AN INTERVIEW CONDUCTED BY HINDUSTAN
TIMES ON THE ALL TIME INDIAN HERO IN
2016
New Delhi: Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose’s daughter Dr Anita Bose Pfaff
wants a DNA test to be conducted to establish whether the ashes kept in a
Japanese temple are her father’s, but believes that the 1945 aircrash in Taipei
was the “most likely cause” of his death.
“I believe that the plane crash is
the most likely cause of his death,” Pfaff said when asked whether she believes
in the theory that her father died in an air crash near the Taihoku aerodrome
in Taipei on 18 August 1945.
However, she said she wants a DNA
test of the ashes kept in an urn at a Buddhist temple in Tokyo to ascertain
whether the remains belong to the freedom fighter.
“A DNA test could provide proof,
provided that the bones are not too badly charred for extracting DNA,” Pfaff,
the only child of Subhash Bose and Emilie Schenkl, told PTI in an
interview from her home in Stadtbergen, Germany.
Bose family sources said the 73-year
old German economist, who is likely to visit India next month, may urge the
Indian government to talk to Japan for conducting DNA test of the remains kept
in the Renkoji temple in Tokyo.
On whether the recently declassified
documents sufficiently proved Netaji’s death in the aircrash, Pfaff said “while
I have only looked at a few files, I get the impression that a death
certificate is not contained.”
Asked about her opinion that Bose was
not treated with as much respect as were leaders like Mahatma Gandhi and
Jawaharlal Nehru, Pfaff said: “That certainly seems to be the case for the
official treatment. “But the general public, the so-called man in the street,
however, seem to have kept his memory alive in a very touching way. It was a
shame how the Indian government treated the INA veterans for decades.”
To a question about Nehru’s approach
towards Bose, she merely said, “Since their relationship lasted over many
years, it was multi-faceted, I imagine. In many aspects they held similar
views, in others their views differed.”
Asked about her reaction to Nobel
laureate Amartya Sen’s recent remark that Netaji’s death has been used for
“petty politics”, Pfaff said, “On the part of some people this is true,
according to my opinion. “However, many of his relatives such as my uncles and
my mother very genuinely wished that he might have survived the crash or not
been in it. Their love for him made the acceptance of his death too hard to
bear.”
Reacting to the declassification of
Netaji files by the Centre and West Bengal government and whether these
documents would help solve the mystery behind the legendary freedom fighter’s
“disappearance”, she said was “indeed happy”. “It was high time. Most likely we
shall find out that for 90% of the files there has been no reason whatsoever
not to declassify them decades ago. I rather doubt that the declassified files
will reveal anything very spectacular about my father’s death,” she said.
She said she agreed with the view
that declassification should have been done much earlier. On whether Netaji’s
birthday should be declared a national holiday, she said, “I believe there are
better ways of keeping Netaji’s memory alive than a national holiday.”
On whether she has any plan to pen a
book on her father, she said, “I did not have the good fortune to know him
personally beyond the age of four weeks. I cannot say much about him. But
together with my niece and other women in our family, I have plans to write a book
about my mother.”
Anita, a former Professor of
Economics at the University of Augsburg, is married to Prof Martin Pfaff, who
was a member of German Parliament Bundestag, representing the SPD or the Social
Democratic Party. They have three children — Peter Arun, Thomas Krishna and
Maya Carina. PTI
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