Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
India

'India must come to terms with its military history'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Oct, 2014 08:00 AM
  • 'India must come to terms with its military history'
India, which contributed over four million soldiers during the two World Wars and has fought five sub-continental wars since Independence, must come to terms with its military history. Otherwise the war memorial of the kind envisaged in the national capital would be jingoistic, says the author of a new book on this country's effort during WW-I.
 
"As a country, we are perhaps uncomfortable with the role of the military. We need greater emphasis on the role of the armed forces, particularly post-Independence. We need to be quite open about our military history... otherwise the (proposed) war memorial becomes a jingoistic exercise," Vedica Kant, whose first book, "India and the First World War", has just been published, told IANS in an interview.
 
"We need to be quite open about our military history. We need to examine the campaigns our armed forces were involved in; what went right and what went wrong.
 
"Our military history post-1947 has not been properly chronicled. For instance, we still have not officially released the Henderson-Brooks report (on the 1962 debacle against China)," added Kant, who is in her late 20s and is currently based in London where she works for a leading political risk consultancy.
 
(Presenting the budget for 2014-15 on July 10, Defence Minister Arun Jaitley announced that a National War Memorial and Museum would be built for Rs. 400 crore ($65,000) in the vicinity of the India Gate memorial to the unknown soldier. India Gate was built in memory of the Indian soldiers who had died during the First World War.)
 
Kant has an M.Phil degree from Oxford and and a Bachelor's degree from Singapore Management University. Quite appropriately, the title of her profusely illustrated book (Lustre Press/Roli Books) is prefaced with: "If I die here, who will remember me?" and has a forward by noted author Amitav Ghosh.
 
Thus, what did the Great War mean for Indian soldiers who had to fight a battle they were unprepared for, in lands they had never seen, against an enemy they didn't know and hitherto unheard of forms of warfare? How did the war impact the political climate in India?
 
Using first-hand accounts such as letters home, documents from various archives and rare photographs, Kant reconstructs the story of a war which was as much India's as it was England's.
 
The book documents, for the first time, India's contribution to the First World War, with details of the different theatres in which Indian soldiers took part. Additionally, Kant also examines the unsettling encounters the Indian soldiers had with foreign, especially European, culture and how it impacted the way they viewed life and living back home.
 
As for the conclusions to be drawn from the Indian effort, Kant writes: "In addition to its impact on the national politics of India, at a more micro level, the war had a bearing on the quotidian lives of the millions of soldiers who had experienced it first hand and were, in fact, significant contributors to its outcome. It is almost impossible to document or distil into one clear, coherent narrative the precise manner in which the war impacted its Indian participants. What the soldiers and other non-combatants made of the war and how they were influenced by it was determined by very individual factors such as theatre of battle, religion, class, caste and regional identity to name just a few."
 
She adds: "Despite these discrepancies in response, there is no doubt that most of the Indian troops returned from the war as changed men. In the words of one British officer, the Indian soldier could now be called a 'man of the world'. This worldliness also manifested itself in the politics of the retired soldiers. One of the most interesting outcomes of the war was the impact it had on the development of a political consciousness among some former soldiers and their role in the burgeoning national movement."

MORE India ARTICLES

Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah

Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah
National Conference (NC) patron and Srinagar Lok Sabha candidate Farooq Abdullah said Sunday that Jammu and Kashmir would not remain a part of India if the country becomes communal, while asking those who vote for Narendra Modi to "drown themselves".

Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah

Army chief's appointment: Need for restraint and consensus

Army chief's appointment: Need for restraint and consensus
Even as India is going through the last phase of a critical and intensely contested general election, which hopefully will lead to a new government in Delhi by late May, the appointment of a new army chief to succeed General Bikram Singh who retires on July 31 has become the focus of a potentially damaging controversy

Army chief's appointment: Need for restraint and consensus

Sachin Tendulkar is 'casual labourer', MGNREGS beneficiary in Goa

Sachin Tendulkar is 'casual labourer', MGNREGS beneficiary in Goa
Sachin Tendulkar may have won the Bharat Ratna, but according to the Goa government's records, he is a "casual labourer" and a beneficiary of the MGNREGS. And so are his wife and two children, says an NGO.

Sachin Tendulkar is 'casual labourer', MGNREGS beneficiary in Goa

Priyanka Gandhi, Smriti Irani in war of words over Rahul's work

Priyanka Gandhi, Smriti Irani in war of words over Rahul's work
A war of words broke out Saturday between Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and BJP's Amethi Lok Sabha candidate Smriti Irani, as the Gandhi scion urged people not to vote for an "outsider" in the constituency.

Priyanka Gandhi, Smriti Irani in war of words over Rahul's work

'Very sad' Manmohan Singh's family gets divided between BJP, Congress

'Very sad' Manmohan Singh's family gets divided between BJP, Congress
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said he felt "very sad" at his step-brother joining the BJP even as his family literally got divided between the opposition party and the Congress, with another step-brother joining the Congress road show of party candidate Amarinder Singh in Amritsar Saturday.

'Very sad' Manmohan Singh's family gets divided between BJP, Congress

PM can't see anything because of mother-son duo: Modi

PM can't see anything because of mother-son duo: Modi
Reacting to Manmohan Singh's comment that there was no wave in India in favour of Narendra Modi, the BJP's prime ministerial candidate Saturday said the prime minister was not able to see anything because the "mother-son duo" (Sonia and Rahul Gandhi) were "looking after things".

PM can't see anything because of mother-son duo: Modi