Her name was Saraswathi Rajamani.
She was born in 1927 in Rangoon, into one of the wealthiest Indian families in Burma. Her father owned a gold mine. She grew up in a mansion, slept on golden beds, and had newspapers and a radio at a time when few people did.
When she was about ten years old, Mahatma Gandhi visited her family’s home. Seeing her practising with a gun, he asked why she needed it. She replied that she wanted to shoot the British. The answer startled him.
At sixteen, she heard Subhas Chandra Bose speak in Rangoon. He called upon Indians to give their wealth and, if necessary, their blood for India’s freedom.
She walked up and donated all her gold and diamond jewellery to the Indian National Army.
Bose was astonished when he learned both the value of the donation and the age of the girl who had made it. He renamed her Saraswathi, saying she possessed a wisdom beyond her years.
She wanted to fight.
Instead, Bose recruited her into the INA’s intelligence network.
For nearly two years, she cut her hair short, dressed as a boy called Mani, and worked inside British military camps as a servant. She carried messages, gathered intelligence, and secretly passed it to the INA.
When one of her fellow women spies was captured, Saraswathi entered the British camp disguised as a dancer, drugged the guards, and rescued her.
As they escaped, she was shot in the leg.
She survived, but walked with a limp for the rest of her life.
She called it her medal.
When the war ended, the INA was dissolved. Her family had given away nearly everything they owned in support of the freedom movement.
They returned to India with almost nothing.
The girl who had once grown up in one of Rangoon’s richest homes spent her later years in a small rented room in Chennai, surrounded by photographs of Netaji.
When the 2004 tsunami struck, she donated her freedom fighter’s pension to the relief fund.
She died in 2018.
One of the youngest spies of the Indian National Army spent her final years in quiet obscurity, remembered by few, despite giving both her wealth and her youth to India’s freedom.
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She has exposed the conversion agenda spread through our devotional books
She has shared the name and contact number of the publication
Hindus kindly note
🚨Heart touchings Apeal : Help Mother to find her daughter missing from uttarakhand - Please Share for Humanity 🙏
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Please don't just scroll Pragya singh (29) went missing from train 12402 on 5th may near roorkee or muzaffarnagar she was in a pink salwar suit her phone is off 70+ hours have passed every second counts
Kalpakkam Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor attaining criticality is a historic milestone for our civil nuclear program.
It is also a testament to our growing domestic capabilities paving the way for nation’s energy security.
Congratulate our scientific community, engineers and many contributors on this momentous occasion.
Today, India takes a defining step in its civil nuclear journey, advancing the second stage of its nuclear programme.
The indigenously designed and built Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor at Kalpakkam has attained criticality.
This advanced reactor, capable of producing more fuel than it consumes, reflects the depth of our scientific capability and the strength of our engineering enterprise. It is a decisive step towards harnessing our vast thorium reserves in the third stage of the programme.
A proud moment for India. Congratulations to our scientists and engineers.
A 3-year-8-month-old boy from Kurnool has been diagnosed with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), a rare genetic disorder. Doctors say he needs a life-saving injection costing Rs 26 crore within 4 months to survive. His parents have appealed #AndhraPradesh government and the public for help to save their child. @naralokesh@ncbn
Mumbai introduces India’s first Musical Road, inspired by Japan and the US.
Vehicles driving at a set speed produce the melody of ‘Jai Ho’ through specially designed road grooves.
Pakistan’s elites live freely, no burqa, no hijab, no niqab.
At Junaid Safdar's (Maryam Nawaz's son) wedding, they openly sang "Tera Vishnu Aave Ghodi Chadheya" in full public view!
Their weddings are full of Sanatan culture, Bollywood music, lehengas, and Hindu traditions.
But the same cultural policing is forced on converted Muslim families in India, especially on women.
Names may change. Borders may change.
Civilisation doesn’t. Sanatan roots run deep. 🕉️