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Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s daughter Anita Bose Pfaff said she will soon approach the Indian and the Japanese governments for a DNA test of the ashes at Tokyo’s Renkoji Temple.
In an interview to PTI, Pfaff said resolving the mystery shrouding Bose’s life and bringing back the ashes to India would be a true tribute to the revolutionary as the country celebrates its 75th anniversary of Independence.
Pfaff, a German, said she had approached the Indian government for the DNA test when the Congress was in power but never got a reply.
“This time, I won’t dillydally much longer. This COVID situation has already delayed the matter by two years. I would parallelly get in touch with the Japanese government. Initially, the Japanese government decided to keep the ashes as they thought they would be for a few months. But now it has been 77 years,” she said in a telephonic interview from Germany.
“I don’t want to name anyone. But for some people, it is true, saw a political campaign in Netaji’s life and mystery for their political advantage. But, this is not a general attitude. A majority of the people still admire him and are not in politics,” said Pfaff, an economist.
“But at the same time, I don’t see a reason they should take the initiative without my pushing them,” she said.
“It is not a mystery for me as there is ample proof that he died in the air crash. But, I want his ashes to be brought back to his motherland. I want to do this service to my father,” she said.
Pfaff said technology advancement now offers the means for sophisticated DNA testing.
“To those who still doubt whether Netaji died on 18 August 1945, or not, it offers a chance to obtain scientific proof that the remains kept at Renkoji Temple in Tokyo are his,” she said.
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