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Bose, Subhas Chandra

Bose, Subhas Chandra (shoobhäsh' chŭn'dru bōs) [key], 1897–1945?, Indian nationalist also known as Netaji. He began his political career in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and soon became the leader of the left wing of the Indian National Congress. He was president of the party in 1938–39 but was forced to resign after a dispute with Mohandas Gandhi; he advocated militancy to achieve independence for India and believed in dictatorship to unify the country. Jailed by the British for his Axis sympathies in World War II, he escaped (1941) and fled to Germany. In 1943 he headed in Singapore a Japanese-sponsored “provisional government of India” and organized an “Indian national army.” Although sympathetic to totalitarianism, his collaboration was principally directed toward freeing India from British rule and the establishment of an independent regime. He was said to have died in an airplane crash in Taiwan, but in 2005 the Taiwanese government said that an investigation showed that no crash had occurred.

See his collected writings and letters, ed. by J. S. Bright (2d ed. 1947); L. Gordon, Brothers Against the Raj (1990).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

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The making of a 'terrorist': Mihir Bose investigates the case of Subhas Chandra Bose in Bengal in 1924 to show what can happen when a government is able to lock people up on the suspicion of terrorism. (History Today)

Brothers Against the Raj: A Biography of Indian Nationalists Sarat and Subhas Chandra Bose. (The Journal of the American Oriental Society)

Everyone's man in Kabul: Mihir Bose tells the little-known story of the Indian secret agent codenamed 'Silver' who served both the Axis and the Allied forces during the Second World War.(Subhas Chandra Bose)(Biography) (History Today)

Supreme soldier ; Considered by the British as their most resolute and resourceful enemy, Subhas Chandra Bose may not have taken to Gandhi's ways, but he was instrumental in the stirring of a new political consciousness. (India Today)

Sharing the blame: Subhas Chandra Bose and the Japanese Occupation of the Andamans 1942-45.(Book Review) (Journal of Southeast Asian Studies)

The afterlife of India's Fascist leader: the intriguing death of an Indian holy man in 1985 suggested that he was none other than Subhas Chandra Bose, the revolutionary and nationalist who, it is officially claimed, died in an air crash in 1945. The truth, however, is harder to find. (History Today)

India's divided loyalties? (Indian National Army led by Subhas Chandra Bose joined the Japanese in World War II to fight the British)(Cover Story) (History Today)

Three Bengalis ; The Mahatma chose Jawaharlal over Subhas, and Sonia preferred Singh over Mukherjee, because Bengali sentiment was secondary to their individual requirements. (India Today)

The many revolts in the mind of Bose, and what they created (Tehelka)

Strange Bedfellow (Artforum)

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