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Netaji's death: Amartya Sen goes by Anita Pfaff's view

"The leader's political thoughts... were something to be felt with the heart''


  • ``This visit brought me close to someone whom I have known about since childhood"
  • Meets Anita Pfaff and her husband Martin Pfaff



    EMINENT COMPANY: Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen with Anita Pffaf, daughter of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, at the Netaji Bhawan in Kolkata on Wednesday. — Photo: PTI

    KOLKATA: Nobel laureate Amartya Sen today declined to comment on the mysterious disappearance of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, saying he preferred to go by the view held by Netaji's daugter Anita Pfaff that he died in the Taihoku air crash.

    ``If Netaji had been alive, he would have been 108. It is not unknown for people to live to that age, but I have no jurisdiction to comment on how he died. I will go by what Netaji's daughter has to say on this,'' Mr. Sen told newspersons during a visit to the Netaji Bhavan here.

    Mrs. Pfaff had said on earlier occasions that she believed Netaji was killed in the air crash at Taihoku. ``Otherwise, he would have come to India after Independence,'' she said.

    Mr. Sen, who visited the Netaji Bhavan for the first time, said that the leader's political thoughts such as bringing about Hindu-Muslim unity, empowering women and integrating the country were something to be ``felt with the heart.''

    ``This visit brought me close to someone whom I have known about since childhood. I am particularly touched by a picture in which a group of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs are having a meal together. This was the practice of the Indian National Army. It is through vignettes like these that the thoughts of the great men are driven home,'' he said.

    Earlier, Mr. Sen was shown around the three-storey building, which was once Netaji's residence, by his niece-in-law and former MP, Krishna Bose, and her son, Prof. Sugata Bose.

    He also had a conversation with Mrs. Anita Pfaff and her husband Martin Pfaff. — PTI

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