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Netaji Subhas was born in a refined Bengali family of Cuttack (in
the Indian State of Orrisha). He went to a missionary English school.
He did not like the upmarket uniform, the un-Indian formal mannerism
and the underlying foreignness of the environment and later transferred
to a Bengali school. Here he came in close contact with headmaster
of the school who harboured the dream of free India. He was the
catalyst in sowing the seeds of independent India and revolutionary
ideals in the impressionist mind of the youngster.
As a brilliant student Bose was admitted to the Presidency College
in Calcutta . He was rusticated for his leadership role in the violent
defiance of the egotistical Englishman, Professor Otten, who treated
Indian students with contempt, abuse and disdain. Barred from being
admitted to any college or university Netaji later met up with the
legendary Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee, then Vice Chancellor of Calcutta
University, who gladly allowed him to enrol in the Scottish Church
College. On completion of his degree in philosophy, his father persuaded
him to go to England to sit for the Indian Civil Service (ICS) exams
on the grounds that he needed to understand the British rulers and
their methods more closely from within. He passed the exams in flying
colours and was offered an ICS role from which he resigned and on
his returned to Calcutta established and became the Principal of
the National College.
His revolutionary ideals and the dream of independence continued
to burn him inside. He came in close contact of another Bengali
leader C.R. Das. Inspired by the call of Mahatma Gandhi's Khadi
Movement, he started selling Khaddar (dhoti made of homespun cotton)
in the streets of Calcutta - an act that caused much displeasure
with the rulers and he was put behind bars. Netaji was by now fully
convinced that civil disobedience alone was not going to be enough
to bring freedom to India. Armed revolution was the answer! He joined
and later was appointed the Commander-in-Chief of the National Volunteer
Corps.
At the outbreak of the Second World War he visited Germany and
met up with Hitler and other Italian and Japanese leaders. He sought
their assistance in the fight for India's freedom. Netaji declared
open war against the British rulers of India. The Indian National
Army (INA) fought shoulder to shoulder against the allied forces
in Burma and eastern front of India. Fifty years after India's independence
Indians are still asking questions about Netaji (beloved leader)
Subhas's sudden and mysterious disappearance following a meeting
with Japanese Field Marshal Terauchi in Saigon. According to the
official news, Netaji was killed in a plane crash near the Taihoku
airport. A popular conspiracy theory, however, disputes that version
and suspects that he was assassinated by the British rulers. Another
view is that he was slain by the Japanese forces due to his rejection
of their conditions of assistance in exchange of economic and political
favours to Japan by independent India.
Greatly influenced and inspired by the lives and teachings of India's
great philosophers like Ramkrishna, Vivekananda, Naveen Chandra
Sen and Sakharam Deuskar, Netaji loved his motherland and its people.
His life of formidable courage, determination and dedication to
the call of duty remains as a beacon for all oppressed people of
the world.
For a fulller account of Netaji's role as the true leader of Free
India see our page the Indian National Army
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