What's new

Who is Subhas Chandra Bose to people today?

Paul2

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Nov 24, 2018
Messages
3,193
Reaction score
7
Country
United Kingdom
Location
United Arab Emirates
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?
 
.
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?

I have zero interest in his exploits, he is an overrated character in the history of our region.

 
. .
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?
I thought he made high end speakers 😆
 
.
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?
No one in Pakistan knows about him, nor do they care.
 
.
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?
This Pakistani loves this man. He was the only freedom fighter for this region. Others like Jinnah, Gandhi were freedom leaders not fighter.
Bose was the last hope for united India.
 
Last edited:
.
This Pakistani loves this man. He was the only freedom fighter for this region. Others like Jinnah, Gandhi were freedom leaders not fighter.
Boss was the last hope for united India.
He was a Bangali and not from "this" region
 
.
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?
Quite famous in India when I grew up in 1990s and early 2000s

Had lessons in history on him

Him, Rash Behari Bose, Bhagat Singh and Chandrashekar Azad were widely celebrated

Only thing Indian establishment has been silent about is his death
 
Last edited:
.
He fought British with an army of 60,000, which took ennormous casualties.

He was against Ghandi's policy of appeasing British.

He once offered Jinnah a post of a Prime Minister, were he to win.

The battle for Burma was one of the most bloody, and big battles of WW2 (Burma offensive was bigger than the D day,) yet subsequently erased from history, along with INA, and Bose himself by Indian establishment

What do people in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh think of the man today?
Bangladesh is all about Mujib and Zia. Nobody else matters politically.
 
.
This Pakistani loves this man. He was the only freedom fighter for this region. Others like Jinnah, Gandhi were freedom leaders not fighter.
Boss was the last hope for united India.
Fake: it’s Bose not Boss. I like Boss suits and Bose Speakers and no stupid Bengali homo fascist who loved the Japs and Hitler. BJP loves him now because he was a fascist like them. Even Indians miss the message from the Fuerher Modi. Now Bose, next Hitler.
 
Last edited:
.
Personally I do not think any Pakistani cares about Subhas Chandra Bose.

Okay he was against the British occupation of South Asia and the injustices done to the Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists (Myanmar & Sri Lanka).

In Pakistan, and amongst Pakistani Muslims, Jinnah, Syed Ahmad Khan, Liaquat Ali Khan, and other All India Muslim League members are given much more respect.
 
. . . .
Nowadays you are supposed to consider every Suckdeep, Hardick and Poonam on the street as a close relative otherwise you are a racist and a bigot. Indians will do anything possible to harass people who migrate to their own state but when it comes to Pakistanis, every single Indian, whether he is from Assam or Tamil Nadu is to be treated like a long lost relative with a claim on our ancestral land
Happened because we started speaking Thier language, Hindustani instead of making our own language Sindhi, Pashto national language or going to pre British era with Farsi
Now what else would they consider Pakistan but to be just another Outpost of gangaland?

Our fault more than thiers
 
.
Back
Top Bottom