Sept 6th 1945, Singapore – A small crowd is
gathered in front of an Azad Hind monument at Connaught Drive. As Indian
Engineers position guncotton charges, Major Donald Brunt (Royal Engineers) is
seen checking the fuses. The fuse is lit and the charges explode. Troops of the
17th Dogra Regiment push over the monument (marked ‘Itmad’ on its
larger face) with poles; a civilian crowd claps and cheers enthusiastically; while
a Malay policeman observes. The clock of the nearby tower, shows 6pm. A burly
Indian Naik (corporal) of the 5th Indian Division, with an Mk 5 Sten
gun with a bayonet fitted, is standing together with two other soldiers, looking
on. A guard of honor of the 17th Dogra Regiment is dressing back a
few paces as a brigadier in a kilt (Is it Brigadier Patrick McKerron?)
approaches and takes the salute. The brigadier spoke later, perhaps with
enthusiasm after this important symbol in the memory of INA soldiers, built by
one Col C J Stracey, had been finally demolished.
But Pat McKerron or Mountbatten, who ordered the
demolition, could not have predicted their own flight out of India, just two
years later. Now, who could this Stracey be? To get to his story, we have to
traverse a long road back in time, to the last stages of the 2nd
World War and the years preceding Indian Independence.
Sometimes you just stumble on the beginnings of a story
while researching another and that is how I came across the tale of a
fascinating character, an Anglo Indian named Cyril John Stracey, who served as
a senior officer in the INA. That itself should evoke some curiosity, an Anglo
Indian in a nationalist Indian outfit? It
was not easy to unearth details of his life, but as it emerged gradually, bit
by bit, it turned out to be a heartwarming tale, sandwiched and hidden between better
known stalwarts in the INA and those of his other illustrious brothers, the two
who served in the British bureaucracy - the ICS, the Forest Service and the third
who rose to occupy the apex position in the Madras Police.
I have always admired the Anglo Indian community, a
community which just happened. Some in British India reviled them for their
leanings to things and thoughts West, many pitied or ridiculed their dual
existence but others watched enviously from afar at their trysts with music and
dance, their connections with the railways and their lighter outlook on life.
Many said ‘but naturally’, when they moved off to Britain and Australia,
seeking easier acceptance from the paternal races that created them, moving off
after feeling a certain animosity in Independent India. There were a few
though, who made India their home fighting through and shining as brilliant diamonds.
Eric Stracey did just that as he rose through the ranks to
become the first DGP of Police in erstwhile Madras. His books on his Anglo
Indian upbringing in Bangalore and his life in the police forces are
interesting, but this is not his story, it is the story of his lesser known elder
brother Cyril John Stracey. The Stracey progeny were in all 11 (four died as infants),
four boys and three girls who lived their lives mostly in India and each of
them were examples of how one could serve on public services. The eldest
Patrick started the wildlife preservation society of India, Ralph became an ICS
officer, Eric joined the police, Doreen became a doctor, Margaret a nurse and
Winnifred, a teacher.
The Stracey’s affair with India actually started from the
early days of the EIC when John and Edward from Cork came to India.
Interestingly John worked at the offices of Hyder Ali as the British commercial
agent representing the Bombay factory while Edward worked for the EIC at Madras,
a bunch who were fighting Hyder. Both married Portuguese Indian girls, perhaps
from Cochin and later worked for the Nizam of Hyderabad while their children
continued working for the British who had by then started to govern India.
Their father Daniel a Catholic a district forest officer (mother
Ethel a protestant), had a connection to Malabar, for he was born in Chittoor
Palghat. Many other family connections can be seen with Malabar, Eric spent a couple
of terms with the MSP at Malappuram, post the Moplah revolts. Ralph’s daughter
married a Malayali, Pat married Peace Mammen a Syrian catholic from Kerala, Pat’s
best friend was Ramabhadran, related to the Kollengode Raja’s.
The Stracey children moved from Andhra and grew up in
Richmond town Bangalore, then a quiet and cool town with a cantonment and an
Anglo Indian minority. Cyril who was born in 1915 at Kurnool, turned out to be
quite different, one who chased adventure and traversed the world. He did his
schooling in St Joseph’s Bangalore, but did not complete his intermediate and
went on to join the Indian Military Academy in 1935 as a gentleman cadet. Eric
records the difficulties the family had to endure in meeting Cyril’s 2 ½ year
course expenses at Dehradun (Pat deferred his marriage to help pay for his
younger brother and their mother had to give up their home in Bangalore and
move to Rangoon as a house guest with her brother in law) after their father
passed away in 1932. Other family friends also chipped in with support as Cyril
was not granted a scholarship which he deserved, for that was awarded instead to
the son of a well-placed ICS officer. Eric recalls that Cyril as a youngster was
actually more artistically inclined than soldierly, could draw and paint well,
and could play the piano with some proficiency.
The IMA’s newly graduated officers were not considered on
par with the Sandhurst graduated ones for they were Indian commissioned
officers, not the king’s commissioned officers, who were treated highly. ICO’s
had a lower pay and were only supposed to replace the VCO’s such as Risaldars,
Jamedars and Subedars. The first two terms made them physically fit, adept in
English, accounting and in the next three terms, they were provided strategic
and tactical training. Camps in the plains and mountains provided them exposure
to difficult terrains and tactics. After graduation (Gen Bewoor, Army Chief was
his batch mate), Cyril was attached to the West Kent’s at Lucknow (This
posting, according to Eric Stracey, with a British battalion was a compulsory
part of his initiation to regimental life before he joined his regular Indian
battalion). His formal posting was with the 1st battalion of the 14th
Punjab regiment at Bannu at the North West frontier.
In Feb 1941 the battalion was deputed to Burma. This
battalion later became part of the 11th Indian division’s 15th
brigade and was in Sept 1941 tasked with preparing the defenses at Jitra on the
Malay-Thai border anticipating a potential Japanese invasion.
On Dec 7th, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor,
dragging America into the 2nd World War. The Japanese attack was
intended to destroy the pacific fleet, thereby preventing it from interfering
with an intended Japanese conquest of key SE Asian countries such as Malaya,
Thailand and Burma, the latter for oil and food resources. On Dec 8th,
the Japanese invasion forces landed at Kota Baru (actually 70 minutes before Pearl
Harbor was hit, so that was the place where the first attack occurred). Despite
their heavy initial resistance, British forces were eventually forced to retreat
to their defenses in front of the airfield. On 11th December 1941,
the Japanese started bombing Penang. Jitra and then Alor Star fell into
Japanese hands on 12th December 1941. The British had to retreat to
the south. On 16th December 1941, the British left Penang to the
Japanese, who occupied it on 19th December. By 31st January
1942, the whole of Malaya had fallen into Japanese hands.
In the meantime the conquest of Burma was underway. On Dec 14th the Japanese bombed
Victoria point airbase, the southernmost British airfield in Burma and
commenced the land based operations. Another Japanese aim was to destroy of the
new Lashio Burma Road link to China. An attack or foray into India was never
intended, originally.
As we saw parts of the 1st division of the 14th
Punjab regiment were at Jitra. Mohan Singh and Cyril Stracey were part of
separate but incomplete defensive positions laid around Jitra. When the
Japanese arrived on the 8th, they had solid air support and tanks. Barbed
wire lines had been partially erected and some anti-tank mines laid but heavy
rains had flooded the shallow trenches and gun pits. Many of the field
telephone cables laid across the waterlogged ground failed to work, resulting
in a lack of communication during the battle. In the Jitra attack, the Japanese
decimated the under equipped British Indians who had little answer for the Japanese
tanks supported from the air. The remaining British forces fled into the rubber
plantations and hid. Both Mohan Singh’s and Stracey’s teams were hiding and
while the former was contemplating his future, the latter was forced to assume
leadership of a motely group of officers, soldiers, Gurkhas and so on, in the
jungle.
C.J. Stracey |
According to Stracey the ferocity of the Japanese attack
forced the men to take refuge in the rubber plantations and as the lone road
was taken by the Japanese, they could not venture back. The locals gave no
shelter or support and eventually when the Japanese reached the location on 16th
where these men were hiding, the hungry and battered men had no choice but to
surrender. They were taken to the police HQ at Alor Setar where the Japanese
started to separate the Indians from the English. Stracey was initially left
with the British, but when his orderly piped in that Stracey was Indian, he was
moved with the Indians. It was here that Stracey met his old pal Mohan Singh
and Mohan Singh updated him of the INA activities and his newfound involvement
together with Pritam Singh and Fujiwara. He explained that Rash Behari Bose had
arrived there from Japan and agreed on a potential tie up with the captured
Indian soldiers to fight the British. Stracey was asked by Singh to explain all
this to the new crowd after a cleanup operation of the town and exhort them to join
the IIL as it was called.
Stracey was confused and torn, wondering what to do, for his
heart was not set on cooperating with the enemy. He also noticed that some
junior officers were now being awarded senior positions in the INA
organization, and was a bit miffed about it. Anyway as matters took their
course, Stracey did not join Mohan Singh and so was confined with other British
officers in the Alor Setar jail. As the number of prisoners increased, they
were moved to Taiping, then to Kuala Lumpur and finally to Singapore, which had
fallen to the Japanese, in Nov 1942.
During this year of confinement, Stracey was getting
disillusioned. He caught up with Mohan Singh who had by then become a general, who
had after the Farrer park meeting created the first INA and recruited a great
many soldiers, totaling to 16,000 or so. Stracey decided to volunteer to the
INA, sick of the discriminatory attitude shown by his fellow British officers
and noting that they had anyway washed their hands off the Indian soldiers and
thrown them to the mercy of the Japanese. Another reason was that he saw a
number of his old colleagues already serving in the INA. Stracey was tasked
with leading the 10,000 odd new volunteers which included Jawans, JCO’s,
Subedar majors, Subedars and Jamadars. He had to start a new army career as a 2nd
lieutenant once again!
Stracey in fact had a unique position, he in his own words
‘was the only officer who saw the INA as a germ, a mere idea and who eventually
participated in its obsequies’. Not only was he with Mohan Singh at the start
of the INA conceptual discussions, but was also a witness to its disbanding and
the first officer to be formally picked up and arrested after the retaking of
Singapore, by the Allies.
But things were not going well for Mohan Singh. The Fujiwara
Kikan which was behind him had given way to the Iwakuro and Hikari Kikan’s
which did not think much of Indians (or rate Indians as equals) and had other
ideas. Mohan Singh had by then many other festering issues (INA recognition,
use of Indians for manual labor, managing of Japanese misappropriation of
Indian assets in Burma) with the Japanese over the INA recognition and issues
about the tasks of the IIL. Mohan Singh’s relationship with the I Kikan as well
as Rash Behari Bose turned sour resulting in him getting sidelined, dismissed
and arrested and transported to Pulau Ubin, an island off Changi point.
A terminally ill Rash Behari Bose had by now decided on
appointing fresh blood to lead the large INA organization, which was somewhat
rudderless. It was into this vacuum that Subhas Chandra Bose stepped in, coming
in from Germany. SC Bose thus took over as the new Supreme commander and
recreated the so called ‘Second INA’. Stracey remained in Singapore as INA’s
adjutant general (Singapore was the rear HQ while Rangoon where Bose lived, was
the front HQ) and was the person responsible for the ‘A’ branch.
Accounts of his life in the INA hierarchy during the Bose
days is very scarce (his family considered him lost or dead!) and Eric agrees -
It was at this stage that Cyril played a
prominent part as its Adjutant-General. We never questioned him about his
motives, for as a family we respected each other’s personal privacy, and what
notes he left behind about his INA days were only brief and purely descriptive.
He rose through the ranks to become a colonel. Dr RM Kasliwal, who was
Netaji’s physician states – Stracey was a
smart Anglo Indian officer, a staunch nationalist, who joined the INA and
became the adjutant general and Quarter master General with a rank as Colonel.
He was a great organizer and a good friend and he and I shared a bungalow in
Singapore. Stracey met Bose a few times and interacted with him personally.
On a lighter side, he once arranged a football match where Bose kicked the ball
off to start the match. He was also involved with the design of some air raid
shelters.
Two incidents relate to him, one indirectly and one
directly. The first is the case of the MK Durrani, an Indian POW who later turned
out to be a British agent. Durrani was implicated in manipulating the newly
trained spies from the Penang spy schools (they were trained and inserted in
India by submarines, but as it turned out, they gave themselves up to the
British, influenced by Durrani’s covert actions) and were eventually caught.
Bose who was furious with this, sentenced Durrani to death. Dr Kasliwal and a
few other Indians asked Bose to show some mercy and finally Bose agreed that
Durrani’s life would be spared if he confessed and provided details of his
mission. Durrani was thus arrested in 1944 and tortured (finger press and water
boarding are mentioned), and some British investigators felt that Stracey and
Kasliwal knew about this and perhaps condoned it (the case at the Red Fort involving
them was dropped due to political reasons) as it was under Stracey’s watch. Incidentally,
the Bidadari camp where Durrani was interred in was administered by others.
Original INA Monument Singapore |
The second was in the construction of the Shaheed Smarak or INA
martyr’s monument in Singapore where INA officers and contractors led by Stracey
built a marble memorial on the Connaught drive, an obelisk 25 feet high,
honoring the INA personnel who died. As is quoted often, C.J. Stracey, Quarter-Master
General of INA produced a number of models for the memorial. Bose approved one
of the models and asked Col. Stracey if he would be able to complete a sea
facing structure before the British forces landed in Singapore. He built it in
a record 3 weeks, racing against time to finish it before the allied forces
retook Singapore from the Japanese, in 1945. The words inscribed were the motto
of the INA: Unity (Etihaad), Faith (Itmad) and Sacrifice (Kurbani). The
monument was built at the Esplanade just before the Japanese surrender. On 8th
July 1945, Bose laid its foundation stone. Perhaps it was an act too late, for
the morale of the INA had gone down, what with the Japanese reverses, general
lack of food and resources, Japanese utilization of Indians for other
purposes (to fight MPAJA and at the death railway) and the INA and Jap
failures at the Indian front. But as
soon as British troops re-occupied Singapore in early September 1945, they blew
it up upon instructions from Mountbatten.
Stracey has this to say about the Japanese and the INA. The Japanese found in the Indian army POW’s
a very useful weapon to help them achieve what they were setting out to do: the
greater co-prosperity sphere of Asia. They were of course very tactful and they
always quoted Mahatma Gandhi and the Indian freedom movement under the great
and recognized leaders. He implies that on the ground, where it mattered
the Japanese never really treated the INA as equals and that Mohan Singh was
perhaps right in breaking up the first INA.
As adjutant and quarter master general, Stracey then
reporting to Gen Kiani in the INA, was also responsible to coordinate the INA
surrender to the British. By this time, Col CJ Stracey was, in British
parlance, a JIFF (Japanese Indian or Japanese inspired fifth column). After the
British had routed the INA and the Japanese, their task was to round up the
JIFF’s and prosecute them to the extent possible.
Interestingly, Cyril’s brother Eric was at that time partly
responsible for interrogation of JIFF suspects! He explains - By a twist of fate, I myself was engaged
towards the end of the war with security intelligence at our Main Forward
Interrogation Centre in East Bengal, where there was a large camp for INA
prisoners captured during the fighting in Burma. Though Cyril was flown direct
to Delhi from Singapore, and so did not pass through my hands as a prisoner as
did some of the other INA officers after Japan surrendered, I had access to his
file and classification before that, followed his latter INA career up to the
time he was retaken, and was personally the subject of considerable interest to
my Intelligence colleagues..
Stracey was taken to Delhi in Jan 1946 and together with a
number of others were put on trial. It is a long and convoluted story with all
kinds of people involved, Congress, Nehru, Patel, Bulabhai Desai, Gandhiji and
so on. Proof was hard to come by, much of the documentation had been destroyed
or lost and large communities including the Anglo-Indian applied pressure on
the administration to disband the INA trials. Most of the INA officers were
dismissed from service or de-mobbed. Colonel Prem Sahgal, Colonel Gurbaksh
Singh Dhillon, and Major General Shah Nawaz Khan were court-martialed. Many
others were charged for torture and murder or abetment of murder. These trials
attracted huge publicity, and public sympathy for the defendants who were
considered patriots of India and fought for the freedom of India from the
British Empire, ran high. Outcry over the grounds of the trial, as well as a
general emerging unease and unrest within the British, ultimately forced the
then Field Marshal Claude Auchinleck to commute the sentences of the three
defendants in the first trial.
Cyril, was dismissed from the army and upon release from the
Red Fort, worked for a year as Secretary of the INA Relief and Rehabilitation
Committee in New Delhi, which proved of help to many refugees during the
large-scale carnage at the time of partition. It was during the trials and this
work that Cyril caught the eye of Nehru who impressed with the officer and his
bearing, stated that he could provide him a job in the Indian Foreign Service
IFS.
Perusing the Nehru papers, I came across substantial
correspondence between Stracey and Nehru during the 1946-48 period. Nehru
mentions about him to Patel, about Stracey’s request to archive all collected
INA material, of Stracey’s request to induct all INA officers for training in
the IMA ( Nehru replied that that would not be advisable as they were over age,
but that he would recommend to Patel and Baldev Singh that they be appointed
into state forces). He was involved with the refugee relief operations
connected with the disasters of the Indian partition. Stracey was also the
secretary of the goodwill mission to Ethiopia under Ammu Swaminathan (Lakshmi
Menon’s mother).
Stracey repaid his debts to his family and friends from the
back-pay he received after the war for his army services and POW period, and he
even had a little extra which he lent to Eric so he could buy his first second
hand car (a 1937 model Chevrolet released by the Air Raids Precautions service
after the danger to Madras city ceased!).
Interestingly, in a fitting end, Nehru gifted Stracey a
marble fragment, a part of the demolished INA monument which read ‘Subhas Ch’
after the dust had settled and India was free. This had been retrieved by a
local Indian in Singapore. What happened to it later, is not known.
As promised, Nehru gave him a position in the IFS where Cyril
did very well. His diplomatic career spanned through postings in Karachi, Bonn,
Jakarta, as Consul-General at San Francisco, First Secretary at Washington and
Chancellor in Paris, finishing with spells as ambassador to Finland and
Madagascar. Reports mention him as being considered a ‘most eligible bachelor’
while in San Francisco and also of his amusing complaints about his lodgings
and landlady while in Washington DC.
Eric and Cyril had purchased a small retirement home
‘Charleston” in Coonoor, where Cyril moved to after retirement from the IFS. He
continued with philanthropic work and was an active member of the Coonoor
branch of the AIS. His 78 rpm records, his piano and his garden gave him the
solace he sought.
Eric’s retelling of his brothers last days is sad and
poignant. Cyril lived on at “Charleston”
until his death in November 1988, enjoying his music and his books, but keeping
much to himself. Apart from a bachelor friend or two, his only company was a
Marwari family, the Simrathmulls, who lived near-by. They were generous and
open-hearted friends - husband, wife and five bright sons, who had him over for
dinner every Sunday night and ran errands for him. (He did not keep a car in
his later years and did not like going down to the bazaar in person). As a
humorous sidelight, when their business ran into trouble, Cyril helped them
with a loan which they duly repaid - a strange case of an Anglo-Indian, a member
of a notoriously prodigal community not known for its wealth, lending money to
one whose people constituted the traditional bankers and money-lenders of the
north! When Cyril had a sudden and fatal heart attack, it was they who rushed
him to hospital and later helped carry his coffin in a last gesture of friendship.
Eric had by then retired from his IPS position in Madras and
moved off to Australia. In 1989, he returned to India to sell off their house,
‘Charleston’ in Coonoor and with that the last link the Stracey’s had to India
was broken. A few educational scholarships and the Stracey Memorial School in
Bangalore, provide trace memories of that family.
That my friends is the story of a very interesting man, one
who stood at a very difficult crossroad and decided his direction only after
much soul searching. One path would perhaps have led him to England or
Australia to live there as a second class citizen, the other, the path he
chose, led him to remain an Indian, in the country he lived for, and died in!
Notes
- 1 While Cyril states – I decided that I will join the INA, this thing has become a reality and why should not an Anglo Indian be part of it as well? Eric explains it differently - In Cyril’s case, predilection would have been reinforced by the pressure of his regimental peers. He was not the sort of person mindlessly to follow the natural course expected of Anglo-Indians and side automatically with the British, nor would he have wanted to incur the sneers and contempt of his other Indian colleagues for a member of a community they already regarded as lackeys of the Raj. It was these factors rather than any special feeling of nationalism that would have moved him to join the INA along with most of the other Indian officers of his battalion.
- 2. Stracey was interrogated after he was picked up in Singapore. Kevin Noles who studied the files states - His interrogator considered that he joined in August 1942 ‘from motives of greed, ambition and pleasure-seeking’ although he conceded his ‘thorough ideological conversion’. The comments reveal more about the attitude of the interrogator attempting to comprehend the actions of an Anglo-Indian than they do about Captain Stracey himself, who seems to have been genuinely enthused by Indian nationalism and became a senior staff officer in the INA.
- 3. The first battalion, 14th regiment had a number of other well-known Indian origin officers. Ayub Khan, SPP Thorat, MH Kiani, Shah Nawaz Khan, Habib Ur Rahman, AIS Dara, GS Dhillon, Inayat Hassan, Mohan Singh etc.
- 4. A number of Mohan Singh’s first INA followers who did not join the Second INA were transported by the Japanese to New Guinea and Solomon island labor camps. That is another story, for another day!
- 5. One could ask if the Congress and Gandhiji won independence for India or was the decision by the British to leave a result of the INA movement? There are certainly many arguments supporting the latter, for the INA movement, the Red Fort trials and so on had a substantial influence on the Indian soldier in the Raj’s army and the general public. The British Empire, which was fully based on the unquestioning loyalty of the Indian armed forces, had finally been undermined by the INA trials. Once Auchinleck and the administration felt that they had lost their complete grip on and loyalty of the Indian army, they knew their cause was lost.
References
The late Cyril Stracey – A remarkable soldier and diplomat
(The Review Vol 88, Feb 1989)
How I came to join the INA (Oracle Volume 4, Jan 1982) CJ
Stracey
Odd man in: my years in the Indian police - Eric Stracey
Growing up in Anglo India: Eric Stracey
Interviews with Ralph, Eric and Cyril Stracey– The Centre of
South Asian Studies
Netaji, Azad Hind Fauz, and After – RM Kasliwal
A remarkable family – S Muthiah Hindu April 16, 2012
Anglo Indians – S Muthiah, Harry Mcalure
Shades of white, brown and black - CVG The Hindu
The Indian national Army & Japan – JC Lebra
The Forgotten Army: India's Armed Struggle for Independence,
1942-1945 -Peter Ward Fay
Waging War against the King’: Recruitment and Motivation of
the Indian National Army, 1942-1945 – Kevin Noles
Pics – Azad Hind
Monument courtesy EM Kasliwal, Cyril Stracey picture Courtesy S Muthiah, Harry
Maclure
11 comments:
Fascinating read once again. I did know about the 'other'Stracey - CJ's forester brother - PD Stracey. Have been looking around for a good deal on PD's book on Lovell Reade - the Jim Corbett of Elephnats.
Now, Read would also deserves his own special post. An interesting character. I believe the Reade family still survives in Manipur or Mizoram.
Thanks...
Yeah, Patrick's studies on elephants is extensive...
the Reade book is available in some university libraries here in the USA..
That's good news. I am stateside as well. I shall check out the local uni libraries.
Many thanks for this extremely interesting write-up. I would like to know if you have contact details of any of Mr. Cyril J. Stracey's relatives and also those of the neighbours, the Marwari family (the five Simrathmull brothers or any of their descendants). I am a 64-year old retired person involved in private research on Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army. I also seek your kind permission as to quote part of your write-up (of course with due reference to your blog) either in my own facebook wall or in a couple of Netaji/INA-related facebook groups so that some attempts could be made to trace out the fragment of the marble plaque (part of the original INA Memorial of Singapore), which could be kept in a Museum coming up in the Red Fort in New Delhi, if it could at all be retrieved. Shall be grateful for an early reply or for some suggestions and leads. Many thanks once again. Utpal Aich, Dwarka, New Delhi - 110 077
Many thanks for this extremely interesting write-up. I would like to know if you have contact details of any of Mr. Cyril J. Stracey's relatives and also those of the neighbours, the Marwari family (the five Simrathmull brothers or any of their descendants) of Coonoor. I am a 64-year old retired person involved in private research on Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army. I also seek your kind permission as to quote part of your write-up (of course with due reference to your blog) either in my own facebook wall or in a couple of Netaji/INA-related facebook groups so that some attempts could be made to trace out the fragment of the marble plaque (part of the original INA Memorial of Singapore), which could be kept in a Museum coming up in the Red Fort in New Delhi, if it could at all be retrieved. Shall be grateful for an early reply or for some suggestions and leads. Many thanks once again. Utpal Aich, Dwarka, New Delhi - 110 077 [utpalaich@gmail.com]
Thanks Mr Utpal..
You are free to quote parts of the article mentioning this source. I do not have any direct contact with the Stracey family as yet, but will try to find one and will let you know ASAP..
rgds
Many thanks. Shall be grateful. Best regards.
I have worked under Ambassador Stracey in Madagascar. He was an outstanding ambassador.
From there, he went to Finland. He took Ganesh Singh who was Neatji's driver to Finland where I met Ganesh Singh years later when I was posted there.
A few Stracey's left for Australia.
Ambassador K P Fabian
Thank you Amb Fabian..
Very interesting pointer, which raised a question as well. Could you pls clarify if Ganesh Singh was Netaji's driver (in Rangoon) or if it was Nizamuddin as one source puts it or if it was a Malayali from Cannanore (can't recall his name now).
And Amb Fabian, we r all deeply appreciative of your work in Kuwait..
perhaps this may interest you.
https://maddy06.blogspot.com/2016/02/the-air-bridge-1991.html
A fascinating story, history as well, with the I.N.A. connection. Shared the blog in my page, subject to your kind approval.
That’s fine and thanks! But it would be nice to know who you are!
Post a Comment