The Statesman interviewed Savie Karnel, who skillfully wove a fictionalised account of Laxmi’s adventures as a child spy ...
United in a divided India Rash Behari Bose, Netaji's John the Baptist, sent epistles to the Indian patriarchs in 1943 seeking their blessings for the nascent INA. In his letter to Muhammad Ali ...
Zero Tolerance once again ignited the mojo of the Indian National Army and its charismatic leader Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose ...
Why are rainbows curved and not straight? Do they “also serve, who stand and wait”? Of course there are beings who can tell ...
Prashant Kishor must have learned a lot from the political parties that were his clients in the past. Can he succeed amid the uncertainties of Bihar's electoral landscape?
MS Annamalai joined the session from Chennai, India, and shared about the history of the INA, which was formed in 1942 and led by Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. Annamalai said the INA spy training ...
Cyril John Stracey was one of them—an Anglo-Indian officer who joined the British Indian Army in 1938, he switched sides to join Subhas Chandra Bose’s Indian National Army (INA) in 1942 and ...
It was based at Singapore and consisted, in the first instance, of five ministers, eight representatives of the INA, and eight civilian advisers representing the Indians of Southeast and East Asia.