Wednesday, December 7, 2011

05. Mahatma Gandhi

Founded in 1885 with the objective of obtaining a greater share in government for educated Indians, the Indian National Congress(INC / Congress) was initially not opposed to British rule. Congress' men saw themselves as loyalists, but wanted an active role in governing their own country, albeit as part of the Empire. They considered British influences on education, law, culture and industry as beneficial to India. During its first several decades, the Congress passed fairly moderate reform resolutions, though many within the organization were becoming radicalized by the increased poverty that accompanied British imperialism.

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, a Gujrati born British educated barrister, having successfully led two struggle  of Indians in South Africa against British discriminatory laws, drew attention of some party members of INC.  Rabindranath Tagore writes a letter to him, imploring him to help Indians in their plight against the British. In 1915, at the age of 46, Gandhi returned to India. He spent a year traveling widely throughout the country to know the real India. He did not share Gandhi's belief in the use of non-violentcivil disobedience.

In an annual meeting of INC with delegates from all regions, Gandhi is introduced to the INC president Sir Surendranath Banerjee. Banerjee was a critic of the proposed method of civil disobedience advocated by Mohandas Gandhi, and as a first task of membership, appoints Gandhi as his personal caretaker for a year. Gandhi obliges, and when short of cleaners, he sets about cleaning the outnumbered toilets of the school where all these delegates were staying.


Other prominent leaders of the INC were Jawaharlal Nehru and Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Jawaharlal Nehru, son of North Indian INC leader Motilal Nehru, joined Congress when fairly young and rose under the mentorship of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. Muhammad Ali Jinnah was one of the few Muslim leaders. He represented Sindh and the Muslim interests in Congress. Jinnah was a secular person and he initially  avoided joining the Muslim League, regarding it as too Muslim-oriented. Eventually, Jinnah  joined the All-India Muslim League in 1913 and became its president at the 1916 session in Lucknow.


Mahatma Gandhi, the first Non Bengali leader of the INC, was elected as its president  in 1921. Gandhi’s vision soon brings millions of regular Indians into the movement, transforming it from an elitist struggle to a national one. The nationalist cause was expanded to include the interests and industries that formed the economy of common Indians. Gandhi became the new guiding star of Indian politics, operating under the umbrella of the Indian National Congress.

In Sep 1920, Gandhi gave the call for Non-cooperation movement against the ills of British rule. "Non-cooperation" enjoyed widespread appeal and success, increasing excitement and participation from all strata of Indian society. Yet, just as the movement reached its apex, it ended abruptly in February 1922. An outbreak of mob violence in Chauri Chaura so shocked and pained Gandhi that he refused to continue the campaign. The decision was condemned even by many of his most loyal followers as a historic blunder.



Tuesday, December 6, 2011

04. Partition of Bengal

Calcutta was the capital and Bengal the nerve center of the British empire in India. Bengalis were the first people in the country to be exposed to English education and also the first to enter government service. They were also the first to demand civil rights. The political situation was rapidly changing. The British were beginning to feel uneasy in their colony. Hostility was brewing among the natives. The anger among the people intensified when the British Government failed to organize effective relief during the plague and famine. In order to alleviate the anger, the British played the political trump-card; they used their divide-and-rule political game.

In 1905, the British  governor general, Lord George Curzon divided the state of Bengal into separate Hindu and Muslim sections. West Bengal, Orissa and Bihar were on one side and the East Bengal and Assam were on the other. The idea was to disperse the Bengalis and divide them along religious lines. Eastern Bengal would get a Muslim identity and the Bengalis of West Bengal would be outnumbered by Biharis and others in the new province.

The Muslim population had found the partition effective for them. By remaining aloof from the Western-oriented education system, the Muslims alienated themselves from the many new avenues opening up for the emerging middle class. This self-imposed isolation led to an intensified awareness of their minority role.Before the partition it was western Bengal, mainly Calcutta and its adjacent areas, that came under the British influence and enjoyed the facilities of education, development and industrialization. On the other hand the socio-economic condition of the Muslim majority Eastern part of Bengal was poor.  Lack of communication impaired trade and commerce and the condition of peasants was miserable under the exaction of absentee landlords.  The rivers were full of pirates and a minimum amount was funded for education.  Muslims had feelings of alleviation in the partitioning of Bengal as they thought that they would enjoy more freedom and opportunity for education, employment, politics and economy.

Curzon's decision, however, was ardently challenged by the educated and largely Hindu upper classes of Calcutta. The Indian National Congress (Congress) and other leaders initiated a well-planned campaign against the partition.A huge amount of nationalist literature was created there during this period. This nationalist spirit was popularized by the patriotic songs of Dwijendralal Roy, Rajanikanta Sen and Rabindranath Tagore. Tagore spoke out in a highly inspiring poem: Banglar mati Banglar jal, Banglar bayu, banglar phal, punya houk, hey Bhagaban…(roughly translated into English: "May the soil of Bengal, the water and the air of Bengal be hallowed ... "). He also wrote Amar Shonar Bangla in 1906, the first ten lines of which were adopted in 1972 as the Bangladeshi national anthem. Bankim Chandra Chatterjee’s ‘Bande Matram’ was taken up as the soul-stirring slogan.

Nawab Salimullah of Dhaka (grandson of Sir Khwaja Abdul Ghani), a staunch supporter of the British Raj started pro-partition campaign which led to the creation of All India Muslim League in 1906. Thus, a separate all-India platform was created to voice the grievances of the Muslims and contain the growing influence of the Congress Party. The leadership had remained loyal to the British Empire, and the Government of India Act of 1909 granted separate electorates to the Muslims.


The educated Bengali, mostly Hindus, felt that it was a deliberate blow inflicted by Curzon at the national consciousness and growing solidarity of the Bengali-speaking population. The Bengali weekly Sanjeevani then suggested that the government would be compelled to take note of the people's mood if the public stopped buying British goods. Agitation against the partition manifested itself in the form of mass meetings, rural unrest and a Swadeshi Movement to boycott British manufactured goods.
 The idea of boycotting British goods spread like wildfire through Bengal and then to different parts of the country.

 In the face of rising opposition to colonial rule the British ended the division and the partition had to be annulled. The government felt that the main advantage, which could be derived from the move, was that it would remove the seat of the government of India from the agitated atmosphere of Bengal to less politically electric atmosphere of. To deprive Calcutta of its prime position as the nerve center of political activity necessarily weakened the influence of the Bengali Hindus.

The annulment of the partition as a result of the agitation against it had a negative effect on the Muslims. The majority of the Muslims did not like the Congress support to the anti-partition agitation. The politically conscious Muslims felt that the Congress had supported a Hindu agitation against the creation of a Muslim majority province. It reinforced their belief that their interests were not safe in the hands of the Congress. Thus they became more anxious to emphasise their separate communal identity and leaned towards the Muslim League to safeguard their interest against the dominance of the Hindu majority in undivided India.

When World War I broke out in 1914, Britain declared that India was also at war with Germany. Indian troops fought in many parts of the world. But following the conclusion of the war, the British sought to introduce draconian legislation to contain the activity of people presumed to be political extremists. On April 13, 1919, large number of men women and children had assembled at Jallianwala Bagh, a public garden in Amritsar on the occasion of Baisakhi (new year celebrations held on 13th April every year) and also to show their resentment against the government policies. The British were enraged, closed of all exit routes and fired 1600 rounds of ammunition on the crowds, resulting in a stampede and a bloody massacre of thousands of men women and children. The brutality of the Jallianwallah Bagh tragedy shocked the country. It deeply moved the national leaders and  marked the emergence of a nation-wide movement against British rule. To show his solidarity with the Indian masses, Tagore rejected the knighthood, earlier conferred upon him by the British government.

The events of 1919 also brought to the fore Mahatma Gandhi.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

03. Sepoy Rebellion

By 1857 everything from the borders of Afghanistan in the west to the jungles of Burma in the east, from the Himalayas in north, to the beaches of Sri Lanka in south were under British East India companies control. In 1857 the total number of soldiers in India was 260,000 amongst them there were just around fourteen percent (34,000) European soldiers.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

02. The British monopoly

Since the death of Emperor Aurangzeb in 1707, Bengal was ruled independently by the Nawabs. Bengal was treated as a province of the Mughal Empire, so it was known as "Sube Bangla," or the province of Bengal, and needed to pay an annual tribute to the Mughal emperor.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

01. The Indian Subcontinent

Indian Subcontinent comprises the countries of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. It also included Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Maldives in different times in history.

Before its independence in 1947, India was never one nation but always a collection of different kingdoms and cultures with no single sovereign identity. Historically, the subcontinent region was largely divided into three regions of political power centers.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

00. Preface

As a child growing up abroad, I took little interest in the long tales of our history my father often tried to tell me. Like making an apple pie from scratch, he would reference so many events and characters, that I would get lost.