| Mohan Singh | |
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Singh (in turban) being greeted by the Japanese Major Fujiwara Iwaichi, April 1942
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| Born | 1909 Ugoke, Sialkot, Punjab, British India (present-day Punjab, Pakistan) |
| Died | 1989 (aged 79–80) Jugiana, Ludhiana, Punjab, India |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Occupation | Soldier |
| Known for | Founding General of the First Indian National Army |
| Movement | Indian Independence movement |
Mohan Singh (Punjabi: ਮੋਹਨ ਸਿਂਘ (Gurmukhi); موہن سنگھ (Shahmukhi); 1909 – 1989) was an Indian military officer and member of the Indian Independence Movement best known for his role in organising and leading the First Indian National Army in South East Asia during World War II. Following Indian independence, Mohan Singh later served in public life as a Member of Parliament in the Rajya Sabha (Upper House) of the Indian Parliament.
He was born the only son of Tara Singh and Hukam Kaur, a couple of Ugoke village, near Sialkot (now in Pakistan). His father died two months before his birth and his mother shifted to her parents home in Badiana in the same district, where Mohan Singh was born and brought up.
As he passed high school, he joined the 14th Punjab Regiment of the British Indian Army in 1927. After the completion of his recruit training at Hrozpur, Mohan Singh was posted to the 2nd Battalion of the Regiment, then serving in the North-West Frontier Province. He was selected as a potential officer in 1931, and after six months' training in Kitchener College, Nowgong (Madhya Pradesh), and another two and a half years in the Indian Military Academy, Dehra Dun, he received his commission in 1934 and was posted for a year to a British unit, the 2nd Border Regiment, and then to 1/14th Punjab Regiment the 1st Battalion of his former 14th Punjab Regiment, which at that time happened to be at Jhelum. World War II broke out in 1939.