NETAJI SUBHASH CHANDRA BOSE
A TRIBUTE
One of our greatest leaders of the indian Freedom Struggle
Subhas Chandra Bose was able to cut a figure which made him outstanding among the comparatively small number of men who influenced the course of the Indian independence movement by their individual qualities. He played an extraordinarily decisive part.
The Government of India and the people of the country have done an injustice to one of the greatest heroes of India's independence struggle whose dynamic moves through the Indian political landscape in the 1930s and early 1940s, culminating in the closing years and months of the Second World War through his Azad Hind Government and Azad Hind Army played such an important role in hastening the country's freedom from British Imperialism.
Fifty years after his death, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's ashes still lie uncared for in the Japanese temple where they were placed in 1945.

With Jawarharlal Nehru and his sister, Mrs. Vijaylakshmi Pandit, 1937.

With Sardar Patel, 1938.

Netaji mesmerises Delhi's youth at All India Student Conference, 1939.

With Mr. & Mrs. M.N. Roy, 1938

Receiving Panditji at Lilooah, 1938.

Addressing the A.I.C.C. session, 1939.

With Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan.

Lukhnow welcomes Netaji, 1940.