Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Ghadr Network

 In 1913, the Ghadar movement was formed by the expatriates Punjabis in the United States with the shared leaders of Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims. It was one of the many revolutionary groups which were active along with Abhinav Bharat, Jugantar, Anushilan Samiti, and many more across Europe especially in Germany and United States. The goal of the Ghadar Party/movement was to overthrow the British colonial rule in India. And this was more or less the common goal of all the revolutionary groups, though their methodologies were different.

However as 1914, the First world war commenced, most of the revolutionary groups synced in a common understanding that by joining hands with the central powers, and using the German empathy over Britain on India as its colony, there can be a major jolt provided to the British rule in India.

The Indians in America around 1912-13 were deeply stressed by the progress of the Indian freedom movement and especially the approach of congress under Gandhi who was more of assisting Britain in their war, that would help Britain providing independence to India. In 1912, a Hindustan Association, dedicated to self-rule in India was formed in Oregon. In California, the Ghadar Movement began in 1913 as a coalition of expatriate Punjabis dedicated to raise money and support to overthrow British rule in India. It was organized and headed by Lala Har Dayal, who was at Stanford university. Its early leaders included two sikhs and a muslim and the masthead of its publications bore the name “Ram, Allah, and Nanak”.

The prejudices and racial discriminations that Sikhs experienced in America fueled their passion for ending colonial oppression in India. In 1914, the Canadian authorities refused the Japanese steamship Komagata Maru permission to land, as a result of which 300 punjabis were left stranded for weeks in Vacouver before which they were to return to Pacific forcefully. This incident send shockwaves to the sikh community down the west coast.

The main way of working of the Ghadar party was by printing pamphlets and supplying arms and volunteers for revolution to India. There had been many missions planned by the party in India, which went unsuccessful. The international Ghadar activity in Germany and elsewhere eventually led to what the press touted as the “Hindu Conspiracy” trial in San Fransico in 1917-18. After the shooting of Ghadar’s major leaders like Ram Chandra, the Ghadar movement left completely in the hands of the Sikhs.

On the land front, the Ghadar Party in San Francisco and the Germans executed the ‘Siam Project’ and the ‘Batavia Plan’ in collaboration. These were the most crucial plans in this troubled period. The details of these emerged through two people later arrested by the British. They were an European employed in german secret service  and held in Singapore by end July 1915 (referred to as Mr ‘X’) and a Punjabi arrested in Bangkok by end August 1915 (christened ‘Z’) .       In the United states and elaborate plan and arrangement was made to ship arms from the country and from far East through Shanghai, Batavia (Jakarta), Bangkok (siam) and Burma. Their idea was to organize 10000 men on the Bruma-Siam frontier and overrun Burma and then the whoe of India. A German officer ‘George Paul Boehm” who was to train these armed men was arrested in Singapore by the British on 27th Septemebr 1915. One of the plans that ‘X’ revelaed was that the Germans wanted to take over Andaman Islands. An agent was to visit the islands as a merchant, land arms that were supplied by German sources, destroy the wireless systems, contact the revolutionaries at the Cellular Jail, free them and flee to Siam and then Rangoon. From ‘X’ was recovered the list of political prisoners that this group wished to free-on top of the list were Vinayak Savarkar and his brother, and members of the Maniktala Case*. The list, he said was written out for him by one Dr Haidar in Berlin, though the handwriting seemed to match that of revolutionary Bhupendra Nath Dutt. ‘X’ had a complete set of photographs of the jail and information on the number of officials, troops, police and warders across the Adnaman settlements. This could not have been possible but for communication from someone from within the Cellular Jail who had passed on vital information to the revolutionaries abroad. The suspicion of the authorities naturally fell on Vinayak. Strict surveillance was place on Vinayak and his movements within the jail, and the entire complex became an armed fortress.

After repeated failures, German interest in India slowly began to wane, while most of the revolutionaries were tried and sentenced to life transportation to Mandalay or given term convictions. In 1920s, the Ghadar party was reorganized and it continued as a focal point for Punjabi and Sikh identity until the time of Indian independence in 1947.

The series of attempts by the Ghadar party between 1914 and 1917 to create a Pan-Indian rebellion against the British Empire during WWI is referred by many as the Hindu-German Conspiracy. Many more incidents and missions like: “Annie Larsen affair”, “Black Tom explosion” , “Pan-India mutiny”, “Christmas Day Plot” were part of the Ghadar movement or Hindu-German conspiracy.

The party was formally dissolved in 1948. Key participants in the Ghadar Movement included Bhai ParmanandVishnu Ganesh PingleSohan Singh BhaknaBhagwan Singh GyaneeHar DayalTarak Nath DasBhagat Singh ThindKartar Singh SarabhaAbdul Hafiz Mohamed BarakatullahRashbehari Bose, and Gulab Kaur. Many of them part of different fragments like Anushilan Samiti, Jugantar group etc etc.

Notes:

Maniktala Case or Alipore Bomb conspiracy case:

The 'Alipore Bomb Case' was "the first state trial of any magnitude in India". The British Government arrested Sri Aurobindo, a prominent Nationalist Leader at the time, Barindra Ghose, and many young revolutionaries. They were charged with "Conspiracy" or "waging war against the King" - the equivalent of high treason and punishable with death by hanging.

The case dragged on with preliminary hearings in the Magistrate's court, involving 1000 artefacts as evidence and 222 witnesses followed by a trial in Sessions Court, involving 1438 exhibits and 206 witnesses. During this period, the under-trial prisoners were illegally held in Presidency Jail under torturous conditions (including solitary confinement).

The judgment was finally delivered by Judge Beachcroft on 6 May 1909 after a protracted trial of one year. Sri Aurobindo was acquitted of all charges with the Judge condemning the flimsy nature of the evidence against him. Of the thirty-seven prisoners on trial, Barindra Ghose, as the head of the Secret society of revolutionaries and Ullaskar Dutt, as the maker of bombs, were given the death penalty (later commuted to transportation for life), seventeen others were given varying terms of imprisonment or transportation and the rest were acquitted.

Reference: http://www.sriaurobindoinstitute.org/saioc/Sri_Aurobindo/alipore_bomb_case

Also read: Muzaffarpur Assasination by Prafulla Chaki and Khudiram Bose

 

Annie-Larsen Affair

 

                                                               Annie-Larsen Affair

As part of a series of attempts by the Ghadar Party between 1914 and 1917 to create a Pan-India rebellion against the British during WWI (which is also referred to by many as the Hindu-German conspiracy), a gun running ( illicit trade of contraband small arms and ammunition, which constitutes part of a broad range of illegal activities often associated with transnational criminal organizations) plot that was planned in United States. The plot also involved conspiracies with the “Irish Republican Brotherhood” (was a secret organization dedicated to the establishment of an “independent democratic republic” in Ireland between 1858 and 1924) and the German Foreign office.

In 1914 German chancellor Theobald von Bethman-Hollweg authorized German activities against India. The German effort was headed by Max von Oppenheim (archaeologist and the new head of the Intelligence Bureau for the east). Oppenheim established contact with Har Dayal of the feasibility of the project and was able to establish contact with the Ghadar party in US. In an October meeting of the Imperial Naval Office, the consulate in San Francisco was tasked to make contact with Ghadar leaders in California. Naval lieutenant Wilhelm von Brincken was able to establish contact, through Tarak Nath Das and an intermediary named Charles Lattendorf, with Ram Chandra (President of Ghadar party between 1914 and 1917).

The entire plot was planned to execute the shipment of arms from New York to Galveston via the Mallory Steamship Company, (an Irish-American shipping Firm), from their by train to San Diego and finally shipped to India via Burma.

Hans Tauscher (an agent of the Krupp-a german family famous for production of steel, arms and ammunition) was to provide small arms and ammunition worth $ 200000 to German Military captain (Franz von Papen). The true destination was not revealed to the customs official “Charles Martinez”.

Martinez hired a sailing vessel (a shooner) named “Annie-Larsen” . The hatched conspiracy created was that the arms were meant for the warring factions in Mexico J. Clyde. Hizar (a Colorado attorney) in charge of placing the arms on board Annie Larsen, posed as a representative of the “Carranza Faction”.

Since Martinez was no unaware of the real intentions which included a Trans-pacific voyage, Annie-Larsen was not suitable for the same and accordingly a German Naval Officer (Frederick Jebsen) arranged for “SS Maverick” which was purchased stating that it would be used for "American-Asiatic Oil Company", a fake oil-trading company. The ship was deployed between China and Borneo.

The Annie-Larsen was to transfer its shipment at a meeting place decided as Scorro Island near Mexico after which SS Maverick will proceed for its destination. The Maverick had hired crew composed of sailors from two German ships interned at San Fransico. An American by the name “John B. Starr-Hunt” served as the supercargo of Maverick and was under the orders to scuttle the ship if challenged by Allied warships. The impression at the docks was that the ship was to relieve congestion in the East Indian Coconut industry, in Java and Borneo.

As per the plan, from Scorro Island, the Maverick will transfer the arms for transshipment to India.  There, the arms would be provided to Hindu nationalists, who had formed the Ghadar Party for the purpose of overthrowing the British Raj in India. The Germans, with support from Irish nationalists, sought to divert British and Allied forces from the main theater in Europe. The execution went terribly wrong, with the Maverick getting delayed in the dockyard for a month which forced in the Annie Larsen waiting at Scorro Island for almost a month, to the Mexican mainland for replenishment. Mexican officials engaged in the Mexican revolution got suspicious on the schooner and delayed the shooner’s (Annie Larsen) departure again for Scorro Island. On the other hand, while even in the dockyard, continuous suspensions led the authorities survey the Maverick multiple times by customs and security only to find empty hold. But before it finally started for Scorro island, it received an additional crew of 5 Indian Ghadarites with fake Persian passports and large amounts of Ghadarite literature tasked to create contact with Indian revolutionaries to arrange for arms to Indian mainland by Ram Chandra. when the Maverick finally reached the Scorro island for a rendezvous, it couldn’t stay there for long, because of the British surveillance after it attracted the attention of the Royal Navy and the US Navy. Soon, finding no other option, the Annie Larsen was sailed to quiet port of Grey Harbor, Washington for further instructions, only to be caught by the customs officers when the arms were discovered. While the arms were seized, the German Agent on board escaped. The Maverick after reaching Scorro island, still waited for 29 days for the return of Annie Larsen, during which it was visited by the Royal Navy ship: HM Kent. The Ghadarites were forced to burn the revolutionary literature in the boiler room when the Kent’s crew searched the ship.  The plot was thus foiled. The ensuing Hindu-German Conspiracy trial was one of the largest and most expensive in US history to that date.  Defendants consisted for numerous German agents and Indian and Irish nationalists.  Over one hundred witnesses testified.  On the last day of the trial, which was closely followed by the press, the chief Indian conspirator was assassinated by one of his fellow defendants, who was then shot and killed by a US Marshal.  In a postscript, the once-again obscure Annie Larsen was grounded and lost on Malden Island in the central Pacific in 1918.

Another claim says, returning to San Diego after failing to meet the Annie Larsen, the Maverick was directed by Fred Jebsen to proceed to Hilo, Hawaii, where it was redirected to Johnston Island by the German consulate for a second effort to rendezvous with the Annie Larsen. And on the other hand Annie Larsen which actually went to Acapulco for replenishment, made for Socorro Island again. However, in adverse weather, this attempt failed as well, and after twenty-two days Scheultzer gave up, choosing to make for the northern port of Hoquiam, Washington.[1][9]However, this failed too and it was subsequently directed to AnjerJava.[8][9] At Anjer, a German operative named Theodore Helfrichs was instructed to dispose of the ship. However, it was seized by Dutch authorities. Starr-Hunt and four of the Ghadarites attempted to flee in a ship, but were captured by the British cruiser HMS Newcastle. Taken to Singapore, Starr-Hunt confessed his role in the plot.

 

About Annie-Larsen

The three-masted schooner Annie Larsen was built in Port Blakely, Washington in 1881 to carry lumber up and down the Pacific coast.  Many similar vessels were used for the same purpose during this period of rapid development in Washington, Oregon, and California.  Its mundane existence changed forever in 1915 when it was chartered to a Los Angeles shipbroker with secret ties to German intelligence. Through a series of middlemen, the Germans had acquired a load of surplus US Army rifles and ammunition.  The arms were shipped to San Diego and loaded onto the Annie Larsen in February 1915.  Plans called for the schooner to rendezvous with the freighter Maverick near Socorro Island, Mexico and transfer the arms for transshipment to India.


Reference: Wikipedia

                   https://www.maritimeprofessional.com/blogs/post/annie-larsen-affair-14761


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Being a travel freak and interested in ancient Bharat, I travel with my family, i love driving and exploring our country. I am deeply interested in exploring our ancient temples because they are the reflection of our real civilization.