Rosie Llewellyn-Jones, historian and editor of Chowkidar, has supplied details of this event being held at Brighton Dome, on Sunday 15th September 2024.
鈥楾he contribution and legacy of Undivided India to World War One鈥 is the focus of this year鈥檚 Heritage Open Day at Brighton, where the conference is being organised by Brighton Council.

(The Royal Pavilion and Museum, Brighton & Hove)
All are welcome – participation is free, but please note that anyone wishing to attend must first register and book a ticket:
鈥nline at
鈥r by phone (01273 709709)
鈥r at the ticket office (Church Street, Brighton BN1 1UE).
Brighton Dome is part of the Pavilion estate, and is about 10-15 minutes walk from the railway station.

Schedule:
Brighton Dome Foyer, 10am鈥3pm | OPEN TO ALL
Pop up exhibition from the Chattri Memorial Group, delicious food provided by The Sikhs of Sussex, and a display of postcards, photographs and Sikh militaria curated by Avtar Singh Bahra.
Brighton Dome Corn Exchange, 11am鈥2.30pm | FREE BUT TICKETED
Please note: one ticket admits you to all talks.
11补尘鈥12.15辫尘
鈥avinder Dhillon – The Chattri – 25 mins
鈥ana Chhina – Indian Soldiers of the Raj – 30 mins
1.15鈥2.30辫尘
鈥avid Omissi – Islam and the Indian Army – 30 mins
鈥om Donovan – Self-Inflicted Wounds in the Indian Army in France, 1914-1915: Fact or Fiction? – 30mins
鈥ejpal Singh Ralmill – WW1 Punjab Recruitment Registers and the Indian Army at Hampton Court Palace – 20mins
Anita’s Room, various times | FREE BUT TICKETED, LIMITED CAPACITY
Chal茅 Gay茅 / They have departed/died, a soundscape by Razia Aziz
Speakers:
Davinder Dhillon – The Chattri

(Phil Duffy MusePhotographic)
Davinder Dhillon OBE, DL, took over the stewardship of the Annual Memorial Service in 2000. He established the Chattri Memorial Group in 2005 as a voluntary community group. The CMG exists to raise awareness, locally and nationally, of the contribution made by Indian troops who fought alongside British troops and their allies during the Great War, particularly in Belgium and France. As a retired teacher from Brighton, Davinder has been keen to involve students in the understanding of this often neglected period of British history, by delivering presentations and guided tours of the Chattri to local schools and historical societies. He also feels it鈥檚 important to bring people together from diverse communities to a shared understanding of our history.
Rana Chhina – Indian Soldiers of the British Empire
Squadron Leader Rana T.S. Chhina served in the Indian Air Force as a helicopter pilot. He is currently Director & Editor of the United Service Institution of India (USI) Centre for Military History and Conflict Studies. The author of a number of books, he was Vice President of the Indian Military Historical Society (2004-2020), and a member of the Government of India鈥檚 Archival Advisory Board. He was responsible for conducting the joint USI-Ministry of External Affairs 鈥淚ndia and the Great War鈥 centenary commemoration activities. Rana is currently a member of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) Independent Advisory Panel and is actively engaged in promoting the preservation of India鈥檚 rich tangible and intangible military heritage. A recipient of the Macgregor Medal for best military reconnaissance, he was appointed an Honorary Member of the Order of the British Empire in 2016 and an Officer of the Belgian Order of Leopold in 2018.
David Omissi – Islam and the Indian Army
Dr David Omissi gained his PhD in the Department of War Studies at King鈥檚 College, London. His many publications about the Indian Army include 鈥楨urope Through Indian Eyes: Indian Soldiers Encounter England and France, 1914鈥1918鈥, English Historical Review, 122/496 (2007), and (as editor) Indian Voices of the Great War: Soldiers鈥 Letters, 1914鈥1918 (1999). He is currently writing a monograph about the Indian Army and the Second World War, under contract with Cambridge University Press.
Tom Donovan – Self-Inflicted Wounds in the Indian Army in France, 1914-1915: Fact or Fiction?
Tom Donovan is a respected military bookseller, publisher, historian, writer and speaker. He is currently Secretary of the Chattri Memorial Group, and an Ambassador for the Burma Star Memorial Fund, for whom he also acts as curator for the BSMF mobile museum. He was previously a member of the editorial committee of Durbar, the journal of the Indian Military Historical Society.
Tej Singh Ralmill – WW1 Punjab Recruitment Registers and the Indian Army at Hampton Court Palace
Dr Tejpal Singh Ralmill is a London GP. His great-grandfather was Subadar-Major Bawa Singh of the 23rd Sikh Pioneers who served in the First World War. As part of a collaborative team between UK Punjab Heritage Association and the University of Greenwich, Tejpal is currently digitising a new archive of WW1 recruitment registers from pre-partition Punjab. He’s also a community curator for the exhibition ‘Indian Army at the Palace’ at Hampton Court Palace and an advisor to the National Sikh War Memorial Trust.
Rosie Llewellyn-Jones and Rachel Magowan