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(This story was first published on 7 March 2018 and has been reposted from The Quint's archives to mark the day when Subhas Chandra Bose was arrested in Kolkata in 1940.)
Camera: Abhay Sharma, Abhishek Ranjan
Video Editor: Puneet Bhatia
“My intention is to lay to rest this controversy that has dragged on for more than 70 years,” says Ashis Ray firmly.
Ray’s book Laid To Rest: The Controversy Over Subhas Chandra Bose’s Death is titled self-explanatorily – it is a compilation of the veteran journalist’s 30 years of research into the death of a national hero.
Here’s the thing: If you grew up a Bengali, or ever lived in Bengal, or were at all an avid reader of the Bose chapters in Indian history, chances are you grew up on a diet of schemes and stories. Some of these claimed he never died in the plane crash in Taipei in 1945; and several declared he’d escaped and returned to India as the robed-and-swathed ‘Gumnami Baba’ .
Ray spent a considerable number of years in Vienna with Netaji’s wife Emilie Schenkl (who has now passed away) and his daughter Anita, and urges – through his book – that their wishes be honoured above all else.
Ray reiterates that every single Indian government has actually always maintained that Netaji died in the plane crash on 18 August 1945. “This includes the present government of Narendra Modi,” he reminds the reader. He tells The Quint:
Ashis Ray’s book details the 11 different investigations into Bose’s death, all of whom reached the same conclusion – and seeks to answer every question every curious citizen has ever had about the man.
(‘Laid to Rest’ has been published by Roli Books and is priced at Rs 595)
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