Bengal Volunteers Corps was an underground revolutionary group against the British rule of India. The group was functional from its inception in 1928 to the Indian independence.
The beginning
Subhas Chandra Bose organised a group of volunteers during the 1928 Kolkata session of Indian National Congress.[1][2][3][4] The group was named Bengal Volunteers Corps and was under the leadership of Major Satya Gupta. Subhas Chandra Bose himself was the General officer commanding.[5] After the Calcutta session of the Congress was over, the Bengal Volunteers continued its activities, under the guidance of Gupta,[6] and was turned into an active revolutionary association.[7]
Activities
The Bengal Volunteers decided to launch 'Operation Freedom' in the early 1930s, primarily to protest against the police repression in different jails in Bengal.[8]
Citations
References
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