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TO DELHI, TO DELHI
Speech at a military review of the Indian National Army, July
5, 1943
SOLDIERS of India’s Army of Liberation!
Today is the proudest day of my life. Today it has pleased
Providence to give me the unique privilege and honour of announcing to the whole
world that India’s Army of Liberation has come into being. This army has now
been drawn up in military formation on the battlefield of Singapore, which was
once the bulwark of the British Empire.
This is not only the Army that will emancipate India from the
British yoke, it is also the Army that will hereafter create the future national
army of Free India. Every Indian must feel proud that this Army, his own Army,
has been organized entirely under Indian leadership and that when the historic
moment arrives, under Indian leadership it will go to battle.
There are people who thought at one time that the Empire on
which the sun did not set was an everlasting empire. No such thought ever
troubled me. History had taught me that every empire has its inevitable decline
and collapse. Moreover I had seen with my own eyes, cities and fortresses that
were once the bulwarks but which became the graveyards of by-gone empires.
Standing today on the graveyard of the British empire, even a child is convinced
that the almighty British empire is already a thing of the past.
When France declared war on Germany in 1939 and the campaign
began, there was but one cry which rose from the lips of German soldiers—"To
Paris, To Paris !" When the Brave soldiers of Nippon set out on their march in
December 1941 there was but one cry which rose from their lips-"To Singapore. to
Singapore !" Comrades ! Soldiers ! Let your battle-cry be-"To-Delhi To Delhi ! "
How many of us will individually survive this war of freedom, I do not know. But
I do know this, that we shall ultimately win and our task will not end until our
surviving heroes hold the victory parade on another graveyard of the British
empire, the Lal Kila or Red Fortress of ancient Delhi.
Throughout my public career, I have always felt that though
India is otherwise ripe for independence in every way, she has lacked one thing,
namely an army of liberation. George Washington of America could fight and win
freedom, because he had his army. Garibaldi could liberate Italy, because he had
his armed volunteers behind him. It is your privilege and honour to be the first
to come forward and organize India’s national army. By doing so, you have
removed the last obstacle in our path to freedom. Be happy and proud that you
are the pioneers, the vanguard, in such a noble cause.
Let me remind you that you have a two-fold task to perform.
With the force of arms and at the cost of your blood you will have to win
liberty. Then, when India is free, you will have to organize the permanent army
of Free India, whose task it will be to preserve our liberty for all time. We
must build up our national defense on such an unshakable foundation that never
again in our history shall we lose our freedom.
As soldiers, you will always have to cherish and live up to the three-ideals of
faithfulness, duty and sacrifice. Soldiers who always remain faithful to their
nation, who are always prepared to sacrifice their lives, are invincible. If
you, too, want to be invincible, engrave these three ideals in the innermost
core of your hearts.
A true soldier needs both military and spiritual training.
You must, all of you, so train yourselves and your comrades that every soldier
will have unbounded confidence in himself, will be conscious of being immensely
superior to the enemy, will be fearless of death, and will have sufficient
initiative to act on his own in any critical situation should the need arise.
During the course of the present war, you have seen with your own eyes what
wonders scientific training, coupled with courage, fearlessness and dynamism,
can achieve. Learn all that you can from this example, and build up for Mother
India an absolutely first-class modern army.
To those of you who are officers, I should like to say that
your responsibility is a heavy one. Though the responsibility of an officer in
every army in this world is indeed great, it is far greater in your case.
Because of our political enslavement, we have no tradition like that of Mukden,
Port Arthur or Sedan to inspire us. We have to unlearn some of the things that
the British taught us and we have to learn much that they did not teach.
Nevertheless. I am confident that you will rise to the occasion and fulfill the
task that your countrymen have thrown on your brave soldiers. Remember always
that officers can make or unmake an army. Remember, too, that the British have
suffered defeats on so many fronts largely because of worthless officers. And
remember also that out of your ranks will be born the future General Staff of
the Army of Free India.
To all of you I should like to say that in the course of this
war you will have to acquire the experience and achieve the success which alone
can build up a national tradition for our Army. An army that has no tradition of
courage, fearlessness and invincibility cannot hold its own in a struggle with a
powerful enemy.
Comrades ! You have voluntarily accepted a mission that is
the noblest that the human mind can conceive of. For the fulfillment of such a
mission no sacrifice is too great, not even the sacrifice of one’s life. You are
today the custodians of India’s national honour and the embodiment of India’s
hopes and aspirations. So conduct yourself that your countrymen may bless you
and posterity may be proud of you.
I have said that today is the proudest day of my life. For an enslaved people,
there can be no greater pride, no higher honour, than to be the first soldier in
the army of liberation. But this honour carries with it a corresponding
responsibility and I am deeply conscious of it. I assure you that I shall be
with you in darkness and in sunshine, in sorrow and in joy, in suffering and in
victory. For the present, I can offer you nothing except hunger, thirst,
privation, forced marches and death. But if you follow me in life and in death,
as I am confident you will, I shall lead you to victory and freedom. It does not
matter who among us will live to see India free. It is enough that India shall
be free and that we shall give our all to make her free. May God now bless our
Army and grant us victory in the coming fight!
Inqualab Zindabad !
Azad Hind Zindabad !
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