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Moar
August 28th, 2012, 03:10 PM
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>> BBC NEWS | Europe | Hitler's secret Indian army : http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3684288.stm


Excerpt:

"He wanted 500 volunteers who would be trained in Germany and then parachuted into India. Everyone raised their hands. Thousands of us volunteered." ~ Lieutenant Barwant Singh <<




>> Hitler's secret Indian army : http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1399564/posts <<




{{ www.jatland.com/forums/showthread.php?868-Jats-Aryan-or-Scythian&p=65937&viewfull=1#post65937 (http://www.jatland.com/forums/showthread.php?868-Jats-Aryan-or-Scythian&p=65937&viewfull=1#post65937) }}




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>> An Examination of the Framing of Indian Nationalists in Newspapers from 1915-1918 (Karla K. Gower - Doctoral Student) : http://list.msu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A3=ind9709d&L=AEJMC&E=7BIT&P=3267393&B=--&T=TEXT%2FPLAIN;%20charset=US-ASCII <<




>> The conspiracy is known under several different names, including the Hindu Conspiracy, the Indo-German Conspiracy, the Ghadar conspiracy (or Ghadr conspiracy), or the German plot. The term Hindu–German Conspiracy is closely associated with the uncovering of the Annie Larsen plot in the United States, and the ensuing trial of Indian nationalists and the staff of the German Consulate of San Francisco for violating American neutrality. The trial itself was called the Hindu-German Conspiracy trial, and the conspiracy was reported in the media (and later studied by several historians) as Hindu–German Conspiracy. However, the conspiracy involved not only Hindus and Germans, but also substantial numbers of Muslims and Punjabi Sikhs, and strong Irish support that pre-dated German and Turkish involvement. The term Hindu was used commonly in opprobrium in America to identify Indians regardless of religion. Likewise, conspiracy was also a negative term. The term Hindu Conspiracy was used by the government to actively discredit the Indian revolutionaries at a time the United States was about to join the war against Germany. The term Ghadar Conspiracy may refer more specifically to the mutiny planned for February 1915 in India, while the term German plot or Christmas Day Plot may refer more specifically to the plans for shipping arms to Jatin Mukherjee in Autumn 1915. The term Indo-German conspiracy is also commonly used to refer to later plans in Southeast Asia and to the mission to Kabul which remained the remnant of the conspiracy at the end of the war. All of these were parts of the larger conspiracy. Most scholars reviewing the American aspect use the name Hindu–German Conspiracy, the Hindu-Conspiracy or the Ghadar Conspiracy, while most reviewing the conspiracy over its entire span from Southeast Asia through Europe to the United States more often use the term Indo-German conspiracy.

(Source : Internet) <<

Moar
August 28th, 2012, 07:29 PM
आज देश को Secularism से ज़्यादा Socialism की ज़रूरत है |

swaich
August 28th, 2012, 10:24 PM
आज देश को Secularism से ज़्यादा Socialism की ज़रूरत है |

We are both, my friend. Just not very good at either of them.