Bose, Rashbehari : (1885-1945), the only front-rank Indian revolutionary whom the police force of the British Empire could never capture. Educated at Dupleix College, Chandernagore he returned there after a short stint of Govt. service in Shimla came in touch with Amar Chatterjee & Srish Ghose (q.v.) of the Yugāntar group & so with Jatin Bannerji & the Calcutta group under Barindra. When Barindra’s group were arrested he took up a job in Dehra Dun Forest Research Institute picking up the links formed by Jatin in Punjab & Delhi. When Govt. shifted India’s capital from Calcutta to Delhi he planned an attack on Hardinge. At his request Amar & Srish sent Basanta of their group. Bose’s complicity in the assassination attempt of 23 Dec. 1912 was known by the police, but they could only charge him for it & the Delhi, Lahore, & Benares Conspiracy cases of 1913-14. In 1915, Bose escaped to Japan where he took a prominent part in organising Subhash Bose’s Azad Hind Fauj. He died there on 21 January 1945.
... give you an anna (1/16 of a rupee = now 6 paise). If you are not satisfied I will not give you anything!” Many of the students supported Suren Banerjee or Rashbehari Bose. (There were two factions in the Congress party then, one under Rashbehari and the other under Bal Gangadhar Tilak.) In one meeting in College square, Charu was present when Sri Aurobindo spoke. He spoke softly. Though Charu could... Aurobindo to be simple and austere, tendencies which he had himself so admired. Charu, though he was beginning to admire Sri Aurobindo, had more respect for the moderates — S. N. Banerjee and Rashbehari Bose. Sri Aurobindo and B. G. Tilak were in the opposite camp, extremists. Charu bought photos of S. N. Banerjee and Sri Aurobindo. He framed the first with an 8-anna (1/2 Rupee) frame and Sri Aurobindo’s ...
... Time is needed to become efficient. It took the Prussians more than a hundred years to throw off the Czar. Among the Indian revolutionaries Rashbehari Bose was an exceptional man —very clever in every way. Pulin Das was also very good. PURANI: Rashbehari was really remarkable. He was a linguist. He used to speak Punjabi just like a Punjabi. He escaped just the night before the arrests. All the ...
... election of the President. The Nationalists had proposed Lala Lajpat Rai, just released from prison, to be the President of the 23 rd Congress. The Moderates opposed this, and chose instead Dr. Rashbehari Ghose, a lawyer from Calcutta. His name was duly proposed, and Lajpat Rai withdrew his. But when Surendranath rose to second the motion, and before he could utter a full sentence, tumult burst... a document to that effect and expected everyone to sign it. But the young invitees showed no interest. "Show it to the other man." "See if that person will sign it? " and so on. Then when Sat yen Bose of Midnapore was approached, he said, "Give it to me. Mister, I'll sign it." As soon as the paper was in his hand he tore it to pieces, and from hand to hand all the torn bits disappeared. ...
... Mission Street, Pondicherry, for which the rent was Rs. 15). [10] March 1914. Rashbehari Bose was a revolutionary of Chandernagore who orchestrated the bomb-attack against Lord Hardinge in Delhi in December 1912. On 8 March 1914, British police officers, armed with an extradition warrant of arrest, raided Rashbehari's house in Chandernagore. They were unable to arrest him, as he had slipped out some... some time before. News of the raid appeared in the newspapers on 12 March or before. Sri Aurobindo wrote this letter to Motilal a short while after he read the news. He was interested not only in Rashbehari's fate, but also in the legal precedent that might be set by the issuance of an extradition warrant against a French subject for a crime committed in British India. [11] April 1914. For Paul Richard... his arrival in Cambridge in October 1890. His father copied out the passage in a letter written to his brother-in-law Jogindranath Bose in December 1890. To His Grandfather. 11 January 1894 . Sri Aurobindo wrote this letter to his grandfather Raj Narain Bose (1826 - 1899), a well-known writer and leader of the Adi Brahmo Samaj, while posted in Gujaria, a town in northern Gujarat, which then ...
... advance and don't cut their wages for the month." Page 14 Then Dada recounted a story: ""When I was in Calcutta we used to live in a three-storeyed rented house in Hindustan Park on Rashbehari Avenue. On the first floor stayed Motilal Roy who was then the chief editor of 'The States man'. Though a bachelor he had an army of maids and attendants working for him. He was slightly eccentric... dark revolutionaries would come to collect money from grand- father. However, once, the police's suspicion was aroused. Netaji Subhashchandra Bose came and stayed in our house on one occasion. The Magistrate enquired with Kaka: 'Why did Subhash Bose come and stay with you?' Kaka told them: 'The relatives of my third brother had invited Subhash-babu to their house but my brother's family... 'What a great honour it for me, sir!' Everyone enjoyed Dada's story. One of them asked: 'We you told us about all these Brahmin titles. Tell us also about the kayastha titles like Ghosh, Bose, Mitra, Dutt, etc. He did they get these titles?' "Ah, you don't know that story, then? During the time BaIIal Sen, five Brahmins from Kannauj were brought Bengal. Accompanying these five Brahmins ...
... possession in India or elsewhere. This was foiled too, and the new French President, M. Poincaré, was firm on this issue. There was, then, the British attempt to get a warrant of extradition against Rashbehari Bose, a revolutionary who was supposed to be hiding in Chandernagore Sri Aurobindo wrote to Motilal Roy immediately and asked him to take steps to defeat the British move, lest it should become a ...
... tried to obtain Sri Aurobindo’s address, but in vain. He also harboured for some time Rashbehari Bose (1880-1945), who had masterminded a bomb attempt against Viceroy Lord Hardinge and who fled to Japan in 1915, where he married a Japanese woman and founded the Indian Independence League in 1924. The Richards met Bose as a matter of course. ‘I attended every meeting at which an Indian scholar spoke ...
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