RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
Total: 1/1
    1. [INDIA-BRITISH-RAJ] Pragmatic Euphony
    2. John Feltham
    3. Begin forwarded message: Very interesting reading from Sunday listening: Stand at East Posted: 28 Jun 2008 02:10 PM CDT Lord Salisbury once described India as 'a barracks in the Oriental seas from which we may draw any number of troops without paying for them.' Which army, over two million men strong, had not a single conscript? Which army bore the brunt of the Japanese attack on Burma and Malaya? Which army fought in North Africa and took part in the assault on Monte Cassino in Italy? The answer is the World War Two British Indian Army: a remarkable fighting force of men from almost every caste, creed and corner of India, serving under both British and Indian officers. It played a crucial but forgotten role in the allied victory. In June 2005, BBC Radio 4 ran a three-part series on the contribution of the British Indian Army during the Second World War, titled "Stand at East". It was hosted by the famous Indophile Sir Mark Tully, former BBC correspondent and author. It has three episodes of around 30 minutes duration each [in Real media streaming format] and provides some enriching and entertaining fare. In Part 1 [Listen to episode 1 here], Tully begins with the transformation of the Indian Army, changing horses for tanks, and small arms for artillery, into a force that became the world's largest volunteer army. In Part 2 [Listen to episode 2 here], survivors of the gruelling Burma campaign recall the horrors of battle and veterans of the Indian National Army reflect on the provocations which drove them into fighting against the British. In Part 3 [Listen to episode 3 here], veterans of what is called the forgotten army demand recognition for their achievement in inflicting the biggest defeat on land the Japanese ever suffered. Ever wondered why this nation, 60 years after independence, has not been able to produce a similar chronicle of independent India's military history. Can any of the readers send me links to similar accounts of 1971, Operation Vijay or Operation Meghdoot, let alone 1948, 1962, 1965 or Operation Blue Star?

    06/30/2008 08:43:45