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British Asian community urged to share sacrifice of their veteran relatives

British families of Pakistani, Indian and Bangladeshi origin are being urged to safeguard the memories of war veterans in their family to highlight the sacrifice of Asian soldiers in WW2. (My Family Legacy)
British families of Pakistani, Indian and Bangladeshi origin are being urged to safeguard the memories of war veterans in their family to highlight the sacrifice of Asian soldiers in WW2. (My Family Legacy)
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Updated 34 sec ago

British Asian community urged to share sacrifice of their veteran relatives

British families of Pakistani, Indian and Bangladeshi origin are being urged to safeguard the memories of war veterans.
  • More than 2.5m people from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka served in the Second World War
  • A new digital archive hopes to share the memories of their service

LONDON: British families of Pakistani, Indian and Bangladeshi origin are being urged to safeguard the memories of war veterans in their family to highlight the sacrifice of Asian soldiers in the Second World War.

The appeal came as a survey showed half of the British public were unaware that Indian troops served in the war, The Guardian reported.

My Family Legacy, a project supported by the Royal British Legion, is constructing a digital archive of veterans’ experiences to highlight the shared stories and sacrifices of Britain’s Pakistani, Indian and Bangladeshi communities.

More than 2.5 million people from those countries, as well as Nepal and Sri Lanka, served in the Second World War.

My Family Legacy is a joint project by the British Future think tank and the British Asian newspaper Eastern Eye.

It is appealing to British Asian families to provide names, stories and pictures of veteran family members, in order to keep their memories alive.

Even among British Asian communities, only about 60 percent of people were aware of the sacrifice of Asian soldiers in the war, according to Focaldata polling.

On Nov. 4, a UK parliamentary memorial event hosted by Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi MP, chair of the House of Commons defense committee, was held to honor late war veterans.

The event honored Havildar Maj Rajinder Singh Dhatt MBE, who took part in the Battle of Kohima, which repelled a Japanese attack on India, and Sgt. Mohammad Hussain, who left home at 16 to enlist and fought in the Battle of Monte Cassino in Italy.

Their stories are among the first to be added to My Family Legacy’s archive site.

Speaking at the memorial, Dhesi said that the sacrifice of Asian veterans must not be “airbrushed and ignored.”

Hussain’s grandson, Ejaz Hussain, said: “The shared history, as a united people fighting for one common cause in spite of their differences, serves as the ultimate metaphor for future generations on how we must remain united as a country. Only then can we overcome any and all challenges in an uncertain world.”

Dhatt’s granddaughter, Amrit Kaur Dhatt, said: “It is so important to capture stories of Commonwealth and ethnic minority soldiers, like my grandfather’s, because they were left out of mainstream history. I fear that today’s society clearly hasn’t learned enough from history.”

By helping to honor Britain’s Asian military veterans, the Royal British Legion hopes to make families feel included in remembrance, said Gail Walters, the charity’s director of network engagement.

Families providing details of their relatives’ service will help build a “fuller picture” of the “integral role” they played in British history, she added.


UK’s King Charles honors nation’s war dead

UK’s King Charles honors nation’s war dead
Updated 6 sec ago

UK’s King Charles honors nation’s war dead

UK’s King Charles honors nation’s war dead
LONDON: Britain’s King Charles III on Sunday led commemorations for the nation ‘s war dead, along with other senior members of the royal family including his son William and his wife Catherine.
The 76-year-old monarch, who is still undergoing treatment for an undisclosed cancer, laid the first wreath at a somber ceremony at the Cenotaph memorial in central London after the traditional two-minute silence at 11:00 am (1100 GMT).
Queen Camilla and Catherine, now in remission after her own cancer diagnosis, watched from the balcony of the Foreign Office overlooking the memorial.
Crowds lined the Whitehall area of the capital as political leaders, including Prime Minister Keir Starmer, current and former members of the armed forces, and war veterans, paid their respects to British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in two world wars and other conflicts.
Around 10,000 armed forces veterans took part in a march-past, including around 20 who served in World War II.
Among those who took part was 101-year-old Sid Machin, one of the last survivors of the Burma (now Myanmar) campaign, who served as part of a special forces unit.
Other members of the royal family including Prince William also laid wreaths.
Prince Harry, 41, who is largely estranged from his family after quitting royal duties along with his wife Meghan in 2020, was not present.
Days ahead of the Remembrance Sunday events, however, he penned a piece released by his US office in which he expressed his pride at being British and urged people not to forget veterans.
The younger son of the king, who did two tours of duty in Afghanistan, said he had witnessed “courage and compassion in the harshest conditions imaginable.”
“But I also saw how easy it can be, once the uniform comes off, for those who gave everything, to feel forgotten,” he said.
On Saturday evening, William and Catherine’s eldest son, Prince George, 12, attended his first tribute for soldiers killed in action at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
It was the first time George, second in line to the throne, had attended the Festival of Remembrance event organized annually by the Royal British Legion, an association dedicated to supporting veterans and their families.
The event, always attended by the monarch and senior members of the royal family, featured readings, prayers, videos and musical performances — including a performance by Rod Stewart.