The National - News

INDIA AND THE SECOND WORLD WAR

- The National staff

Indian troops were involved in the Second World War from the beginning.

Although fully mechanised by 1939, when the British expedition­ary force went to France, it became clear that the British army still needed pack animals.

Four Indian animal transport companies – 2,500 mules and their handlers – of the Royal Indian Army Service Corps arrived in France from Bombay in December 1939 and were given the name Force K-6.

Three companies of Force K-6 were taken to safety from Dunkirk, but had to leave their mules behind, giving them away to local people. But the fourth company was captured by the Germans. Most of the men died in Nazi prisoner of war camps.

Historians record that during the chaos of the retreat, the Indian forces showed determinat­ion and discipline.

Troop commander Jemadar Maula Dad Khan, was awarded the Indian Distinguis­hed Service Medal for “magnificen­t courage, coolness and decision” when his men came under fire from both air and ground on the approach to Dunkirk in May 1940.

His citation read: “When his troop was shelled from the ground and bombed from the air by the enemy, he promptly reorganise­d his men and animals, got them off the road and under cover in extremely difficult conditions. It was due to this initiative and the confidence he inspired that it was possible to extricate his troop without loss of men or animals.”

Force K-6 remained in Britain for a time and in 1944 returned to India to join the Burma campaign. By then, the Indian army had expanded to nearly 2.5 million men – the largest volunteer force in history. Indian sailors – known as lascars – on merchant ships and other non-military vessels also took part in Operation Dynamo.

About 5 million servicemen from the empire served with British forces during the Second World War. Of those, almost half were from south Asia.

Despite the film’s omissions, and despite not being dubbed into any Indian language, Dunkirk took in US$2.4 million (Dh8.8m) on its first weekend, making it the biggest opening of an English-language film in India.

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