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The forgotten Indians who fought WWI for the Raj

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Updated: November 8, 2015 02:50 IST
The forgotten Indians who fought WWI for the Raj - The Hindu

One and a half million soldiers fought in freezing trenches dressed only in khaki cotton gear on the western frontier.
To wear a red poppy in your lapel is a ubiquitous form of homage in the U.K. to soldiers who died in the First World War. Yet in the ceremonies that mark Remembrance Day, there has till now been only a token recall of the contribution of a significant section of the British armed forces – soldiers from the subjugated colonies of British Empire who stood in the frontlines of the Great War.

One and a half million soldiers from undivided India fought in freezing trenches dressed only in khaki cotton gear on the western frontier; in Africa and West Asia; in Palestine, Mesopotamia, Gallipoli and Egypt. Of them, 72,000 died.

The gap in our historical knowledge of soldiers from undivided India, who constituted the biggest segment of troops from the colonies, will now significantly narrow with the publication of a new book by the London-based journalist and author Shrabani Basu.

In For King and Another Country, Ms. Basu — whose earlier biography of Noor Inayat Khan, the courageous Special Operations Executive of Indian origin in WW2, received much critical acclaim — seeks to shine a light on the lives and contributions of soldiers from the subcontinent in WW1.

Mining the vast and hitherto unused repository of official documents relating to Indian soldiers in the India Office Records at the British Library and National Archives; in newspapers of the period; and in interviews with the descendants of soldiers, Ms. Basu has put together a compelling and compassionate account of the lives of those who fought for causes that were not theirs in distant and unfamiliar theatres of war.

For the most part, Indian soldiers were cannon fodder for the British army. As chief guest General David Richards, former Chief of the Defence Staff, 2010-2013, put it: “Britain needed mass,” and Indian soldiers provided it.

Mr. Basu’s book tells us of children as young as 10 who fought in the frontline; of special arrangements made by the British to accommodate caste and religion, including separate funeral provisions; of the enduring blight of untouchability, even on foreign shores; and of outstanding examples of bravery, earning 11 Indians the Victoria Cross.

Clearly, the colonial rulers had well imbibed the lessons of 1857 and the disastrous consequences of religious unity that bound Indian soldiers in opposition to colonial rule. Through photographs and text, Ms. Basu puts faces and hearts to a population hitherto an amorphous mass in the popular mind. There is Sukha, the Dalit cleaner whose dead body both caste Hindus and Muslims reject and is ultimately buried with due dignity by a church in Brockenhurst; there is the dashing and brave 19-year old aviator Indra Lal ‘Laddie’ Roy, a tragically young victim of combat. We are introduced to Hardit Singh Malik, another RAF aviator, later to become a distinguished diplomat in independent India. There is Khudada Khan, a machine gunner with the 129th Baluchis who was the last man alive in October 1914 in a German attack near Ypres; and many more participants of that distant war.
 
Im irritated to see Bollywood and other idiots asking for the Kohinoor Diamond back. Why won't these dimwits ask for the religious artifacts that are in their bloody museums first and foremost?
 
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http://www.hindustantimes.com/world...raq-s-basra/story-s5CCzSM3g0DwuTLyP1Be9K.html

One of the largest memorials to Indian soldiers who fought in the first and second world wars – set in Basra, Iraq – is set to go online on April 18 as part of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s plans to celebrate its centenary this year.

It will be launched by CWGC’s director-general Victoria Wallace at the United Service Institution (USI) of India in New Delhi, marking a new emphasis of the organisation on India, where it cares for graves or memorials of over 62,000 people who died in the two world wars.

The Basra memorial is particularly significant in India’s military history. During the First World War, Basra was occupied by the 6th (Poona) Division in November 1914, from which date the town became the base of the Mesopotamian Expeditionary Force.

Wallace told Hindustan Times that the virtual memorial to Indian soldiers in Basra is part of a range of CWGC activities for its centenary year across India, the UK and elsewhere. USI is CWGC’s partner in India.

Indian casualties of First World War were buried in the Basra cemetery but their numbers and names were never recorded. The plots of graves there are marked by two memorials of a general nature, one to the Hindu and Sikh soldiers and the other to Muslims.

The Basra Indian Forces Cemetery contains 292 burials of the Second World War. The virtual memorial will include details of every Indian soldier who died there, including the places they came from in colonial India.

Wallace said: “The CWGC Basra Memorial commemorates around 40,000 servicemen who died in Iraq during the First World War and have no known grave. Over 36,000 served with the Indian Army”.

“That is half of the total number of Indian Army personnel we commemorate for the entire war. Our online resource lists all their names, and provides more information about who they were, where they came from, and what they did”, she added.

The CWGC’s India plans include ‘India Remembers’, which seeks to reconnect communities with the country’s military heritage with events in schools, institutions and others community areas. CWGC work in India includes cemeteries in Kohima and Imphal in the north-east.

In the UK, the CWGC cares for the graves or memorials of 422 Indian Army service personnel who died in the two world wars, mainly in the Brookwood cemetery in Surrey and in Brighton. India contributes to CWGC’s annual budget.

Overall, the CWGC seeks to ensure that 1.7 million people who died in the two world wars will never be forgotten, caring for cemeteries and memorials at 23,000 locations in 154 countries.
 
http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...roics-of-a-forgotten-army/article19217819.ece

99 years ago, the Mysore Lancers played a big role in liberating the city of Haifa
They were part of nearly 1.3 million fellow countrymen whose story and military achievements in distant lands in a war which had little stakes for India, is all but forgotten.

Of them, personnel from Mysore Lancers – which was part of princely Mysore’s military under Nalwadi Krishnaraja Wadiyar – stood proud of their achievements in the middle eastern theatre of World War I (1914-18).

It is their contribution and memories that are now being resurrected with the Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Israel where 99 years ago, the Mysore Lancers played an important role in the liberation of the city of Haifa from the Ottoman troops and Germans.

Modern Mysore

The first contingent of the Mysore regiment consisted of 29 officers, 444 non-commissioned officers. Men with 526 horses, 49 mules and 132 followers left Bangalore on October 13, 1914 under the command of B. Chamaraja Urs. They were accompanied by Major M.H. Henderson and Col. J. Desaraja Urs as the representative of the Durbar, as per the account of the war by historian M. Shama Rao in Modern Mysore.

Reinforcements were sent periodically to ensure that the corps strength was not depleted and Mysore Transport Corps was mobilised for active service in 1915. Six detachments of the corps comprising of 12 officers, 321 ranks, 49 followers with 210 carts and other requirements was dispatched again in September 1916 under the command of Furzulla Khan.

Modern Mysore states that the Mysore Lancers engaged with the “enemy” in the Suez Canal in November 1915, took part in the attack on Gaza in Palestine in November 1917 and suffered heavy casualties in the action at Aleppo (in present day Syria) in October 1918.

It goes on to add that the Mysore Imperial Transport Corps landed at Basra and helped establish communication and took active part in the battle of Sannaiya and Hai but their commandant Furzulla Khan was killed in action in July 1917.

Many honours

Among those whose gallantry has been eulogised include Commandant A.T. Thyagaraj of the Transport Corps who was awarded the title of Captain. Jamadar Adul Gaffar Khan, while serving in Egypt, charged into the enemy position braving heavy machine gun fire and rallied the squadron after its British officer was killed. Risaldar A. Lingaraj Urs was among the earliest Indians to lose his life in action at Aleppo when he died during the final phase of operation in Palestine on October 26, 1918.

Other soldiers whose names are evoked by historians are that of Subbaraja Urs, Mir Turab Ali, among others, while one B.P. Krishne Urs is credited with extreme valour in warding off the enemy attack in the Suez Canal in 1915 by capturing 40 Turks as prisoners. He was latter awarded the Military Cross by the British and White Eagle of Serbia by the King of Serbia, according to Shama Rao.

Some like Col. Chamaraja Urs and Desaraj Urs returned to hold exalted posts in the king’s army after World War I. But there were others who did not return or slipped into oblivion.

In the historical accounts that followed, they receive a passing mention at best. A similar fate befell the next generation of nearly 2.5 million Indians who ended up fighting in the Second World War almost 20 years later.
 
Love in the time of the Great War
TNN | Mar 4, 2017, 07.19 AM IST
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BENGALURU: The docu-fiction, Farewell My Indian Soldier, throws the spotlight on the Indian soldiers who fought in France during World War I.

Over a 1,40,000 Indian soldiers and civilian workers defended France against invasion during World War 1. But far from being feted, their story lay forgotten, gathering dust on the gravestones at the Neuve-Chapelle Indian Memorial in France. Which is why when Paris-based filmmaker Vijay Singh visited the place on an invitation a few years back, there wasn't much that he was aware of, beyond already-known facts -it is a tribute to some 4,702 soldiers who'd lost their lives in the Battle of NeuveChapelle. Piqued by the war memorial, Singh would later chance upon a book in French that contained letters written by these Indian soldiers. The letters and the stories behind them fascinated him enough to want to make a docufiction about them. Singh was in Bengaluru recently to screen the film, Farewell My Indian Soldier.Made over a period of five years, the docu-fiction evocatively narrates the story of Indian soldiers using 100-year old war songs, over 600 insightful letters and personal testimonies. There's a lot of information that would fascinate any history buff.

For one, the Indian soldiers, most of whom came from the hinterlands of India, found France to be a different universe. There were no divisions of caste or religion.Unlike the British who kept their woman away from the Indian soldiers at home, in France, the bravehearts were coveted by the mademoiselles. "In fact, the French title of the docu-fiction is Mademoiselle France Pleure. It translates in English to `Miss France in Tears'. This was what French women would write on banners when they were bidding goodbyes to the Indian soldiers who'd temporarily live in French villages for some R&R during the war," explains Singh.

"I'd like to believe that this warm reception gave the soldiers' a first-hand taste of the French values of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity," Singh says.

And the admiration was mutual. Indian soldiers would write home several letters praising these independent, educated French women who were running their towns in the absence of their men."Everyone here is educated, even the women. Send our daughter to school," reads one of the letters featured in the documentary .

Ironic as it may sound, many a love bloomed between the brave Indian soldiers and their free-spirited French hostesses during the period of conflict, spawning children with Indo-French bloodlines.It is also the stories of these IndoFrench children that Singh tells.

Journeying through France, Belgium, England and India, the film traces the history through the eyes of one such young descendent, whom Singh met serendipitously.




"I happened to discuss the idea of the film with a friend of mine and he told me about this woman who'd apparently approached him during an exhibition of Indian soldiers' artifacts. She told him that her grandfather was an Indian soldier who'd fought in the war in France. She then asked my friend if he could help her find his family in India. My friend was just a bureaucrat and so the conversation ended there. And because they didn't exchange numbers, there was no way for me to get in touch with her," recalls Singh.




The lady's name was Monique Soupart and finding her again, as the director reveals, turned out to be a story in itself. "I approached the local paper of the place she was from and got them to publish a couple of articles about how we were looking for stories on Indian soldiers who had fought in France."




Singh hit pay dirt after waiting for a few months.




While he is happy with the reception of the film, the filmmaker is quite disappointed with India's disinterest in its history. "The first unit that was deployed in France during World War I was 15 Ludhiana, which is 2 Sikh battalion, today. There are a lot of records stored away in archives in Britain.Why is India not taking any interest in preserving them?" Singh asks, sadly.
 
The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi leaves for Haifa to pay homage to Indian soldiers at Haifa, liberated in WWI, in Israel on July 06, 2017. The Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu is also seen.
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The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi leaves for Haifa to pay homage to Indian soldiers at Haifa, liberated in WWI, in Israel on July 06, 2017. The Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu is also seen.
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The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi at the Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110780.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi laying wreath at Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110781.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi paying homage at the Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110782.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi and the Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu unveil the plaque to commemorate Indian Soldiers led by Maj Dalpat Singh who fought to liberate Haifa, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
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The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi and the Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu unveil the plaque to commemorate Indian Soldiers led by Maj Dalpat Singh who fought to liberate Haifa, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
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The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi signing the Visitors’ Book at the Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017. The Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu is also seen.
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I don't think this is something to be proud of. Our soldiers were sold off by the powerful for political gain which only benefited them but not us.

Agreed here.

WWs had nothing to do with the world and were technically bum European wars where people of our part of the world were forced to fight.
 
Prime Minister's Office
23-September, 2017 17:07 IST
PM salutes the brave Indian soldiers who laid down their lives to liberate Haifa in 1918


The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi has saluted the brave Indian soldiers who laid down their lives to liberate Haifa in 1918.

“On Haifa Day I salute the brave Indian soldiers who laid down their lives to liberate Haifa in 1918.

Was pleased to visit Haifa and pay homage there in person in July”, the Prime Minister said.

***
 
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...ost-cutting/story-fzjT1Us774fqV3RfFvZ9mJ.html

The government announced in August that it would shut the military farms to cut costs and better use its vast defence land portfolio.

india Updated: Oct 15, 2017 11:29 IST
Agence France-Presse, Allahabad
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A worker stands next to calfs eating at a British-era dairy farm opened in 1889 that is now run by the Indian military in Allahabad. (AFP)

Under a hot afternoon sun workers scrub down cows at the Allahabad Military Farm, the latest hangover of India’s colonial past being forced into the 21st century.

The 700-acre (285-hectare) farm in the city of 1.1 million people, along with 38 other military farms set up by the former British rulers, is to be closed in coming weeks.

The yellow and white Victorian-era buildings will probably be demolished while the 500 cows face an uncertain future.

The Allahabad farm, set up in 1889, is the oldest of those once used by the British to house the cows transported to Asia to provide milk for the troops in city barracks.

india-animal-army-dairy_be36acac-b16c-11e7-839f-5e4b0d653fbd.jpg

A cow stands next to the dairy farm. (AFP)
The government announced in August that it would shut the military farms to cut costs and better use its vast defence land portfolio.

The 39 farms are spread over 20,000 acres in all and include prime real estate in New Delhi and other big cities. They have about 25,000 cattle and hundreds of workers.

Over time, their upkeep has become expensive -- the farms cost more than $46 million a year to run -- according to media reports. It is also cheaper to get milk for the 1.2 million-strong Indian army from cooperatives.

The cross-bred Frieswal cow -- a mix of Holstein-Friesian cows from the Netherlands and India’s native Sahiwal -- at Allahabad is high-maintenance and requires special nutrition.

india-animal-army-dairy_ce795646-b16c-11e7-839f-5e4b0d653fbd.jpg

A worker watches cows walking through the dairy farm in Allahabad. (AFP)

In the scorching summer months, the animals also need to be showered up to three times a day as they cannot cope up with the heat.

Workers at the Allahabad farm had mixed feelings about the closure although the government has said they will be redeployed.

“We have been told that the farm will shut down permanently,” one officer told AFP on condition of anonymity. “But we will be [moved] elsewhere in other wings of the armed forces.”

Military authorities are trying to give the sturdy cows, bulls and calves to commercial dairy farms and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research.

india-animal-army-dairy_9f447144-b16c-11e7-839f-5e4b0d653fbd.jpg

A worker walks with a cow at the farm. (AFP)

One media report said the animals could be auctioned off. It is not sure who will buy them however as few farms have the expertise of looking after the Frieswals.

The cows yield an average of about 3,600 litres every 300 days compared to the national average yield of 2,000 litres.

Besides shutting down farms, the government is also to close army postal units and revamp ordnance depots.

The restructuring is aimed at devoting more resources to enhancing combat capability.
 
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/61342653.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

DEHRADUN: A team of the Garhwal Rifles will travel to France in November to identify and bring back the remains of its two soldiers killed during the First World War, an Army official said.

The decision came after the French government recently found the remains of four soldiers, including two unnamed Indian soldiers, at a construction site near Laventie, about 70km from Dunkirk, in France.

"The French government has found remains of two soldiers along with their regimental insignia having 39 number engraved on it. This makes us believe that the two soldiers could be of the Garhwal Rifles regiment," Lt. Colonel Ritesh Roy of Garhwal Rifles said.

Notably, during the time of World War I the now Garhwal Rifles regiment was known as '39 Garhwal Regiment'.

According to Roy, the other two remains found from the site were of British and German soldiers.

"We have already informed the Indian government and top Army officers about the situation and a team from our regiment will be visiting France to identify the remains.

"If it is confirmed that the remains belong to the Garhwal Rifles regiment soldiers only, then we will bring it back with full army honour," he added.

The British government honoured the 39th Garhwal Rifles by renaming it as '39 Royal Garhwal Rifles'. However, it was changed back to its original name after India's independence.

Over 650 soldiers of the Garhwal regiment lost their lives during World War I.
 
Laventie on the map of France

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Vice President's Secretariat
07-November, 2017 18:47 IST
Terrorism is a global concern that demands global attention: Vice President

Calls on His Majesty, The King Philippe of Belgium

The Vice President of India, Shri M. Venkaiah Naidu has said that terrorism is a global concern that demands global attention and requires global cooperation. He was interacting with His Majesty, The King Philippe of Belgium, in New Delhi today. Senior officials from both sides were present on the occasion.

The Vice President drew the attention of growing menace of terror across the globe. His Majesty agreed that this was a major global challenge and appreciated India’s support to Belgium in the hour of crisis when terrorism stuck their country. The Vice President suggested that India believes in an early conclusion of negotiation and adoption of the Comprehensive Convention on International terrorism at the United Nations. His Majesty the King of Belgium expressed support to India’s view in this regard.

The Vice President said that India and Belgium today are two vibrant democracies and share several ideals and principles. He further said that democracy, rule of law, freedom of speech, independent judiciary, free press and protection of human rights are fundamental values through which our societies are held together. Belgian academicians have made notable contribution to the advancement of Indian language studies, particularly Hindi and Sanskrit, in India and Belgium, he added.

The Vice President said that more than 1,30,000 Indian soldiers fought in the battle fields of Belgium during the First World War, and more than 9,000 made the supreme sacrifice. He expressed his happiness that the King would inaugurate the exhibition on contribution of Indian soldiers in the First World War and also release a coffee table publication, “India in Flanders Fields”. This indeed is a tribute to the heroism and sacrifice of Indian soldiers, he added.

The Vice President said that India today is an attractive business destination for Belgian businesses and would encourage Belgium Small and Medium Enterprises to explore tie-ups with Indian Start Ups. He further said that India’s 100 Smart Cities initiative is aimed at harnessing the economic potential of urban centres. Belgian companies with expertise in urban transportation solutions, energy efficient technologies, smart citizen services, sanitation and waste management will find many business opportunities in India, he added.

A high level delegation was accompanying the King of Belgium.



********

The Vice President, Shri M. Venkaiah Naidu calling on His Majesty The King Philippe of Belgium, in New Delhi on November 07, 2017.

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The Vice President, Shri M. Venkaiah Naidu calling on His Majesty The King Philippe of Belgium, in New Delhi on November 07, 2017.

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Last edited:
Ministry of Defence
11-November, 2017 10:57 IST
Primer: Burial Ceremony of Two WW-I Martyred Indian Army Soldiers on 12 Nov at Military Cemetery, La Gorgue, France

On 20th Sep 2016, during an excavation work on southern side of the village of Richebourg near Laventie Military Cemetery approximately 230 Kms away from Paris, two human remains were found. On examining their belongings, they were identified as causalities of 39th ROYAL GARHWAL RIFLES. The office of Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWWGC), which is curator of the graves of these unsung heroes, in consultation with the French Government and the Indian Embassy in France decided to hold a burial ceremony at Laventie Military Cemetery, with full military honours for these martyrs alongside the Annual Memorial Service to commemorate the Indian soldiers who sacrificed their lives in France and Belgium. On behalf of the Indian Army, a delegation comprising of the Commandant and the Subedar Major of the GARHWAL RIFLES Regimental Centre, two bagpipers from the GARHWAL RIFLES Regimental Pipe band and Colonel Nitin Negi, grandson of late Naik Darwan Singh Negi, Victoria Cross, the gallant hero in the battle of Festubert, were nominated to attend the Ceremony. In a symbolic gesture the soil from the graves of these soldiers would be brought back to their homeland.

During World War I, the GARHWAL Brigade comprising of 1st/39th and 2nd /39th ROYAL GARHWAL RIFLES showed unparalleled bravery in those treacherous trenches of France and Flanders. The British and the Indian soldiers fought shoulder to shoulder and attained martyrdom in the call of duty. The GARHWAL Brigade earned six Battle Honours and two Victoria Cross in France and Flanders Theatre.

On the solemn occasion, homage will also be paid to the martyrs of Indian Meerut Division at Nueve Chapelle War Memorial by laying wreaths on behalf of the Chief of the Army Staff, Indian Army by Brigadier Indrajit Chatterjee, Commandant and Subedar Major Trilok Singh Negi of the GARHWAL RIFLES Regimental Centre.

*****
 
The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi leaves for Haifa to pay homage to Indian soldiers at Haifa, liberated in WWI, in Israel on July 06, 2017. The Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu is also seen.
s20170706110778.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi leaves for Haifa to pay homage to Indian soldiers at Haifa, liberated in WWI, in Israel on July 06, 2017. The Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu is also seen.
s20170706110779.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi at the Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110780.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi laying wreath at Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110781.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi paying homage at the Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110782.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi and the Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu unveil the plaque to commemorate Indian Soldiers led by Maj Dalpat Singh who fought to liberate Haifa, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110783.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi and the Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu unveil the plaque to commemorate Indian Soldiers led by Maj Dalpat Singh who fought to liberate Haifa, in Israel on July 06, 2017.
s20170706110784.jpg

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi signing the Visitors’ Book at the Indian cemetery at Haifa, which Indian cavalry regiments helped liberate in 1918, in Israel on July 06, 2017. The Prime Minister of Israel, Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu is also seen.
s20170706110785.jpg
Soldiers from Pakistan

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