Savarkar and Netaji : How they worked together for India’s independence

WebDesk
Updated: May 31, 2023 5:48

By TNV Desk

The  forthcoming film on Veer Savarkar has kicked off a debate on his relationship with Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. Not only in this context but given the fact that Bharat(India) is celebrating ‘Amrit Kaal‘ of its independence  it’s  also time to have a relook at some of the forgotten chapters  of our recent history and one of them is the relationship between  Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and Vinayak Damodar Savarkar- the two stalwarts of India’s independence movement. Both of them had their differences with  Mahatma Gandhi and Jawahar Lal Nehru led Congress and chose a different path to end the colonial rule focusing on the militarization and a straight fight in the battlefield against the British .

Bose, born on 23 January, 1897 had entered the public life in the beginning of 1920s whereas Savarkar had joined the  independence movement in  first decade of the 20th century. Both of them later came together to work for India’s independence.

One of the defining moment in this relationship was a three-hour meeting that took place between Bose and Savarkar on 22 June, 1940. The meeting took place at Savarkar’s residence-Savarkar Sadan– in Mumbai.  Savarkar’s personal secretary Balarao Savarkar revealed what had happened in that meeting  in a letter dated 2 June,1954:

“It may be mentioned here that it was a private and personal meeting between Netaji Subhas Babu and Savarkarji at Savarkar Sadan Bombay that a definite suggestion was made to Subhash babu by Savarkar ji that he should try to leave India and undertake the risk of going over to Germany to organize the Indian forces there fallen in German hands as captives and then with German help should proceed to Japan to join hands with Sri Rash Behari Bose. To impress this point, Savarkarji showed to Subhas Babu a letter from Sri Bose (Rash Behari) to Savarkarji written just on the eve of Japanese declaration of war.”(The Two Great Indians in Japan: Sri Rash Behari Bose and Subhash Chandra Bose by George Ohsawa, Kusa Publications, 1954, Pp95)

 Around six months after this meeting, Bose took exactly the same route as was said to have been discussed in the meeting. In January, 1941 he disappeared from his house on Elgin Road in Kolkata and eventually joined Rash Behari Bose in Japan.

Vikram Sampath  explains in  ‘Savarkar: A Contested Legacy’(Penguin, Pp418-19), “Rash Behari Bose was…holding a Tokyo Conference during 28-30 March 1942 where it was resolved to form an Indian National Army under the direct command of Indian officers who would conduct the campaign to liberate India. An Indian Independence League(IIL)  was established and its conference held in Bangkok in June 1942. Over 100 delegates participated from Burma, Malaya, Thailand, Indo-China, Philippines, Japan, China, Java, Sumatra, Hong Kong and the Andamans. The conference raised the tricolour flag of India and also invited Subhas Bose to East Asia. Indian soldiers who had been captured by the Japanese in the war but had now sworn allegiance to liberate their motherland and eschew the British were also recruited in this group. More than 25000 volunteers swore to join the INA that was formally set up on 1 September 1942. But several handicaps prevented Rash Behari Bose o take the full plunge and it was only Subhas came to the East that INA got a bolster. Subhas was made the leader of the Indian independence movement and hailed as Netaji by his followers, with the war cry of ‘Jai Hind’ resonating the frontiers.”

 After Subhas Chandra Bose’s escape  from Calcutta, Savarkar had issued a statement, “ May the gratitude, sympathy and good wishes of a nation be a source of never-failing solace and inspiration to him. Wherever he happens to be, I have no doubt he will contribute his all, even health and life to the cause of Indian Freedom’.( Veer Savarkar by Dhananjay Keer, Pp260).

After INA’s campaign came to a close due to defeat of Japan in the second world war, around 25000 Indian soldiers were taken as prisoners of war by the British.

While most of the Congress leaders kept a deafening silence on this issue, Savarkar  came out openly in defence of these soldiers. He sent a cable to the then British Prime Minister Clement Attlee on 1 December 1945 which read:

“In view of general convention of international treatment dealt out to war prisoners and in view of the very deep discontent aroused in the public mind, which could not be easily appeased I implore apart from any question of right that every Indian under arrest of those war prisoners whether they belong to the Subhash Sainiks or outside of it should be released without any humiliating conditions as an act of grace by declaring a general amnesty.”(VD Savarkar, Historic Statements, Pp. 130).

Earlier Subhash Bose talked about Savarkar in a radio broadcast from Singapore on 25 June, 1944 where he said, “When due to misguided political whims and lack of vision almost all the leaders of the Congress Party are decrying all the soldiers in  the Indian Army as mercenaries, it is heartening to know that Veer Savarkar is fearlessly exhorting the youth of India to enlist in the Armed Forces . These enlisted youth themselves provide us with the trained men from which we draw the soldiers of our Indian National Army.”(Veer Savarkar by Dhananjay Keer, Pp349-50).

Eminent Congressman NB Khare wrote in ‘My Political Memoirs or Auobiography’(Pp 64) about INA, “In this enterprise Subhash Bose took his inspiration from Savarkar’s book on Indian War of Independence of 1857. In one of his speeches Subhash Bose has freely admitted this. He also distributed copies of this book freely amongst all the army personnel. He named one his regiments as Rani of Jhansi regiment and he borrowed the slogan Chalo Delhi  from the Indian soldiers in Merrut who marched to Delhi from there on the 10th May of 1857.”

According to Sampath(Savarkar: A contested Legacy, Pp422-23), “ Kapil Kumar,  former professor a Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU), stumbled upon some letters of the INA Trials and Military Intelligence Reports. A letter in his collection, dated 31 May, 1946, is from a soldier to the INA Relief Committee and is addressed to Sardar Patel:

“I am very glad to inform that the C-in-C in India has now permitted to read any newspapers prohibited since a long time…Sir, there are Indian soldiers who still raise their  rifles against their own brothers…Simultaneously there are men who have INA at heart and worshipping “Netaji” as their God, and waiting for the order, who joined the Army by the advice of  Barrister Savarkar in 1942. Still the same light is in the lamp…..”

 Sampath further adds, “Through his compilation of the letters of the time, Professor Kumar asserts that several of soldiers of the INA were from Maharashtra and were seemingly inspired to join the Indian National Army through the call given by Savarkar for militarization.”

Incidentally Rash Behari Bose also spoke very highly of  Savarkar in a radio address as he said, “In saluting you, I have the joy of doing my duty towards  one of my elderly comrades in-arms. In saluting you, I am saluting the symbol of sacrifice itself.”

It is clear from the above that  Netaji and Savarkar worked in close coordination and the relationship between Savarkar, Netjai, Rash Behari Bose and INA was not only one of the most glorious chapters of India’s struggle for freedom, but together they played an instrumental role in  forcing the British to leave India immediately after second world war.

(The writer, an author and columnist, has authored several books. Views expressed are personal.)

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