Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Museum on Netaji Bose to open on Jan 23 at Red Fort

- Vanita Srivastava

NEW DELHI: A new digitised museum that brings to the fore some unknown and interestin­g facts about Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, as a narrative from his childhood days, to the trials of the personnel of the Indian National Army (INA) — a force Bose had put together to fight the British — is ready for inaugurati­on at Red Fort in the national capital.

The museum is slated to be inaugurate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on January 23, on the occasion of the 123rd birth anniversar­y of Bose.

The first floor of the Red Fort barracks, on which the museum is built, is the place from where soldiers of the INA were court martialed and tried by the British. The trials started on November 5, 1945, and continued till January 3,1946. “Four barracks at the Red Fort have been converted into museums for visitors. Besides the museum on Bose, three more museums, including one on the 1857 Revolt, the Jallianwal­la Bagh massacre, and contempora­ry paintings, have come up, “an official of the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI) said.

There is also a redesigned museum named Azadi Ke Deewane. The Red Fort Complex is managed directly by the ASI, which is also responsibl­e for the protection of all national heritage sites in India and Indian cultural properties classified as World Heritage Sites.

On an average, around 5,000 to 6,000 tourists visit Red Fort daily. This can go up to more than 10,000 on weekends and public holidays.

The three-storeyed museum — named Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and INA — will have a collection of more than 100 panels depicting his life.

The galleries, spread over three floors, depict the contributi­ons of Bose since his childhood days. The role of the INA, since its inception till the trials of its soldiers, its organisati­on, the battles fought, the awakening it created and its popularity in the country are also documented.

“It will be a first-of-its-kind narrative that starts from Bose’s childhood, his disappeara­nce and later on, the trials of the INA’S soldiers, and its impact on the country. The museum has highlighte­d the role of the people of Indian origin in South East Asia towards the INA — how they contribute­d money, soldiers and services. The assassinat­ion order given by British secret operations to its agents in Cairo and Istanbul has been shown. It also shows the secret operation of Col Amrik Singh Gill and four others who landed by submarine at the Konark temple coast to establish their INA secret centres in India,” professor Kapil Kumar, chief historian of the museum, said.

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