Worth a read.
tribuneindia.com/2006/20060212/…
Ironically, the mutineers raised the flags of all three parties in order to underline the communal unity on board.
The tricolour was hoisted on all establishments on 19 Feb 1946.
Finally, brute force prevailed and the mutineers were arrested.
But they had put into motion a chain of events that would ultimately convince the British Empire that it couldn't count on continued loyalty of its Indian soldiers, followed as it was, by the Jabalpur mutiny by Indian Army Signallers.
They were aware that they didn't have the military force necessary to rule India if the Indian Sepoys didn't cooperate.
Memories of 1857 still haunted them.
A piece by @GabbarSanghi ..
Another recommended reading about this epochal event.
historyunderyourfeet.wordpress.com/2015/02/18/20-…
When asked some years later as to why the British left India, Attlee named Bose, armed forces mutiny as reasons. Gandhi helped too, just minimally, as per him.
Here's another blog post by @dikgaj, @maidros78, @sarkar_swati.
Worth a read. janamejayan.wordpress.com/2015/10/03/how…
Political movement could continue, but it was the events like INA, Jabalpur & Naval mutiny that finally 'convinced' the Empire to leave.
A week hence will be the 70th anniversary of the Jabalpur Mutiny.
#LestWeForget
:Fin: