Thanks for pointing out that Pakistan was India then St. L.
Mate, Rememberance Sunday isn't about celebrating who won, its about remembering those who gave and lost their lives from all the countries that formed part of the Allies. We remember everyones contribution, no matter how small.
It is not a political celebration, far from it.
Re HP maybe a moment of reflection to remember the 22,000 brave Indians who lost their lives, and over 80,000 that were taken prisoner coinsidentally involving campaigns in the middle east and North Africa.
Here is something i have copied from a site - in fact i was totally amazed at the huge contribution by the then Indian nation.
The Indian subcontinent (present-day India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka - henceforth referred to, for convenience, as ‘India’) contributed the largest volunteer army in history to the Allied cause during the Second World War. Out of a population of some 384 million, over 2.5 million servicemen and women, every one of them a participant by his or her own choice, gave their services.
Most of this mighty number served in the Indian Army - 700,000 of them in the 14th Army in Burma, representing nearly three-quarters of its strength. Indians served in the North African campaign against the Germans, in Eritrea and Abyssinia against the Italians; in the Middle East, Iran and Iraq; in the Far East; in Italy, where they took part in some of the bloodiest fighting at the siege of Monte Cassino and elsewhere.
Many Indians took to the seas - 30,000 joined the Royal Indian Navy, and many thousands served as merchant seamen.
The air service attracted a large number of Indians. 55,000 joined the Royal Indian Air Force as flyers or ground staff, while several enterprising airmen came to Britain to serve with the RAF.
Indian women took part in their hundreds of thousands, either as WRINS (Women’s Royal Indian Naval Service) or WACS (Women’s Auxiliary Corps: Indian), or as nurses, munitions workers and many other forms of service.
In addition, it is estimated that some 14 million Indians took part in other forms of war work.