usa supported india's freedom -eyewitness account of the struggle between President Roosevelt & Churchill, over the fate of the post-war world


Roosevelt VS British Colonialism
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President Franklin Roosevelt's Battle against Colonialism

American System

By Robert Trout
October 15, 2000


An eyewitness account of the struggle between President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, over the fate of the post-war world is contained in the book by the President's son, Elliott Roosevelt, 'As He
Saw It,' (New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1946). Elliott Roosevelt was an aide to his father at all but one of the Big Three conferences during World War II. Elliott Roosevelt recounts how his father, the American President laid out his determination to shape a post-war world free of colonialism, and his perspective for the economic development of the former colonies to eradicate poverty and illiteracy.

The following are two excerpts from Elliott Roosevelt's book. The first is from a meeting of Roosevelt and Churchill at the Bay of Argentia, of the coast of Newfoundland. It was at this meeting where Roosevelt forced Churchill to sign the Atlantic Charter on August 14, 1941. This charter contained key aspects of Roosevelt's vision of the post-war world.

The first section is Elliott Roosevelt's account of the conference between Roosevelt and Churchill at Argentia Bay off Newfoundland. The Atlantic Charter was signed at this meeting on Aug 14, 1941.

(It should be emphasized that Roosevelt is not promoting the British doctrine of free trade. Indeed the British only followed the free trade approach when it was to their benefit. The British Empire was based on monopolistic trading arrangements that enriched Great Britain and impoverished the colonies. Trade between British colonies and other countries was severely limited.)


Roosevelt and Churchill Meet in August 1941


It must be remembered that at this time Churchill was the war leader, Father only the President of a state which had indicated its sympathies in a tangible fashion. Thus, Churchill still arrogated the conversational lead, still dominated the after-dinner hours. But the difference was beginning to be felt.

And it was evidenced first, sharply, over Empire.

Father started it.
'Of course,' he remarked, with a sly sort of assurance, 'of course, after the war, one of the preconditions of any lasting peace will have to be the greatest possible freedom of trade.'

He paused. The P.M.'s head was lowered; he was watching Father steadily, from under one eyebrow.

'No artificial barriers,' Father pursued. 'As few favored economic agreements as possible. Opportunities for expansion. Markets open for healthy competition.' His eye wandered innocently around the room.

Churchill shifted in his armchair. 'The British Empire trade agreements' he began heavily, 'are--'

Father broke in. 'Yes. Those Empire trade agreements are a case in point. It's because of them that the people of India and Africa, of all the colonial Near East and Far East, are still as backward as they are.'

Churchill's neck reddened and he crouched forward. 'Mr. President, England does not propose for a moment to lose its favored position among the British Dominions. The trade that has made England great shall continue, and under conditions prescribed by England's ministers.'

'You see,' said Father slowly, 'it is along in here somewhere that there is likely to be some disagreement between you, Winston, and me.

'I am firmly of the belief that if we are to arrive at a stable peace it must involve the development of backward countries. Backward peoples. How can this be done? It can't be done, obviously, by eighteenth-century methods. Now--'

'Who's talking eighteenth-century methods?'

'Whichever of your ministers recommends a policy which takes wealth in raw materials out of a colonial country, but which returns nothing to the people of that country in consideration. Twentieth-century methods involve bringing industry to these colonies. Twentieth-century methods include increasing the wealth of a people by increasing their standard of living, by educating them, by bringing them sanitation--by making sure that they get a return for the raw wealth of their community.'

Around the room, all of us were leaning forward attentively. Hopkins was grinning. Commander Thompson, Churchill's aide, was looking glum and alarmed. The P.M. himself was beginning to look apoplectic.

'You mentioned India,' he growled.

'Yes. I can't believe that we can fight a war against fascist slavery, and at the same time not work to free people all over the world from a backward colonial policy.'

'What about the Philippines?'

'I'm glad you mentioned them. They get their independence, you know, in 1946. And they've gotten modern sanitation, modern education; their rate of illiteracy has gone steadily down....'

'There can be no tampering with the Empire's economic agreements.'

'They're artificial....'

'They're the foundation of our greatness.'

'The peace,' said Father firmly, 'cannot include any continued despotism. The structure of the peace demands and will get equality of peoples. Equality of peoples involves the utmost freedom of competitive trade. Will anyone suggest that Germany's attempt to dominate trade in central Europe was not a major contributing factor to war?'

It was an argument that could have no resolution between these two men....


The conversation resumed the following evening:


Gradually, very gradually, and very quietly, the mantle of leadership was slipping from British shoulders to American. We saw it when, late in the evening, there came one flash of the argument that had held us hushed the night before. In a sense, it was to be the valedictory of Churchill's outspoken Toryism, as far as Father was concerned. Churchill had got up to walk about the room. Talking, gesticulating, at length he paused in front of Father, was silent for a moment, looking at him, and then brandished a stubby forefinger under Father's nose.

'Mr. President,' he cried, 'I believe you are trying to do away with the British Empire. Every idea you entertain about the structure of the postwar world demonstrates it. But in spite of that'--and his forefinger waved--'in spite of that, we know that you constitute our only hope. And'--his voice sank
dramatically--'{you} know that {we} know it. {You} know that {we} know that without America, the Empire won't stand.'


Churchill admitted, in that moment, that he knew the peace could only be won according to precepts which the United States of America would lay down. And in saying what he did, he was acknowledging that British colonial policy would be a dead duck, and British attempts to dominate world trade would be a dead duck, and British ambitions to play off the U.S.S.R. against the U.S.A. would be a dead duck.

Or would have been, if Father had lived.


The policies that Roosevelt fought for were embodied in the Atlantic Charter that Roosevelt and Churchill signed at this meeting. However, Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. His successor, Harry Truman shared none of Roosevelt's vision. His Presidency proved to be a tragic failure.


At the Casablanca Conference


A similar kind of discussion occurred between Roosevelt and Churchill at the Casablanca Conference in January 1943. The following is Elliott's description of his father's talk with him one evening during that meeting.


His thoughts turned to the problem of the colonies and the colonial markets, the problem which he felt was at the core of all chance for future peace. 'The thing is,' he remarked thoughtfully, replacing a smoked cigarette in his holder with a fresh one, 'the colonial system means war. Exploit the resources of an India, a Burma, a Java; take all the wealth out of those countries, but never put anything back into them, things like education, decent standards of living, minimum health requirements--all you're doing is storing up the kind of trouble that leads to war. All you're doing is negating the value of any kind of organizational structure for peace before it begins.

'The look that Churchill gets on his face when you mention India!

'India should be made a commonwealth at once. After a certain number of years--five perhaps, or ten--she should be able to choose whether she wants to remain in the Empire or have complete independence.

'As a commonwealth, she would be entitled to a modern form of government, an adequate health and educational standard. But how can she have these things, when Britain is taking all the wealth of her national resources away from her, every year? Every year the Indian people have one thing to look forward to, like death and taxes. Sure as shooting, they have a famine. The season of the famine,
they call it.'

He paused for a moment, thinking.

'I must tell Churchill what I found out about his British Gambia today,' he said, with a note of determination.

'At Bathurst?' I prompted.

'This morning,' he said, and now there was real feeling in his voice, 'at about eight-thirty, we drove through Bathurst to the airfield. The natives were just getting to work. In rags ... glum-looking... They told us the natives would look happier around noontime, when the sun should have burned off the dew and the chill. I was told the prevailing wages for these men was one and nine. One shilling, ninepence. Less than fifty cents.'

'An hour?' I asked, foolishly.

'A {day!} Fifty cents a {day!} Besides which, they're given a half-cup of rice.' He shifted uneasily in his big bed. 'Dirt, disease. Very high mortality rate. I asked. Life expectancy--you'd never guess what it was. Twenty-six years. Those people are treated worse than the livestock. Their cattle live longer!'

He was silent for a moment.

'Churchill may have thought I wasn't serious, last time. He'll find out, this time.' He looked at me thoughtfully for a moment. 'How is it, where you are? How is it in Algeria?' he asked.

I told him it was the same story. Rich country, rich resources, natives desperately poor, a few white colonials that lived very well, a few native princes that lived very well, otherwise poverty, disease, ignorance. He nodded.

And then he went on to tell of what he thought should be done: France to be restored as a world power, then to be entrusted with her former colonies, as a trustee. As trustee, she was to report each year on the progress of her stewardship, how the literacy rate was improving, how the death rate declining, how disease being stamped out, how...

'Wait a minute,' I interrupted. 'Who's she going to report all this to?'

'The organization of the United Nations, when it's been set up,' answered Father. It was the first time I'd ever heard of this plan. 'How else?' I asked Father. 'The Big Four--ourselves, Britain, China, the Soviet Union--we'll be responsible for the peace of the world after....

'...It's already high time for us to be thinking of the future, building for it.... These great powers will have to assume the tasks of bringing education, raising the standards of living, improving the health conditions--of all the backward, depressed colonial areas of the world.

'And when they've had a chance to reach maturity, they must have the opportunity extended them of independence. After the United Nations as a whole have decided that they are prepared for it.

'If this isn't done, we might as well agree that we're in for another war.'

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 INA played a very important role in the liberation of India from the british and those of who, think that INA was a failure please read the following:-

Chief justice P.B. Chakrabarty of Calcutta High Court, who had also  served as the acting Governor of West Bengal in India, disclosed the  following in a letter addressed to the publisher of Dr. R.C. Majumdar's  book A History of Bengal. The Chief Justice wrote:
In the  preface of the book Dr. Majumdar has written that he could not accept  the thesis that Indian independence was brought about solely, or  predominantly by the non-violent civil disobedience movement of Gandhi.  When I was the acting Governor, Lord Atlee, who had given us  independence by withdrawing the British rule from India, spent two days  in the Governor's palace at Calcutta during his tour of India. At that  time I had a prolonged discussion with him regarding the real factors  that had led the British to quit India. My direct question to him was  that since Gandhi's "Quit India" movement had tapered off quite some  time ago and in 1947 no such new compelling situation had arisen that  would necessitate a hasty British departure, why did they have to leave?  In his reply Atlee cited several reasons, the principal among them  being the erosion of loyalty to the British Crown among the Indian army  and navy personnel as a result of the military activities of Netaji.  Toward the end of our discussion I asked Atlee what was the extent of  Gandhi's influence upon the British decision to quit India. Hearing this  question, Atlee's lips became twisted in a sarcastic smile as he slowly  chewed out the word, "m-i-n-i-m-a-l!"[46]

Subhash Bose, Indian National Army and the Royal Navy mutiny

Subhash Bose, Indian National Army and the Royal Navy Uprising..

When Justice P.B. Chakrabarty, the Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court once asked the British PM Lord Clement Atlee – responsible for conceding India’s Independence, the all important question –
“what was the extent of Gandhi’s influence upon the British decision to quit India”
His response, with a smirk: “m-i-n-i-m-a-l!“
So, then why did they have to leave if the Quit India movement of 1942 had subsided and nothing major happened in the mainstream politics – then why did the British have to leave so suddenly in 1947??
Clement Atlee’s response:
Erosion of loyalty to the British Crown among the Indian army and navy personnel as a result of the military activities of Netaji

Who freed India? Gandhi or Bose?


Who freed India? Gandhi or Bose? : Mail Today, News - India Today

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Royal Indian Navy Mutiny & India's struggle for Independence

Here is an untold story of the role of the Indian Navy in the Indian Freedom Struggle!

The below article is courtesy: http://defence.pk/threads/royal-indian-navy-mutiny-which-gave-a-jolt-to-the-britishers.371051/


We have often heard that this mutiny did not get enough attention in our history books possibly because it was snubbed by all the political parties. Some call it as one of the most spectacular episodes of the intense revolt against the British Raj. It was the uprising of the sailors of the British Indian Navy, when hindus and muslims joined hands to fight for a common cause.

In one an extract from a letter written by P.V. Chuckraborty, former Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court, on March 30 1976, reads thus: "When I was acting as Governor of West Bengal in 1956, Lord Clement Attlee, who as the British Prime Minister in post war years was responsible for India’s freedom, visited India and stayed in Raj Bhavan Calcutta for two days`85 I put it straight to him like this: ‘The Quit India Movement of Gandhi practically died out long before 1947 and there was nothing in the Indian situation at that time, which made it necessary for the British to leave India in a hurry. Why then did they do so?’ In reply Attlee cited several reasons, the most important of which were the INA activities of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, which weakened the very foundation of the British Empire in India, and the RIN Mutiny which made the British realise that the Indian armed forces could no longer be trusted to prop up the British. 

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Royal Indian Navy Mutiny was another landmark in India's struggle for independence was the Royal Indian Navy Mutiny of 1946. Before the outbreak of the World War II, the Royal Indian Navy was formed being separated from the British Navy. The English officers of the Navy always ill-treated the Indian junior officers. There was a wide difference in salary between the British and Indian officers. The condition of the Indian soldiers attached to the Navy was miserable. They wanted to express their discontent.

The chance came in February 1946. On the seashore of Bombay, some Indian naval personnel attached to the warship 'Tulare' were receiving training. The poor food supplied to them and the highhandedness of their officers led them to protest it and they expressed' it by displaying posters on the barrack walls containing the slogan 'Hindustan Sindbad', 'Englishmen leave India' etc.

The British officers suspected the Radio operator Data and imprisoned him. This led the navy personnel in the barracks to strike. Just by that time the I.N.A. Trial in the Red Fort had accused certain officers and soldiers. These naval personnel wanted to relieve immediately the officers and soldiers in the I.N.A.
                                                         
The mutiny soon spread to other barracks. M.S. Khan became the head of the National Central Strike Committee.The mutineers demanded better food, equal pay for English and Indian naval officers and soldiers, release of I.N.A. officers, soldiers and political prisoners etc.

The Hindus and Muslims ironed out the differences among them and joined hands to make the strike a success. The tricolor, crescent and hammer and sickle-flags were together raised on the mast heads of the rebel ship 'Talwar'. When they returned to their barracks, they found them surrendered by the British soldiers on 21 February, 1946, when the rebelling Indian heavy personnel wanted to break the cur den, fighting took place between them and the British soldiers.

At this juncture, the civilian population Of Bombay offered favourable response to the mutiny. They supplied food and other requirements to the Indian navy personnel. The Communist Party of India in Bombay gave a clarion call of general strike. Congress socialist leaders like Arena Assar Ali and Asyut Palwardhan supported it with utmost vigor.


However surprisingly, the Congress and the Muslim League did not support it. The leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Jinnah and several others persuaded the mutineers to surrender when they headed the guidance of these leaders. However, the mill workers fully supported the cause of R.I.N. mutiny and a street-fighting took place between them and the police. By the repeated appeal of Patel and Jinnah, the mutineers finally surrendered on 23 February 1946.

With their surrender, the R.I.N. mutiny came to an end. It failed largely due to the desire of the British Government and some Indian leaders who immediately wanted to quell it. The net result was this that the British Government now took precaution not to flare up mutiny against His Majesty's Government.

The wide support to this mutiny by the public in Bombay clearly showed that a sense of hatred had developed fully in the mind of Indians towards the British rule. When one thinks about the R.I.N. ratings, one remembers the words of the Naval Central Strike Committee - "Our strike has been a historic event in the life of our nation. For the first time the blood of men in the services and in the streets flowed together in a common cause."

INDIAN NAVY MUTINY 1946 AND B.C.DUTT


Role of B.C. Dutt as a conspirator to build the foundation of The Royal Indian Navy mutiny in 1946

The year 1757 marked the begning of British power in India. Bengal was subjugated in June 1757, after the battle of Plassey. Plassey transferred power to England and the battle of Buxar in 1764 created rights.
The sepoy mutiny of 1857 was the first armed struggle on a national scale against British rule. The mutiny failed. The leaders of the mutiny were no match to the iron-willed men of the east india company. Eighty nine years later the ratings of the Royal Indian Navy rose in revolt. They too failed. As for the cause that finally led to the mutiny we find only those records that have been left behind by the foreign rulers. We also find the version given out by the ratings in their evidence before the Enquiry Commission. No more for their perspective rasons, all the three parties- the British rulers, the ratings and the national leaders- made it appear as if the cooks of the Royal Indian Navy caused the mutiny.
Like the history of a people, the history of a movement can not be completed if one is denied access to the diaries of the participants. History is more than mare narration of bare facts. Behind the facts are the actors who willed the events.
Early Life
B.C. Dutt, full name Balai Chand Dutt was born in 1923 in a village near Burdwan town of West Bengal. In his childhood life he was not interested in playing like other children but fond of reading Historical books and Bengali Literature. He had read almost all the works of Rabindranath Tagore, Sarat Chandra Chatterjee and Bankim Chandra Chatterjee by the time he was in the final year in school. Among the personalities of Indian history, the life of Shivaji fascinated him. He read whatever he could get on him in Bengali. Dutt used to imagine himself as a member of Shivaji’s band of desperadoes.
After finishing his matriculation in 1940, he had come to Patna. In those days World War was warming up. There was a great opportunity for youth to make a career at the expense of the Government. A well wisher of Dutt advised him to try and get recruited to some special branch of the fighting forces. For the purpose he started to learn type writing and line-telegraphy. After a short ups and downs finally he was blundered into the Royal Indian Navy on February 28, 1941 as a Wireless Telegraphist.
Perception
After being entered into the RIN Dutt’s perception towards navy was changed. From the first day Indian ratings of RIN were welcomed with an unfamiliar language like “Son of a bitch”, “Bunch of sickly monkeys, bloody cross between pigs and goats, bloody Sissies.” These types of words of officer made it clear that signing the bond for service in the RIN was tantamount to signing away one’s soul. It was worse than physical assault. Ratings had to face Such type of behavior once again on the dining table. All the ratings were served with a huge wooden thali containing some 10 Kg. of very greasy and very hot daal and also a large pile of chappaties of massive size and thickness. Some of the fellowes, however, went to get their plates and spoon from the kit bag. They received another torrent of choice abuse for their good manners.
Dutt’s first meal in the RIN was a new experience. His batch had representatives from practically all the communities and the major language groups in the country. The cook lent them an aluminium mug from which all of them drank water. This was his first communal meal which removed at one stroke the barriers from which the society they came from.
Ever since the sepoy mutiny of 1857 indian servicemen had been kept isolated from the mainstream of the country’s life. Political reliability was an important factor with the recruiting officials. Political literature, even of an elementary nature, was kept out of reach of the ratings. Except the british owned dailies and periodicals, no other material was allowed inside the barracks or ships. The end of World War II changed the situation. There was a tremendous upsurge in the country when the men of Subhash Chandra Bose’s Indian National Army were brought back to india in 1945. The british commander-in-chief Auchinleck, wanted to try the INA men for waging war against the King Emperor and for plotting the overthrow of his Imperial Majesty’s Government of India.
It was no longer possible to keep the ratings at the pre-war level of isolation. They saw the world outside India during war. Having travelled and also having learnt what the war was all about, most of them had become more sensitive to the condition of their own country. Men in uniform were despised by people to whom those involved in the Quit India Movement were heroes.
What turned B.C. Dutt from loyal servicemen into rebels? It was the result of a chain of events spread over the long, dark days of the war.
Dutt often found Indian servicemen working alongside white servicemen from the army. In the Indian army, British servicemen received preferential treatment. Whether at base or in a combat zone, they had better accommodation, better amenities. They were paid five to ten times more for the same jobs that an Indian servicemen did. They travelled more comfortably. They could, if they wished, use Indian servicemen’s canteen, mess rooms but the Indians had no access to theirs. The British servicemen were not required to salute viceroy’s commissioned officers. The discrimination was crude, and was calculated to make the Indians feel inferior to the British.
During the World War, Dutt had seen the British people defending their country. He had served alongside British sailors and others from the other commonwealth countries in different theatres. They knew what they wre fighting for. Dutt began to question his whole existence. What did he fight for? Whose war did he fight? Was it for his country? To the British authorities Indian sailors were servicemen but to nationalist India these were mere mercenaries. He felt to prove that he was as much sons of the soil as the nationalist india who were fighting for the country’s independence. Without quite realizing it, Dutt became a conspirator.
Conspirator
After the World War, soldiers of royal Indian navy were ordered to get back India. They returned to the shore-based signal school, H.M.I.S. TALWAR in Bombay. Every week new batches of ratings poured in from different parts of the world to await demobilization or new postings. Old friends who got scattered over the globe during the war met again on the TALWAR at war’s end. One day a friend of B.C. Dutt, Salil Syam, returned from Malaya with strange tales of the Indian National Army. Dutt had heard about them in Burma. Having been with the occupation forces in Malaya, Syam had come in direct contact with the men of INA. He had brought letters from some members of the former Azad Hind Government addressed to Jawaharlal Nehru and Sarat Chandra Bose. He also brought relevant literature and photographs. In the RIN it would have been considered a high treason if Syam was found with the letters.
Dutt felt he was holding a live bomb in his hands when Syam told him the contents of the packet he had smuggled into the TALWAR from across the sea. Syam asked for Dutt’s help in reaching the letters and literature to Sarat Bose and Nehru. Dutt had suddenly become an important messenger of significant tidings for his country.
It was not difficult to locate other ratings like Dutt on the TALWAR. Anyone who had served more than a year in the RIN had his pet discontent and private grudge against British. It was a question of selecting the right ones. But any kind of anti-British work, agitational or otherwise, was extremely difficult and risky because there were ratings of the security branch living with them in the barracks. He gave himself a separate identity. For, he no longer considered himself as mere ratings of the RIN . he considered himself as fighter for the country’s freedom. He called himself “Azad Hindi” and the group or organization of these men was called “Azad Hindustan”. But how did he convince the ratings to join the Azad Hindustan?
The canteen of TALWAR became recruiting centre. Dutt extended liberal invitations for tea and soft drinks to all. The main motive behind this party was to make friendly enquires about their experiences in different theatres of war. The likely candidates for Azad Hindi were those who sounded bitter about their experiences. The strength of azad hindi did not exceed twenty regulars and about a dozen sympathizers during the four months of it’s existence.
A comprehensive plan of operation was prepared. Dutt planned to channelize the prevailing discontent over the sloppy demobilization policy through a whispering campaign- towards sharpening the prevalent anti- British atmosphere; to commit acts that would create disorder in the ships and barracks; to create a sense of instability in the minds of the ratings through widespread sabotage. It was not an easy job to preach from unit to unit or regiment to regiment the lessons. He was feared about court-martialled and shot down the persons trying to give the message of mother India.
The revolution, Dutt wanted, was not of violence and blood-shed. With the help of pamphlets he convinced the ratings not to consider an Englishman as a enemy. He made ratings understood that an Englishman is also a citizen of the world as like them. In England he was a good man, but in India, he could not tolerate their rise whereas they could not in India tolerate his rule here. He appealed not to shed their blood unnecessarily to a foreigner. It would be shed only for their motherland who stands the first for it. Dutt knew it that it was not an easy job to obtain freedom from the strong despots and monarchs. India was enslaved by sword and military and she was to be set free by sword and forces. To awake the ratings of RIN he made them aware towards their rights. In a pamphlet having titled “A thought for the day” he compared the conditions of British and Indian ratings. The main motive bhind this act was to awake them towards their rights and make them realized that they were a slave that is why they were getting such type of treatment. He made them understood that india could not be free unless they did not know about their rights. In pamphlets he also narrated the glorious story of the INA and its Neta Ji. He explained about their motive, heroic deeds and defeat also. He told the ratings that glorious defeat is honourable than the cowardice victory. Dutt appealed all the ratings to be considered themselves as “Azad Hindi” from the day and act such as.
Act of sabotage
Dutt chose the Navy Day on December 1st 1945 as the curtain raiser for the first act of sabotage because the civil population was invited for the first time in the history of RIN to visit ships as well as the shore establishments and the authorities wanted to present a Navy spick and span and the ships dressed with flags and bunting.
Talwar was not unguarded at night. Besides the permanent and regular sentries at the main gate, there were half of dozen more sentries patrolling the grounds and the barracks throughout the night. Fortunately half of sentries for middle watch (12 to 4 am) were from Azad Hindi.The night became a witness to the organizing ability of the conspirators. The TALWAR meant as an exhibit before an admiring Bombay public, was a shambles. The parade ground was littered with burnt flags and bunting; brooms and buckets were prominently displayed from the masthead. Political slogans in foot-high letters were staring from every wall: ‘Quit India’, ‘Down with the Imperialists’, ‘Revolt Now’, ‘Kill the British’’. Nothing ever like it had happened before. For the ratings the slogans mirrored their feelings.
The operation was so well executed that no arrest could be made. The authorities also preferred not to make too much fuss over the incident. After the Navy Day success, scores of ratings became their adherents and chain of events had been started. R.K. Singh a member of Dutt’s group sent up his resignation. At that time men in RIN could not resign. They were dismissed, demobed or retired. Singh was charge-sheeted for sending in his resignation. When he was brought before the commanding officer, Singh threw his cap on the ground and kicked it, signifying his utter contempt for the crown and the service. The news of Singh’s defiance reached the barracks in due course. To many ratings he became a martyr.
Commander-in-chief’s visit to the TALWAR was announced for February 2, 1946. This was his first visit to TALWAR. Dutt and his group decided that this was an occasion for a better show than the one they had put up for Navy Day. “Jai Hind” and “Quit India” were painted on the platform from which the C-in-C was to take the salute. But Dutt had to be content with painting a few more slogans and pasting a few seditious leaflets on the barrack walls. He had got these leaflets cyclostyled and smuggled inside the TALWAR earlier. The message in the leaflet was a call to the conscience of the ratings.
The sentries discovered the slogans on the platform about 5 a.m. The gum bottle was the clue. Perhaps the whole watch consisting of four trainees had noticed him walking out of the room with the gum bottle. The officer came looking for him. When dutt’s locker was opened for inspection, mimeographed copies of “Indian Mutiny of 1857” by Ashok Mehta, his diaries, the copies of the leaflet he had distributed and some incriminating letters were discovered.
The Navy did not want to produce its own mini INA scandal. Meanwhile, the Bombay Press had carried the news of Dutt’s arrest along with his photograph on the front page. Exaggerated versions of his heroics before Commander King and the admiral’s committee inspired many others on the Talwar to individual acts of sabotage. Slogans began to appear on every wall. Some vehicles from the TALWAR with anti-British slogans brazenly painted on both sides were inadvertently driven through the city. These vehicles were used to fetch, each morning, milk and rations from a depot. Even commander King’s car did not escape attention. These were the work of ratings inspired by Dutt’s activities over the last few months which led to the mutiny on 18th february of 1946.

1946 INDIAN ARMY REVOLT AGAINST BRITAIN



Radioactive Rebels? - Outlook India

www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/radioactive-rebels/240266
Apr 20, 2009 - Signalsmen of the Jabalpur mutiny of 1946 wonder why they aren't heroes ... Jabalpur, defied their British superiors and broke free from their barracks. ... The then commander-in-chief of the British Indian army, Gen Sir Claude ... Seeing the Jabalpur and the navy mutiny of Bombay together, the British were ...

1946 INDIAN MUTINY IN AIR FORCE{R.A.F} AGAINST BRITAIN
Bamr Mann bombaymann@gmail.com
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• Jun 1, 2016
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20 April 2009 National history: Indian Army

Radioactive Rebels?

Signalsmen of the Jabalpur mutiny of 1946 wonder why they aren't heroes
On the quiet morning of February 26, 1946, some 120 men of the 'J' company of the Signals Training Centre (STC), Jabalpur, defied their British superiors and broke free from their barracks. Part of a radio signalling unit, they were angry at the abuse heaped on them by their British counterparts.

They were also upset at the incarceration of two Indian National Army (INA) officers at Red Fort in Delhi. The ranks of the mutineers swelled to 1,700 men, armed with nothing more than Congress and Muslim League flags. Shouting slogans, the patriotic mutineers protested peacefully for some days till a bayonet charge by the Somerset Light Infantry brought the mutiny to a halt.

Eighty men behind the mutiny were court-martialled and dismissed without pay and pension. Forty-one others were sent to prison. But the incident was quickly hushed up. The British officers stationed in Jabalpur were replaced by Indian officers and most of the records destroyed. And so, a chapter in India's struggle for freedom was virtually buried. The recognition due to the soldiers for standing up to British might was denied them.

In sharp contrast, the naval ratings who mutinied just days ahead of the Jabalpur mutiny were recognised as freedom fighters. The mutiny was officially recognised as part of the freedom struggle by the government of India. The men were allowed to serve in the navy of independent India and retire with full pensionary benefits, pay and allowances. What's more, they were awarded special freedom fighter's pensions. All that the mutineers of Jabalpur received for their efforts was a bayonet charge, rigorous imprisonment and dismissal without benefits.

The Jabalpur mutiny, though lost to public historians, left a deep impact on the British. The then commander-in-chief of the British Indian army, Gen Sir Claude Auchinleck, sent several secret cables back to London, discussing a quick transfer of power from British hands to the Indians. Seeing the Jabalpur and the navy mutiny of Bombay together, the British were worrying about the probability of a larger insurrection. Therefore, when the men of the 'J' company stood in defiance, they made history—this was the first and only major instance of Indian army regulars challenging the British.

The effect was telling. The naval mutiny—and another in the air force, a few days earlier—could be contained. But the shock was from the Jabalpur mutiny, for the British Indian army and its loyalty was considered the backbone of British rule in India.


Maj Gen V.K. Singh and his book The account of the Jabalpur mutiny has now been recorded in The Contribution of the Indian Armed Forces to the Freedom Movement, a recent book by Maj Gen V.K. Singh (retd), chairman of the signals corps's history cell.

Singh chanced upon the few remaining records of the Jabalpur mutiny while working on the official history of the Corps of Signals. He has already published the second volume of the corps's history and is busy collating material for the third and final volume. "I saw what Gen Sir Claude Auchinleck wrote to the army commanders, worried that the loyalty of the Indian troops couldn't be taken for granted anymore. This had a profound impact on the British and probably quickened the departure of the British from India," Singh told Outlook.

It was in 2002, when Singh reopened dusty files of the Corps of Signals, that he lighted upon this forgotten chapter of the mutiny. "It seems that the men were agitated at the result of the INA trials, in which two officers were sentenced to rigorous imprisonment. The fact that Indian troops were treated as inferior to the British and paid less also added to their anger," says Singh.

He immediately took up the cause of getting the mutiny recognised as a part of the freedom struggle. However, he only ran into the impenetrable Indian bureaucracy. As letters flew between Singh, the directorate of signals, ministry of defence, and the ministry of home affairs (MHA), the bureaucratic machinery continued to hold out. Singh took pains to point out to any official who would care to hear him out that the Jabalpur men had been ignored while recognition had been accorded to the naval ratings who participated in the Royal Indian Navy mutiny, which ironically took place a couple of weeks before the Jabalpur mutiny.


A list of the court-martialled
Click here for large image
Meanwhile, one of the survivors of the mutiny, Lance Naik Neelakantan Nair, went to the Kerala High Court seeking directions to the MHA. In July 2003, the court directed the MHA and the state government to look into the matter and report back in six months. But nothing came of it. Finally, in a letter dated February 14, 2003 (No 8/2/2003-FF-P), the MHA stated that the issue of granting freedom fighter status to the mutineers had been "considered and it has been decided at the level of the home minister that they cannot be treated as freedom fighters."

The then home minister and currently the BJP's prime ministerial candidate, L.K. Advani, as the letter states, did not find the mutiny and its impact adequate enough to club it with the freedom struggle. After much persuasion from the signals corps, some of the participants, 41 out of over 1,700 mutineers, were granted a meagre pension while the others were dismissed since official records showed that they had been "discharged on administrative grounds". What the MHA forgot to look into was a small but critical detail on the discharge certificates. The men had been discharged, the certificate stated, for taking part in the "Jubalpore STC mutiny".

"It is absurd. All the naval mutineers have been recognised and feted by the government as freedom fighters. They too were discharged on administrative grounds. But the same logic didn't hold true for the men who suffered for decades for participating in the mutiny," says Singh. Ironically, the naval mutineers were also radiomen just like the ones in Jabalpur.


M.A. Kochuvareed, a mutineer
Eighty-seven-year-old M.A. Kochuvareed, who was a havildar during the Jabalpur mutiny and is one of its few survivors, has laboured to seek recognition from the government for nearly 60 years. His memory is fading, but Kochuvareed still remembers those fateful days of the uprising in great detail. "Just two weeks before the mutiny, we had heard Pandit Nehru at a rally in Jabalpur. He told us that even a chotta harkat (minor move) on our part would be enough to bring down the British flag and raise the Indian tricolour. Many were already agitated and we decided to take on the British soon after that. A few days after the mutiny began the British sent in a bayonet charge that killed nearly eight people and injured 30 others," Kochuvareed recounted to Outlook.

Indian officers such as Brig Terence Baretto and Maj Gen K.K. Tiwari, both then war-weary captains in the British Indian army, were rushed to Jabalpur by army headquarters and the command of the unit was handed over to another Indian officer, one Lt Col Mukherjee. "As an adjutant I was in charge of the quarterguard where the men had been incarcerated and we heard from them about how they had been ill-treated by their British counterparts. I learnt a lot from them," remembers Tiwari.

So why did the British hush up the Jabalpur mutiny? They feared trouble if the news of the revolt spread to other army units across British India. A year later, as independent India finally became a reality, the brave men of Jabalpur became a footnote in the forgotten records of the Corps of Signals.
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AUTHORS: Saikat Datta
PLACES: Madhya Pradesh
SECTION: National
OUTLOOK: 20 April, 2009