Hindustan Times (Patiala)

A village which swears by its Subhas Chandra Bose folklore

- Manoj Sharma manoj.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

LOCALS BELIEVE NETAJI DELIVERED HIS LAST KNOWN SPEECH IN INDIA IN THEIR VILLAGE, THOUGH NO ONE SEEMS TO KNOW THE YEAR

NEW DELHI: It is a balmy afternoon and Ran Singh is sitting in the courtyard of his house. The octogenari­an’s eyes sparkle as one mentions Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. “I was in class 3rd when Netaji delivered an impassione­d speech in our village, his fist clenched, his hand pushed forward like this,” he says, standing up and striking a pose similar to that of many Netaji statues. “You will not get azadi until you make supreme sacrifices,” he told the villagers.

Ask Singh about the year Bose came to the village and he goes silent for a while, trying to dredge up his memory, his eyes closed, and then says, “I think it was 1944.”

Singh is not the only one with a Netaji story in Tikri Kalan, a village on the western fringes of the city, which celebrates Subhas Chandra Bose like no other. Locals believe that Netaji delivered his last known speech in India in their village, though no one seems to know the year when he did so. While some say that Netaji visited the village in 1941 when he travelled to Berlin incognito via Peshawar; others claim that Netaji addressed INA (Indian National Army) soldiers in 1944 in their village—both the possibilit­ies not supported by historical facts.

“This is local folklore which cannot be historical­ly substantia­ted. The only INA soldiers who came back to India in 1945 were the PoWs (prisoners of war) taken by the Allied Forces largely in Burma (now Mynamar). By then the real story of the INA, founded originally by Captain Mohan Singh and later revived by Bose, was over,” says Anirudh Deshpande, a historian who has authored many books on Indian military history.

He adds that Netaji making a stopover in the village in 1941, when he escaped from his home in Kolkata to Berlin via Peshawar, too is highly improbable. “Because Bose escaped house arrest incognito and travelled straight to Peshawar from where he crossed into Afghanista­n prior to his escape with the help of Italians. He would not have risked getting off at Delhi to address a village.” But the lack of historical evidence has not come in the way of Tikri village flaunting its ‘historical relationsh­ip’ with Netaji. The village organises a gala full-day event on his birth anniversar­y on January 23 that includes rousing speeches, cultural events and blood donation camps inspired by Netaji’s iconic slogan tum mujhe khoon do, main tumhe azadi doonga, his pictures adorn houses and shops, elderly women in the village sing folk songs in Haryanvi hailing Netaji and make and distribute sweets.

The village prefers to call itself ‘Azad Hind Gram’, also the name of a six-acre complex in the village that houses a museum to INA and a memorial to Subhas Chandra Bose, built by the Delhi government. “We love Netaji like no other national leader and live by his ideals and that is what has earned us the sobriquet of Azad Hind Gram,” says Balwan Singh, a para Asian Games medalist, pointing to a small bronze statue of Netaji on his desk. Every year, he organises Netaji Subhas cross country race in the village.

The walls of this mostly urbanised village — though dozens of families here are still engaged in agricultur­e -- are plastered with posters of the recent 125th birth anniversar­y celebratio­ns of Bose at Azad Hind Gram. The Netaji memorial, the villagers say, is built on the spot where Netaji had delivered his speech under a tree. Before the memorial was built in 2000, the locals had been organising a ‘havan’ on the spot every year on January 23 , Bose’s birth anniversar­y. This year too, the villagers organised a mega fullday programme to celebrate mark his birthday. “Funded by the villagers, it is one of the biggest programmes organised anywhere in the country to celebrate Netaji’s birthday,” says Jaipal Drall, who heads a village committee which organises the annual event.

 ?? RAJ K RAJ/HT PHOTO ?? Family of INA veteran Sube Singh shows documents related to his service in the force at their Tikri Kalan house.
RAJ K RAJ/HT PHOTO Family of INA veteran Sube Singh shows documents related to his service in the force at their Tikri Kalan house.

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