansi, Tantia Tope, Maharaja Kunwar Singh of Dumraon and Nana Sahib – among others – the names of all these warriors are for ever engraved in letters of gold.
Unfortunately for us, our forefathers did not at first realize that the British constituted a grave threat to the whole of India, and they did not therefore put up a united front against the enemy. Ultimately, when the Indian people were roused to the reality of the situation, they made a concerted move and under the flag of Bahadur Shah in 1857, they fought there last war as free men. In spite of a series of brilliant victories in the early stages of this war, ill-luck and faulty leadership gradually brought about their final collapse and subjugation. Nevertheless, such heroes as the Rani of Jhansi, Tantia Tope, Kunwar Singh and Nana Sahib live like eternal stars in the nation\\’s memory to inspire us to greater deeds of sacrifice and valour.
Forcibly disarmed by the British after 1857 and subjected to terror and brutality, the Indian people lay prostrate for a while-but with the rebirth of the Indian National Congress in 1885, there came a new awakening. From 1885, until the end of the last World War, the Indian people in their endeavor to recover their lost liberty, tried all possible methods- namely agitation and propaganda, boycott of British goods, terrorism and sabotage – and finally armed revolution. But all these efforts failed for a time. Ultimately in 1920, when the Indian people haunted by a sense of failure, were groping for a new method, Mahatma Gandhi came forward with the new weapon of non-co-operation and civil disobedience.
For two decades thereafter, the Indian people went through a phase of intense patriotic activity. The message of freedom was carried to every Indian home. Through personal example, people were taught to suffer, to sacrifice and to die in the cause of freedom. From the centre of the remotest villages, the people were knit together into one political organization.
Thus the Indian people not only recovered their political consciousness but became a political entity once again. They could now speak with one voice and strive with one will for one common goal. From 1937 to 1939, through the work of the Congress Ministers in eight provinces, they gave proof of the readiness and their capacity to administer their own affairs.
Thus, on the eve of the present World War, the stage was set for the final struggle for India\\’s liberation. During the course of this war, Germany with the help of her allies has dealt shattering blows to our enemy in Europe – while Nippon, with the help of her allies, has inflicted a knockout blow to our enemy in East Asia. Favored by a most happy combination of circumstances, the Indian people today have a wonderful opportunity for achieving their national emancipation.
For the first time in recent history, Indians abroad have also been politically roused and united in one organization. They are not only thinking and feeling in tune with their countrymen at home, but are also marching in step with them along the path to freedom. In East Asia, in particular, over two million Indians are now organized as one solid phalanx, inspired by the slogan of \\’Total Mobilisation\\’. And in front of them stand the salaried ranks of India\\’s Army of Liberation, with the slogan \\’Onward to Delhi\\’, on their lips.
Having goaded Indians to desperation by its hypocrisy and having driven them to starvation and death by plunder and loot, British rule in India has forfeited the goodwill of the Indian people altogether and is now living a precarious existence. It needs but a flame to destroy the last vestige of that happy rule. To light that flame is the task of India\\’s Army of Liberation. Assured of enthusiastic support of the civil population at home and also of large sections of Britain\\’s Indian Army, and backed by gallant and invincible allies abroad – but relying in the first instance on its own strength, India\\’s Army of Liberation is confident of fulfilling its historic role.
Now that the dawn of freedom is at hand, it is the duty of the Indian people to set up a provisional Government of their own and launch the last struggle under the banner of the Government. But with all the Indian Leaders in prison and the people at home totally disarmed, it is not possible to set up a Provisional Government. It is therefore the duty of the Indian Independence League in East Asia, supported by all patriotic Indians at home and abroad, to undertake this task – the task of setting up a Provisional Government of Azad Hind (Free India) and of conducting the last fight for freedom, with the help of the Army of Liberation, (that is, the Azad Hind Fauj or the Indian National Army) organized by the League. Having been constituted as the Provisional Government of Azad Hind by the Indian Independence League in East Asia, we enter upon our duties with full sense of responsibility that has devolved on us. We pray that the province may bless our work and struggle for the emancipation of our Motherland. And we hereby pledge our lives for our comrades in arms to the cause of her freedom, of her welfare and her exaltation among the nations of the world.
It will be the task of the Provisional Government to launch and to conduct the struggle that will bring about the expulsion of the British and their allies from the soil of India. It will then be the task of the Provisional Government to bring about the establishment of a permanent National Government of Azad Hind constituted in accordance with the will of the Indian people and enjoying their confidence. After the British and their allies are overthrown and until a permanent National Government of Azad Hind is set up on Indian soil, the Provisional Government will administer the affairs of the country in trust for the Indian people.
The provisional Government is entitled to, and hereby claims, the allegiance of every Indian. It guarantees religious liberty, as well as equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens. It declares its firm resolves to pursue the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and of its parts, cherishing all the children of the nation equally and transcending all the differences cunningly fostered by an alien government in the past.
In the name of God, in the name of bygone generations who have welded the Indian people into one nation, and in the dead heroes who have bequeathed to us a tradition of heroism and self-sacrifice-we call upon the Indian people to rally round our banner and strike for India\\’s freedom. We call upon them to launch the final struggle (against the British and all their allies in India and prosecute that struggle) with valour and perseverance in full faith in final victory – until the enemy is expelled from Indian soil and the Indian people are once again a free nation
Signed on behalf on the Provisional Government of Azad Hind
Subhas Chandra Bose
Head of State, Prime Minister and Minister of War and Foreign Affairs
Captain (Dr) Lakshmi
Women\\’s Organization
SA Ayer
Publicity and Propaganda
Lt -Col AC Chatterji
Finance
Lt-Col Aziz Ahmad, Lt-Col NS Bhagat, Lt-Col JK Bhonsle, Lt-Col Gulzara Singh, Lt-Col MZ Kiani, Lt-Col AD Loganadhan, Lt-Col Ehsan Qadir, Lt-Col Shah Nawaz
Representatives of the Armed Forces
AM Sahay
Secretary (with Ministerial Rank)
Rash Behari Bose
Supreme Advisor
Karim Ghani, Debnath Das, DM Khan, A Yellapa, J Thivy, Sardar Ishar Singh
Adviser
AN Sarkar
Legal Adviser
The Conspiracy Is Still On
The sugata Bose Cabal, vide his latest book ‘His Magesty’s Opponent’, is peddling the same discredited fable of Netaji’s death in Taihoku aircrash that never was. Justice Mukherjee Commission concluded that no such crash took place, as per records of Taiwan govt Netaji did not die on August 18, 1945. Friends let us join hands to stop their hidden agenda.
Friends, the group has become once again active to prove Netaji’s death in the cooked-up plane crash which has already been negated by many international agencies including the Govt. of Taiwan itself. Let us protest against the heinous conspiracy. Join hands to defeat the enimies of our MOTHERLAND.
Expert says Handwritings match
B Lal, the expert appointed by HindustanTimes.com to match Bhagwanji’s and Netaji’s handwritings, has concluded that they are of “common authorship”.
Among other things, Lal says:
There is “no evidence to show that the questioned (Bhagwanji’s) writing has been made by a writer other than SCB (Subhas Chandra Bose) by imitating/copying the writings of SCB”.
Bhagwanji tried to hide his identity but failed.
There are “…similarities in general and individual writing habits, …suggesting common authorship of questioned writings and admitted writings of SCB”.
While pointing to the lack of muscular control, sign of old age and slight tremor in some of the writings, Lal also observes “a reproduction of some peculiarities that even decades could not hide”. As examples, he points to the habit, both of Bhagwanji and Netaji, of using insertion marks to introduce words between sentences, over writing on letters and underlining and bracketing passages for emphasis, making strokes more prominent and writing letters in a certain combination.
Indeed, matching the samples was no easy task. Most of Bhagwanji’s handwriting samples were notes left on the margins of pages. Also, most of the writing samples belonged to the ’70s and ’80s, whereas the samples of Netaji’s writing were of pre-1943 years. To complicate matters, Bhagwanji had also written in upper case to disguise his hand.
Lal has 44 years of experience studying and analysing documents, both for the government and for private groups. Before retiring as Additional Director of National Institute of Criminology and Forensic Sciences, he was the Chief Government Examiner in Questioned Documents. (Lal will defend his report, if the Mukherjee Commission so demands.)
Handwriting analysis is admissible evidence in courts nowadays, and is as significant as fingerprint analysis. In fact, Mukherjee Commission visited Faizabad treasury on November 26, 2001, to collect samples for DNA and handwriting tests from Bhagwanji’s belongings preserved there. (The samples may reach the Commission’s Kolkata office in early May.)
By Anuj Dhar
Source: Hindustan Times
