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Strategies & Market Trends : India Coffee House

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To: Mohan Marette who wrote (9778)11/25/1999 2:25:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (1) of 12475
 
Give me blood, I will give you freedom...Subash Chandra Bose

( While the Gandhi /Nehru Congress has garnered much of the credit for India's freedom struggle, it is important to remember that India's freedom movement was in fact a movement of the masses and there were a number of great leaders with fierce patriotism and great visionary ideas who sacrificed their entire lives for the nation's cause. We continue our series on the freedom fighters, on the occasion of Netaji's 102nd birthday.
-Jyotsna Kamat
January 26, 1999
India's Republic Day)


kamat.com

sitemarvel.com

westbengal.com

ent.ohiou.edu
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Jaswant promises to take up Netaji case

Tokyo, Nov 25

External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh said he would take up with his government the issue of bringing to India the ashes of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose now lying in the Renkoji Temple in Tokyo.

He gave the assurance at his meeting with Japanese businessmen when an associaste of Netaji in the Indian National Army (INA) suggested that Netaji's ashes should find their resting place in India.

In the morning, Singh drove to the Renkoji Temple, where Netaji's ashes have been kept since 1945 after he was believed to have been killed in a Japanese Air Force plane crash.

The aircraft was flying him to Machuria from Saigon.

The minister wrote in the visitor's book at the temple: This is a rare privilege to be so fortunate as to come to the shrine and pay homage to a great son of India. There has been opposition in some sections in India against bringing the ashes as they think Netaji did not die in the plane crash and is still alive." UNI

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