- Paris Indian Society
The Paris Indian Society was an Indian nationalist organisation founded in 1905 at
Paris under the patronage ofMadam Bhikaji Rustom Cama ,B.H. Godrej andS. R. Rana . The organisation was opened as a branch of theIndian Home Rule Society founded that same year inLondon under the patronage ofShyamji Krishna Varma .cite web
author = MAH
publisher = Dawn group of newspapers
url=http://www.dawn.com/weekly/dmag/archive/011230/dmag16.htm
title=Two words about one parsi
accessdate=2007-11-04] The Paris Indian Society also saw active participation from Indian nationalists who at various times were associated with theIndia House during its short existence. This includedVirendranath Chattopadhyaya ,Har Dayal ,M.P.T. Acharya andVinayak Damodar Savarkar .Harvnb|Parel|1997|p=xxviii] Harvnb|Yadav|1992|p=23] Other prominent Indians associated with the society included P.O. Mehta, H.M. Shah, P.C. Varma and a number of other prominent Indians in Paris at the time.Harvnb|Chopra|1985|p=205] The Paris Indian Society, under the strong leadership of Madam Cama, developed close links with theSocialist Party and Russian socialists in exile in Paris, and Cama herself attended the Socialist Congress of theSecond International atStuttgart in 1907, where seconded byHenry Hyndman , she demanded recognition of selfrule for India. It was at this congress that Cama famously unfurled one of the firstFlag of India .Following the liquidation of the
India House in the wake of Curson Wyllie's assassination in 1909 byMadanlal Dhingra , the PIS became the refuge and hub of Indian revolutionaries who fled England. The Paris Indian Society at this time grew to be one of the most powerful Indian organisations outside India at the time,Harvnb|Yadav|1992|p=26] and grew to initiate contacts with not only French Socialists, but also those in continental Europe. It sent delegates at this time to the International Socialist Congress in August 1910. At the time ofV.D. Savarkar 's rearrest atMarseilles folowing his escape during deportation from England, this socialist network was successfully able to exert pressure on the French government to press for Savarkar's extradition to France before the International Tribunal at Hague ruled in favour of Britain. In Paris, the Indian Society also held regular meetings and sought to train its members in skills necessary for revolution, which included training in firearms, learning military tactics, as well as organising the publication of revolutionary literature. It also sent recruits other countries and, after training, some were sent back to India to carry on propaganda work The Paris Indian Society produced the "Bande Mataram" from 1909, and Madam Cama later financed the "Talvar " to be produced in Berlin.References
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Chopra
Given1 = Pran Nath
Surname2= Xavier
Given2= Arakal
Year = 1985
Title = India's Struggle for Freedom: Role of Associated Movements
URL =
Publisher = Agam Prakashan on behalf of the Centenary Celebrations Committee of the Indian National Congress, New Delhi.
ISBN=.
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Parel
Given1 = Anthony
Year = 1997
Title = Hind Swaraj and other writings.
URL =
Publisher = Cambridge University Press
ISBN= 0521574315.
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Yadav
Given1 = B.D
Year = 1992
Title = M.P.T. Acharya, Reminiscences of an Indian Revolutionary
URL =
Publisher = Anmol Publications Pvt ltd
ISBN= 8170414709.Further Redaing
*Bose, Arun. "Indian Revolutionaries Abroad, 1905-1922". 1971. Bharati Bhawan.
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