okładka

Tom 18 Nr 2 (2011)

ISSN:
1427-7476

eISSN:
2957-1723
Dział: Varia

Obywatele polscy z Nawanagar w Indiach

Anuradha Bhattacharjee

Departament Mediów, Kultury i Komunikacji Instytut Komunikacji Mudra Ahmedabad Indie

Pamięć i Sprawiedliwość, Tom 18 Nr 2 (2011), strony: 233-254

Data publikacji: 2011-12-30

Abstrakt

Polish citizens in Nawanagar, India The history of the 1940 journey across India of Polish citizens evacuated by Gen. Anders is well known to historians. Literature on the subject presents the view that the journey to India and the provision of housing took place under the auspices of a program sponsored by Great Britain. Yet a careful analysis of documents has shown that it was the Indian princely state of Nawanagar that first offered to accommodate the Polish children evacuated from the USSR in 1941. The first 500 Polish children were hosted in Balachadi, Nawanagar, and supported with charity funds collected in India by Indian princes and other wealthy individuals. Between 1942 and 1948, Indian citizens’ donations for the maintenance of the Polish orphans amounted to the sum of 600,000 rupees (44,250 pounds sterling, the equivalent of 64,241.51 present-day pounds sterling).

K. Sword, Deportation and Exile: Poles in the Soviet Union, 1939–1948, Londyn 1994 R.V. Kesting, American Support of Polish Refugees and Their Santa Rosa Camp, „Polish-American Studies” 1991, t. 48, nr 1, s. 79–90 I. Copland, The Princes of India in the Endgame of Empire 1917–1947, Londyn 1997 S. Sarkar, Modern India 1885–1947, London 1989 A. Bhatti, J.H. Voigt, Jewish Exiles in India 1933−1945, New Delhi 1999 E. Raczyński, In Allied London, Londyn 1962 K. Sword, Deportation and Exile, Poles in the Soviet Union 1939–1948, London 1994 L. Krolikowski, Stolen childhood – a saga of Polish War Children, New York 1983

okładka

Tom 18 Nr 2 (2011)

ISSN:
1427-7476
eISSN:
2957-1723

Data publikacji:
2011-12-12

Dział: Varia