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The Bengal Famine: How the British engineered the worst genocide in human history for profit

How a Debate Was Won in London Against British Colonisation of India, by Shashi Tharoor

(Dr. Shashi Tharoor is a two-time MP from Thiruvananthapuram, the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs, the former Union Minister of State for External Affairs and Human Resource Development and the former UN Under-Secretary-General. He has written 14 books, including, most recently, Pax Indica: India and the World of the 21st Century.)

Last week, on the very day that Scotland was deciding its future, six of us gathered in London to debate the past.

To commemorate the 400th anniversary of the British presence in India -- King James I's envoy, Sir Thomas Roe, arrived at the court of Emperor Jehangir in 1614 -- the Indo-British heritage Trust held a debate, in the chamber of the UK Supreme Court, on the motion "This House believes that the Indian subcontinent benefited more than it lost from the experience of British colonialism." Needless to say, I spoke against, alongside two Indophile Brits, authors William Dalrymple and Nick Robins. The proposers were Pakistan's Niloufer Bakhtyar, an editor, Martin Bell, former BBC war correspondent, and Kwasi Kwarteng, a Conservative Party MP of African descent.

It was a lively affair. As the debate began, its Chair, Labour MP Keith Vaz, called for an initial vote, which went 35 to 28 for the motion. When it was over, voting took place again, and the needle had moved dramatically: 26 to 42 against. The anti-colonialists had carried the day.

Why was our case so compelling? At the beginning of the 18th century India's share of the world economy was 23%, as large as all of Europe put together. By the time we won independence, it had dropped to less than 4%. The reason was simple: India was governed for the benefit of Britain. Britain's rise for 200 years was financed by its depredations in India.

Britain's Industrial Revolution was built on the de-industrialisation of India - the destruction of Indian textiles and their replacement by manufacturing in England, using Indian raw material and exporting the finished products back to India and the rest of the world. The handloom weavers of Bengal had produced and exported some of the world's most desirable fabrics, especially cheap but fine muslins, some light as "woven air". Britain's response was to cut off the thumbs of Bengali weavers, break their looms and impose duties and tariffs on Indian cloth, while flooding India and the world with cheaper fabric from the new satanic steam mills of Britain. Weavers became beggars, manufacturing collapsed; the population of Dhaka, which was once the great centre of muslin production, fell by 90%. So instead of a great exporter of finished products, India became an importer of British ones, while its share of world exports fell from 27% to 2%.

Colonialists like Robert Clive bought their "rotten boroughs" in England with the proceeds of their loot in India (loot, by the way, was a word they took into their dictionaries as well as their habits), while publicly marvelling at their own self-restraint in not stealing even more than they did. And the British had the gall to call him "Clive of India", as if he belonged to the country, when all he really did was to ensure that much of the country belonged to him.

By the end of the 19th century, India was Britain's biggest cash-cow, the world's biggest purchaser of British exports and the source of highly paid employment for British civil servants - all at India's own expense. We literally paid for our own oppression.

As Britain ruthlessly exploited India, between 15 and 29 million Indians died tragically unnecessary deaths from starvation. The last large-scale famine to take place in India was under British rule; none has taken place since, since free democracies don't let their people starve to death. Some four million Bengalis died in the Great Bengal Famine of 1943 after Winston Churchill deliberately ordered the diversion of food from starving Indian civilians to well-supplied British soldiers and European stockpiles. "The starvation of anyway underfed Bengalis is less serious" than that of "sturdy Greeks", he argued. When officers of conscience pointed out in a telegram to the Prime Minister the scale of the tragedy caused by his decisions, Churchill's only response was to ask peevishly "why hasn't Gandhi died yet?"

British imperialism had long justified itself with the pretence that it was enlightened despotism, conducted for the benefit of the governed. Churchill's inhumane conduct in 1943 gave the lie to this myth. But it had been battered for two centuries already: British imperialism had triumphed not just by conquest and deception on a grand scale but by blowing rebels to bits from the mouths of cannons, massacring unarmed protestors at Jallianwallah Bagh and upholding iniquity thru institutionalised racism. Whereas as late as the 1940s it was possible for a black African to say with pride, "moi, je suis francais", no Indian in the colonial era was ever allowed to feel British; he was always a subject, never a citizen.

What are the arguments FOR British colonialism benefiting the subcontinent? It is often claimed that the British bequeathed India its political unity. But India had enjoyed cultural and geographical unity throughout the ages, going back to Emperor Ashoka in the 3rd century BC and Adi Shankara travelling from Kerala to Kashmir and from Dwarka to Puri in the 7th century AD, establishing his temples everywhere. As a result, the yearning for political unity existed throughout; warriors and kings tried to dominate the entire subcontinent, usually unsuccessfully. But with modern transport and communications, national unity would have been fulfilled without colonial rule, just as in equally fragmented 19th century Italy. And what political unity can we celebrate when the horrors of Partition (1 million dead, 13 million displaced, billions of rupees of property destroyed) were the direct result of deliberate British policies of "divide and rule" that fomented religious antagonisms?

The construction of the Indian Railways is often pointed to as benefit of British rule, ignoring the obvious fact that many countries have built railways without having to be colonized to do so. Nor were the railways laid to serve the Indian public. They were intended to help the British get around, and above all to carry Indian raw materials to the ports to be shipped to Britain. The movement of people was incidental except when it served colonial interests; no effort was made to ensure that supply matched demand for mass transport.

In fact the Indian Railways were a big British colonial scam. British shareholders made absurd amounts of money by investing in the railways, where the government guaranteed extravagant returns on capital, paid for by Indian taxes. Thanks to British rapacity, a mile of Indian railways cost double that of a mile in Canada and Australia.

It was a splendid racket for the British, who made all the profits, controlled the technology and supplied all the equipment, which meant once again that the benefits went out of India. It was a scheme described at the time as "private enterprise at public risk". Private British enterprise, public Indian risk.

The English language comes next on the credit list. It too was not a deliberate gift but an instrument of colonialism. As Macaulay explained the purpose of English education: "We must do our best to form a class who may be interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indians in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals and in intellect." The language was taught to a few to serve as intermediaries between the rulers and the ruled. That we seized the English language and turned it into an instrument for our own liberation was to our credit, not by British design.

The day we defeated the motion, Scottish voters rejected the proposal to leave the United Kingdom. But it's often forgotten what cemented the Union in the first place: the loaves and fishes available to Scots from participation in the exploits of the East India Company. Before 1707 the Scots had tried to colonize various parts of the world, but all had failed. After Union with England, a disproportionate number of Scots was employed in the Indian colonial enterprise, as soldiers, sailors, merchants, agents and employees. Earnings from colonialism in India pulled Scotland out of poverty and helped make it prosperous. With India gone, no wonder the bonds are loosening...

How a Debate Was Won in London Against British Colonisation of India, by Shashi Tharoor
 
India never mentions the good things we did, only focus on the negatives, without us there wouldn't be any modern India as we know it today. Even if it did, it will be farrrrr smaller or made of several different independent countries/states from oriental north eastern states of arunachal pradesh/manipur etc who would have been independent or part of china/Burma to Kashmir, khalistan/punjab, Maoist areas etc. Etc.
All these kingdoms/states would not have been part of India today without our rule. we unified India and established a central government/authority with laws and regulations, modernized the army/military, built the worlds most extensive railways to bring the country closer and established a unifying national language. So Indians should also mention all the many good deeds we did, not just the bad ones.
Though i'm not justifying the above unwarranted actions of Churchill.

Mate, as a fellow Englishman I'm flabbergasted to learn that you think colonisation had positives for the subcontinent. Plus I highly doubt average Indian at that time was allowed on the train even along with the whites and if allowed then not in the same coach I wouldn't have thought. Plus many countries in the world have modernised their armies and have rail lines without being colonised. It probably would have reached later but, I don't see why not? Plus why would Indians remember the good deeds when the negatives clearly outweigh the positives?

Since we're being optimistic; glorify the slavery as well. Why don't you?

Economically it was a dynamic and efficient system? After initial suppression millions of Africans now enjoy one of the highest living standards in the world?
 
India never mentions the good things we did, only focus on the negatives, without us there wouldn't be any modern India as we know it today. Even if it did, it will be farrrrr smaller or made of several different independent countries/states from oriental north eastern states of arunachal pradesh/manipur etc who would have been independent or part of china/Burma to Kashmir, khalistan/punjab, Maoist areas etc. Etc.
All these kingdoms/states would not have been part of India today without our rule. we unified India and established a central government/authority with laws and regulations, modernized the army/military, built the worlds most extensive railways to bring the country closer and established a unifying national language. So Indians should also mention all the many good deeds we did, not just the bad ones.
Though i'm not justifying the above unwarranted actions of Churchill.

That surely justifies killing 4 million year in a single year & you are wrong if not the Brits the Martha empire would have united India

Mate, as a fellow Englishman I'm flabbergasted to learn that you think colonisation had positives for the subcontinent. Plus I highly doubt average Indian at that time was allowed on the train even along with the whites and if allowed then not in the same coach I wouldn't have thought. Plus many countries in the world have modernised their armies and have rail lines without being colonised. It probably would have reached later but, I don't see why not? Plus why would Indians remember the good deeds when the negatives clearly outweigh the positives?

Since we're being optimistic; glorify the slavery as well. Why don't you?

Economically it was a dynamic and efficient system? After initial suppression millions of Africans now enjoy one of the highest living standards in the world?

Exactly his argument is pathetic
 
we are doing it in a more humane manner by educating and counselling the people about the benefits of having fewer children.

that is the right way of doing it.....

communism/socialism is bad.....
 
The only people who believe this is the British dude @mike2000 is back who is misinformed and defending his country which is fair enough and that Sri Lankan faggot who has a major inferiority complex to India. @Gibbs

A shit head pootah.. Calling others faggot's.. Who are you trying to fool moron ? Sporting false flags.. A freaking veggie fart can never hide his true identity how much you try.. Cos you stink a mile.. :lol:

No matter how much you wankers thrown hissy fits the facts remains India is a creation of the British.. The whole world know it.. Now go drink some lassie, It will help your piles
 
No matter how much you wankers thrown hissy fits the facts remains India is a creation of the British.. The whole world know it.. Now go drink some lassie, It will help your piles
Don't talk crap boy about things you have no idea of .
There is lot of difference between modern India & British India, along with British there were 500 princely state which constituted pre 1947 India.
British_Indian_Empire_1909_Imperial_Gazetteer_of_India.jpg

The man responsible for political integration of India was Sardar Patel, India's Bismarck not the brits
Political integration of India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Don't talk crap boy about things you have no idea of .
There is lot of difference between modern India & British India, along with British there were 500 princely state which constituted pre 1947 India.
British_Indian_Empire_1909_Imperial_Gazetteer_of_India.jpg

The man responsible for political integration of India was Sardar Patel, India's Bismarck not the brits
Political integration of India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

From your own links bub.. Stop kidding yourselves

Mountbatten believed that securing the states' accession to India was crucial to reaching a negotiated settlement with the Congress for the transfer of power.[38] As a relative of the British King, he was trusted by most of the princes and was a personal friend of many, especially the Nawab of Bhopal, Hamidullah Khan. The princes also believed that he would be in a position to ensure the independent India adhered to any terms that might be agreed upon, because Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Patel had asked him to become the first Governor General of the Dominion of India.[39]

Mountbatten used his influence with the princes to push them towards accession. He declared that the British Government would not grant dominion status to any of the princely states, nor would it accept them into the British Commonwealth, which meant that the states would sever all connections with the British crown unless they joined either India or Pakistan.[40] He pointed out that the Indian subcontinent was one economic entity, and that the states would suffer most if the link were broken.[41] He also pointed to the difficulties that princes would face maintaining order in the face of threats such as the rise of communal violence and communist movements

Btw You posted a map of British India.. Contradicting your own argument.. Every empire ruled it's colonies.. Using local representatives or loyalists, The Maharaja's were exactly that.. You did'nt prove a thing

Btw.. Just to make things clear.. I'm not here to argue on atrocities committed by colonists, Be that it may but false perception that all evil is due to them
 
From your own links bub.. Stop kidding yourselves
So what mountbatten simply said to the princesly states to fuk off you are on your own. But it was Patel who had to coerce them into joining the union. Even resorting to military action as in the case of Junagadh and Hyderabad.
Not only the political integration but establishing a new constitution, division of state on linguistic lines, distribution of power in a federal structure these were herculean task . India is far more diverse and populous compared to even europe, to run a functional democracy when many of neighbours fell to autocratic dictatorship is no mean task.
Look at Sri lanka for example you have only 2 main ethnic groups the Sinhalese and Tamils and still you had bloody civil war for 3 decades. India being home to so many ethnic groups from many caste creed and religion is still intact and thriving is a testament to our visionary founding fathers.
 
India never mentions the good things we did, only focus on the negatives, without us there wouldn't be any modern India as we know it today. Even if it did, it will be farrrrr smaller or made of several different independent countries/states from oriental north eastern states of arunachal pradesh/manipur etc who would have been independent or part of china/Burma to Kashmir, khalistan/punjab, Maoist areas etc. Etc.
All these kingdoms/states would not have been part of India today without our rule. we unified India and established a central government/authority with laws and regulations, modernized the army/military, built the worlds most extensive railways to bring the country closer and established a unifying national language. So Indians should also mention all the many good deeds we did, not just the bad ones.
Though i'm not justifying the above unwarranted actions of Churchill.
For the bolded part- you are...

And yes absolutely countries need to be enslaved for integration and modernized... great logic, would you like britain to be enslaved for say 200 years, to get even more modernized, better integrated... forget railways you might be able to build teleportation s extensive as railways....
 
Whats your problem still high on the opium that brits gave you .

I want to see Indians prosper and right now Indians are suffering under medieval Hindu caste system.

Britain can solve India's problems like they did before Hindus destroyed India. Indians cannot govern themselves which is why Anglo-Saxons must rule their own creation as only the Anglo-Saxons know whats best for the Hindu people.

Trust me, Britain did an outstanding job in creating a country called India and developing and they can do even better.

The greatest beneficiary from colonialism was India. Britain gave the Hindus a unified country under a central government for the first time in its history which every Hindu must be thankful for.

So stop hating the British. Without Britain, there won't even be an 'India'.
 
India never mentions the good things we did, only focus on the negatives, without us there wouldn't be any modern India as we know it today. Even if it did, it will be farrrrr smaller or made of several different independent countries/states from oriental north eastern states of arunachal pradesh/manipur etc who would have been independent or part of china/Burma to Kashmir, khalistan/punjab, Maoist areas etc. Etc.
All these kingdoms/states would not have been part of India today without our rule. we unified India and established a central government/authority with laws and regulations, modernized the army/military, built the worlds most extensive railways to bring the country closer and established a unifying national language. So Indians should also mention all the many good deeds we did, not just the bad ones.
Though i'm not justifying the above unwarranted actions of Churchill.
You should read some history of your country's plunder from Indian sub-continent before bragging about your contribution.Without Indian resource,raw materials and captive market The Industrial revolution that started in Britain after 1750 would never have materialised.I read an American writer's book where it said that the revenue collected from a single Indian province Bengal was many times greater then what British collected from their 13 North American colony.It was the Indian resouces that made Britain first Industrialized country in the world and subsequently other European and American countries followed.It was the Indian resources that made your small Island a global hegemon during 19th century.
 
You should read some history of your country's plunder from Indian sub-continent before bragging about your contribution.Without Indian resource,raw materials and captive market The Industrial revolution that started in Britain after 1750 would never have materialised.I read an American writer's book where it said that the revenue collected from a single Indian province Bengal was many times greater then what British collected from their 13 North American colony.It was the Indian resouces that made Britain first Industrialized country in the world and subsequently other European and American countries followed.It was the Indian resources that made your small Island a global hegemon during 19th century.

If Britain didn't conquer the kingdoms in the subcontinent, its people would be even more backward than it is today.

The only reason 'India' is as developed as it is today is solely due to Britain.

Britain united all those small backward Hindu kingdoms and finally gave them a central government, a modern legal system, a modern education system, English language, rail and road infrastructure, sports such as cricket, enormous aid, etc.

If Britain was ruling India today, every Indian would have access to indoor plumbing, Indian women won't have the rape problem as most of the Indian men would be educated, Indians would be well fed without diseases, infrastructure would be modern, etc.

'India' as a country didn't exist before the British arrived. Britain spent enormous sums of money building up the subcontinent. If Britain didn't spend all that money on 'India', it would be spent on Africa instead.
'India' would be where Africa is today if Britain neglected 'India'.

Colonisation is not great but in the case of 'India', colonisation was the best thing that happened to it. 'India' had a net benefit from colonisation. Sure, the Brits did a few bad things, but I think you shouldn't dismiss the enormous benefit 'India' gained from Britain.

 
If Britain didn't conquer the kingdoms in the subcontinent, its people would be even more backward than it is today.

The only reason 'India' is as developed as it is today is solely due to Britain.

Britain united all those small backward Hindu kingdoms and finally gave them a central government, a modern legal system, a modern education system, English language, rail and road infrastructure, sports such as cricket, enormous aid, etc.

If Britain was ruling India today, every Indian would have access to indoor plumbing, Indian women won't have the rape problem as most of the Indian men would be educated, Indians would be well fed without diseases, infrastructure would be modern, etc.

'India' as a country didn't exist before the British arrived. Britain spent enormous sums of money building up the subcontinent. If Britain didn't spend all that money on 'India', it would be spent on Africa instead.
'India' would be where Africa is today if Britain neglected 'India'.

Colonisation is not great but in the case of 'India', colonisation was the best thing that happened to it. 'India' had a net benefit from colonisation. Sure, the Brits did a few bad things, but I think you shouldn't dismiss the enormous benefit 'India' gained from Britain.

Well my friend,I am not defending the India of today.I am talking about undivided Indian subcontinent of 19th century which was the main cash cow for the British.You rightfully recalled the many problem of India which held it backward eg Caste system,degradation of women.superstition,backwardness,wired customs,lack of technological progress.Infact British were able to conquare India not because British were immensely powerful but because the inherent weakness of India which stem from the above mentioned ill.
 
If Britain didn't conquer the kingdoms in the subcontinent, its people would be even more backward than it is today.

The only reason 'India' is as developed as it is today is solely due to Britain.

Britain united all those small backward Hindu kingdoms and finally gave them a central government, a modern legal system, a modern education system, English language, rail and road infrastructure, sports such as cricket, enormous aid, etc.

If Britain was ruling India today, every Indian would have access to indoor plumbing, Indian women won't have the rape problem as most of the Indian men would be educated, Indians would be well fed without diseases, infrastructure would be modern, etc.

'India' as a country didn't exist before the British arrived. Britain spent enormous sums of money building up the subcontinent. If Britain didn't spend all that money on 'India', it would be spent on Africa instead.
'India' would be where Africa is today if Britain neglected 'India'.

Colonisation is not great but in the case of 'India', colonisation was the best thing that happened to it. 'India' had a net benefit from colonisation. Sure, the Brits did a few bad things, but I think you shouldn't dismiss the enormous benefit 'India' gained from Britain.

Then why is it that eastern part of India that is from Bengal till Uttar Pradesh which was first to fall under british East India Company has the worst poverty rate in the subcontinent or the fact that Kerala which was part of Travancore state which was not under British rule has HDI equal to that of a Developed country ?
Or lets go out side India why is it that Thailand is more prosperous than Myanmar, Vietnam and Cambodia, because it was not under colonial rule it formed buffer state between British Burma and French Indo China .

@Beidou2020 You are an american right tell me how will you feel if Walmart starts ruling over America like East India Company did in case of India, why is it difficult for you lot to understand exploitive nature of colonisation.
 
Indians and their "blame the whities and colonialism" syndrome.
There was a WW going on.People died in tens of millions all over the world.You didn't see the half of the worst of that age and the self entitled poppers are going bonkers
 

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