JanjaWeed
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2010
- Messages
- 9,772
- Reaction score
- -2
- Country
- Location
If you cant understand the point i an trying to make mate its pointless for me to even bother to explain .
Fair enough
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If you cant understand the point i an trying to make mate its pointless for me to even bother to explain .
Netaji was not a natural Military commander. Although his academic career was flawless, his military mission was bound to fail because he was fighting a war he could never win. But the point is, the way we,Indians have treated this great leader after his mysterious disappearance, through the methodical way Government of India had tried to hinder every enquiry commission about him are simply inexcusable. If we are a true democratic,liberal nation the truth must be revealed no matter who gets saved or who not.
Which way? Shaking hands with the Fuhrer does not always make you a Fascist. Isn't?I thought he was a fascist?
Which way? Shaking hands with the Fuhrer does not always make you a Fascist. Isn't?
Which way? Shaking hands with the Fuhrer does not always make you a Fascist. Isn't?
Not sure. But Indians tend to have black and white views about their leaders.
I don't think Jawaharlal Nehru was the worst man ever.
*runs away*
In the 40's every Indian political leader believed that the Axis will win the war. Right from Gandhi,Nehru to Netaji. So, it was natural for a Bengali to seek help from Hitler to liberate his motherland. Remember,in those days the truth about holocaust was not known to the outside world and Germany,atleast looked morally much correct than the British those days.
you must not
Bose Ji was doing bad bad bad stuff gambling away family heirloom
...
As @scorpionx said, in the early 1940's, Axis victory seemed reassured.
It is easy for us with 20/20 hindsight.
Actually no.
There was no assured victory for Nazis.
Anyone doing unemotional analysis could have seen that Germans were not prepared for WW2
Yes they were pretty big power
and could have defeated individual countries
But not the allies
Fauj Sahib, Didn't Maulana Azad ji mentioned it in his autobiography?
I was saying @Ravi Nair that the Indian Political leaders had firm belief that the Germans will win the war. This belief reflected in some of the Mr.Gandhiji's decision those days, which Maulana saab exclusively mentions in his book.
so you tell me how that bald looking man aka Mohandas Gandhi is relevant in the present day politics of India but politicians still drag him in literally everything and even today our history books are full of his "so called" heroic struggles against the Brits.so if he is still relevant upto this day then i am quite sure that Netaji will also find relevance in the present day India,after all he has got a huge no. of followers among the younger generations and people still draw their inspirations from his selfless and relentless struggle to achieve our freedom against the mighty British empire......Rather than retoric do tell me how its revelant today? and not form a history poin of view.
the common Indian citizens have a right to know about the real story as we consider ourselves to be a liberal democracy.the GoI has a moral obligation to share the real story behind Netaji's disappearance with us.......As stated by you his importance is only historical , just like we revere Gandhi ji so also Subash ji, but has ,as a recent book claims that bapu was a homosexual any impact on our reverence to him or what he accomplished? No !!!
So also neither will us learning about Subash ji death make him any less of a hero or more so. His death has no significance in todays life, it may change what we read about him in our textbooks but nothing else.
By the way there are many such secrets that the govt deems fit not to share with us, will it change our lives if they do ? i doubt it!!!
if he was a fascist then he would have formed a fascist political organization in the lines of the existing European fascist parties but instead he formed a marxist Forward Bloc party after getting out of I.N.C.he was a socialist and his dream was to liberate India with the active support of the U.S.S.R. but he was left with no other option when U.S.S.R. joined the Allies in the 2nd WW.so he was forced to seek help from Germany to liberate India....I thought he was a fascist?
As stated by you his importance is only historical , just like we revere Gandhi ji so also Subash ji, but has ,as a recent book claims that bapu was a homosexual any impact on our reverence to him or what he accomplished? No !!!
So also neither will us learning about Subash ji death make him any less of a hero or more so. His death has no significance in todays life, it may change what we read about him in our textbooks but nothing else.
By the way there are many such secrets that the govt deems fit not to share with us, will it change our lives if they do ? i doubt it!!!