The Asian Age

Woman on the frontline

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Headed by Dr Laxmi Sehgal, Mehta underwent rigorous training for around eight months and was trained to use sten guns, machine guns, rifles, and other war weapons. She also underwent nursing training to treat soldiers at the frontlines. “I used to cry a lot. I had never seen that life before. I had all the comforts of the world as a child. Waking up early and participat­ing in marches was not easy,” she shares, further recounting that she later made friends with other women soldiers, and she was the first among other women officers to join Indian soldiers at the frontline. “I would never get time to eat, even; there would be wounded soldiers all the time. There was constant bombing at the frontline and you just have to run to safe places,” she adds.

‘PEOPLE DON’T KNOW WHAT WAR IS’

As a soldier, Mehta at a very young age had suffered the deepest wounds and scars of the war. Initially, women in the INA never went on frontlines, but the women in Rani Jhansi Regiment would pester Netaji to send them on the battlefiel­ds. “We wanted to serve the nation and be a part of the fight equally. Netaji was concerned for us so didn’t send us in the beginning but then he agreed and I was selected among other few women,” gushes Mehta, who says that while she lived her best days in the INA, wars are torturous.

“People don’t know what war is. We have seen that closely. We have seen people dying every minute. We used to spend hours in trenches,” reminisces the veteran. She further elucidates that there were attacks by British Army every night and they would usually choose full moon nights. “For years, we hated full moon nights. As soon as we would hear the danger siren, we would run to our trenches and stay there till we hear cleaning sirens,” she shares.

Although the former soldier has several painful memories,

“We didn’t get the freedom because of Gandhi or Nehru but majorly because of Subhas Chandra Bose’s army”

she also has a fond recollecti­on of her meeting with Netaji. In the seven-acre camp where Mehta was stationed, she was allotted a duty of a sentry of guarding the camp. “I was strolling around the camp at night with a rifle on my shoulder and I slipped. I was injured and hospitalis­ed in a military hospital. Netaji came to meet me and I started crying. He said ‘The war has not started yet. You will be there on the frontline, and if you cry like this then how will you fight? Be bold and brave. Think about attaining India’s freedom.’ These words motivated me and I just forgot my pain,” she recalls with a smile.

A HIGH PRICE TO PAY From the (approximat­ely) 75,000 soldiers, who were fighting for Indian’s independen­ce, over 30,000 soldiers lost their lives. Many soldiers were kept in prison and tortured to death, while women were harassed and tormented after INA lost the war in 1945. Mehta, her mother, and sister were on house arrest for over six months.

“We didn’t see the outside world; the British army was spying on us. It was so uncomforta­ble. When a British soldiers asked me that why I joined INA, I boldly told them that I want the Independen­ce of India,” she states, adding that once she came back to India in 1946, she stayed with her family in Mumbai and later was given an opportunit­y to join politics via the Congress party by Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel. “I declined. I didn’t want to join politics but wanted to serve the country, and I became a tourist guide with the government of India,” she reveals.

It has been over seven decades since India successful­ly got the independen­ce, but the INA veteran, clad in a simple blue salwarkame­ez, still sits alone sometimes and thinks about the days in INA. She cries when she thinks of Netaji.

“I cried when I heard the first speech of Jawaharlal Nehru after India got the Independen­ce. Netaji wanted this in his entire life and he wasn’t there to see that. The unfortunat­e part is that Nehru, Patel, and Mahatma Gandhi never gave recognitio­n to Netaji. That was sad. We didn’t get the freedom because of Gandhi or Nehru but majorly because of Subhas Chandra Bose’s army,” she asserts before signing off.

 ??  ?? Rama Mehta at target practice immediatel­y after joining INA
Rama Mehta at target practice immediatel­y after joining INA

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