Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Bihar archives to chronicle Bose’s connection with the state

Date:

Share post:

spot_img

Patna: The British Raj had asked provincial governments in the country in the early 1930s not to allow publishing of a speech by revolutionary Subhash Chandra Bose at a conference in London during that time, according to documents of the period.
A colonial-era record available in this connection, at the Bihar State Archives (BSA) here, contains an order letter issued from Shimla, the then summer capital of the Raj, to the then provincial Government of Bihar and Orissa, asking it not to let the speech be published.
The same record also contains news clipping of Bose having attended the conference in London and speaking there. After searching through its voluminous collection to look for records in connection with Netaji, the state archives would soon be publishing a volume ‘Subhash Chandra Bose in the records of the Bihar State Archives’.
“We went through our records in connection with Netaji and Bihar for the project and so far the research and collection work have been completed. We are working on the composition and the volume should be out by March next year,” Director of Bihar State Archives Vijoy Kumar told.
Bose visited Patna a few times and addressed gatherings at the historic Gandhi Maidan (then called Patna Lawn), in Danapur, near the cantonment area and in Patna City, the old counterpart of the new capital. He also had visited Jamshedpur, then part of the Bihar province.
Archivists at the BSA are trying to still trace links that Bose enjoyed with Patna or any other part of colonial Bihar that possibly are still buried in record books. “Just before the Ramgarh Conference of the Congress in 1940, Netaji visited Patna and addressed a gathering at the Mangles’ Tank in Patna City.
Peasant leader Swami Sahajanand Saraswati also spoke there and was later arrested by the police,” a BSA archivist, working on the project said.
Among other records are those of Bose’s visit to industrial city Jamshedpur during a union strike there and him having developed a pain in his abdomen while being lodged in a jail in Nagpur.
“The record dating to 1933 talks of letters being sent to Bihar and Orissa government seeking transfer of Bose from Seonee Jail in Nagpur in the then central provinces to the General Hospital in Patna for conducting meals and radiography tests on him after he complained of severe pains in his stomach,” the archivist said. (PTI)

spot_img

Related articles

All-England badminton: Sindhu crashes out in opening round

New Delhi, March 12: Two-time Olympic medallist P.V. Sindhu suffered a disappointing first-round exit from the All-England Badminton...

Guterres announces ‘UN80 Initiative’ to make world organisation relevant to today’s world

United Nations, March 12:  UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday launched the "UN80 Initiative" to transform the global...

Bengal CM gets Centre’s approval to visit UK to deliver address at Oxford University

Kolkata, March 12: The Union government has given permission to West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to visit...

Manipur: Shutdown continues to hit life in tribal areas, no fresh incidents of violence

Imphal, March 12: Normal life continued to remain affected in the Kuki-Zo areas of Manipur for the fourth...