A. C. N. Nambiar Biography

Arathil Candeth Narayanan Nambiar (1896 – 17 January 1986) was an Indian Nationalist and a friend and colleague of Subhas Chandra Bose. Originally from Kerala (he was born in Thal*ery), Nambiar spent much of his life serving the Indian independence movement in Europe.

In Europe

Nambiar had been working in Europe as a left-wing journalist for some time when the Second World War broke out. In the 1930s he had been beaten up by National Socialist German Workers' Party stormtroopers, imprisoned, and then deported, at first to Prague. At the outbreak of war he was working in Paris.

According to MI5 do*ents that remained cl*ified until 2014, the British believed Nambiar was a Soviet spy before the war. The do*ents show that a Soviet defector in the 1950s said Nambiar had been an agent of the GRU in the 1920s. Nambiar had visited Moscow in 1929 while active in Indian communist organisations. (The decl*ified do*ents also included correspondence between Nambiar and Bose captured after the surrender of German submarine U-234.)

In January 1942 he joined the Free India Centre as second in command to Bose. This organisation was set up by Bose to promote Indian independence and to *ist the enemies of the British Empire, namely National Socialist German Workers' Party Germany, the Empire of *an, and the other Axis powers. Nambiar was a reluctant recruit; his anti-National Socialist German Workers' Party politics put him in an uncomfortable position, but he finally suc*bed to Bose's persuasiveness and moved to Berlin. Nambiar established a branch of the Free India Centre in Paris before leaving. The Berlin Centre was given the status of a foreign mission by Germany and ran a propaganda radio station. It also controlled and recruited the Indian Legion. This had been founded by Bose and was mainly recruited from Indian prisoners of war and officered by Germans. It was originally intended to use it to fight the British in India, but it was eventually deployed to defend the French coast. It was never a significant military force, never consisting of more than a few thousand men.

In January 1943 Bose secretly transferred by submarine to the *anese theatre of war, leaving Nambiar in charge in Germany. There was more potential there for recruitment to Bose's cause amongst Indian prisoners; large numbers had been taken in the Fall of Singapore. The at*ude of Bose and Nambiar towards National Socialist German Workers' Party Germany slowly transformed from seeing it as a convenient way of obtaining material support for their cause to believing that German victory was essential for them to succeed. As a consequence, they more and more accepted use of the Legion in the German cause as opposed to exclusively in India. In April Nambiar had to deal with a mutiny in the Legion, who were reluctant to move to the Netherlands as ordered. They had believed they would be fighting in India or somewhere from where they could attack towards India such as North Africa. By August the Centre's operations became severely disrupted by Allied bombing and Nambiar's own house was destroyed. Most activity was moved out of Berlin, but Nambiar remained there as Bose's official representative. In March 1944 Nambiar was appointed Minister of State in Bose's Provisional Government.

In August 1943 the Legion, now with a strength of three battalions, was moved from the Netherlands to Bordeaux where they found the climate more agreeable. However, as the threat of Allied invasion started to loom morale severely deteriorated. In a tour in April and May 1944 Nambiar concluded that morale could only be improved by action. He persuaded the reluctant German commander of the Legion (Lieutenant Colonel Krappe) to allow a small contingent into action as an experiment. The 9th Company was sent to Italy, where some Legion personnel were already being used in intelligence and propaganda roles. The experiment was a complete failure. They were positioned opposite a Polish force. The initial reconnaissance party immediately deserted, followed by the entire company refusing to go into action on the grounds that the Poles were not their enemy.

Post-war

Nambiar was imprisoned after the war for collaboration with the enemy. He escaped to Switzerland and, against the wishes of Britain, was given an Indian p*port by Nehru's Interim Government. He then worked as a counsellor at the Indian Legation in Berne. He was appointed Indian amb*ador to Scandinavia, then, in 1955 he was appointed the second Indian Amb*ador to the Federal Republic of Germany, succeeding Subimal Dutt. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan in 1958. Nambiar finished his career as European correspondent of the Hindustan Times.

Personal life

He was the fourth son of writer Vengayil Kunhiraman Nayanar and Arathil Candethil Kallyani Amma. He married Suhasini Chattopadhyay, the sister of Sarojini Naidu, and the first woman Communist member of India in 1919. Later they separated.

References

    External links

    • A.C.N. Nambiar materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA)
    • Arathil Candeth Narian Nambiar: collaboration with National Socialist German Workers' Partys; activities in Europe; refusal of p*port facilities Jan 1946-Jan 1949 in UK National Archives
    • Arathil Candeth Narian Nambiar, Indian Information Bureau, Berlin: *ault and detention by National Socialist German Workers' Partys and deportation from Germany Mar 1933-May 1939 in UK National Archives