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An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India’

Hindustani78

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Vice President's Secretariat
04-November, 2016 19:39 IST
‘Famine, forced migration and brutality’ - the three examples of why British rule over India was despotic and anything but enlightened: Vice President

Releases the book ‘An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India’



The Vice President of India, Shri M. Hamid Ansari has said that the author rightly points out that British rule in India was effectively and regularly supplemented by “famine, forced migration and brutality” - the ‘three examples of why British rule over India was despotic and anything but enlightened’. He was addressing the gathering after releasing the book ‘An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India’ authored by Dr. Shashi Tharoor, here today.


The Vice President said that Shri Tharoor has penned an interesting and engaging account of a period whose shadow on modern India remains disturbingly relevant. The book recalls in some detail the misdeeds of the British in looting India and making it suffer an agonizing and violent death, he added.


The Vice President said that the economic deprivation was one aspect of the colonial rule and more serious was its impact on the minds of the subjugated and on the totality of their existence. A set of questions do need to be raised like how did the British succeed in enslaving India with such ease, was there an India as a cohesive entity and did these lead to active or passive resistance, he added.


Following is the text of Vice President’s address:


“Shri Tharoor has penned an interesting and engaging account of a period whose shadow on modern India remains disturbingly relevant.


The last sentence in the book extols the benefits of a rear view mirror. The book does just that and recalls in some detail the misdeeds of the British in looting India and making it suffer an agonizing and violent death. The process was comprehensively traced a century earlier by Romesh Dutt in his Economic History of India Under the Early British Rule.


Economic deprivation was one aspect of the colonial rule. More serious was its impact on the minds of the subjugated and on the totality of their existence. This was summed up by a colonial administrator, Sir Thomas Munro: “he who loses his liberty loses half his virtue. The enslaved nation loses the privileges of a nation as the slave does those of a free man; it loses the privilege of taxing itself, of making its own laws, of having any share in their administration, or in the general governance of the country.”


A set of questions do need to be raised:


· How did the British succeed in enslaving India with such ease?

· Was there an India as a cohesive entity or a set of disparate territorial entities oblivious to wider processes underway?

· Did these lead to active or passive resistance? Was there any social, intellectual or ideological awareness about these changes?


An answer to the second question, perhaps, helps understand the process by which the British succeeded. A European scholar, writing in the year 1853, addressed it and analyzed the ground reality: “The paramount power of the Great Moghuls was broken by the Moghul Viceroys. The power of the Viceroys was broken by the Mahrattas. The power of the Mahrattas was broken by the Afghans, and while all were struggling against all, the Briton rushed in and was enabled to subdue them all.”


We need to accept that there was, in that initial period, no India politically or emotionally. The encroachment by the East India Company was piecemeal, and resentment or resistance was per force local. It often took the shape of peasant uprisings motivated by economic deprivation of severe character often inflicted through physical brutality or ethnic prosecution. It was at times led by local landlords. Some of these conflicts involved large numbers but organized military confrontations, of the type with Tipu Sultan of Mysore, were the exception. Nevertheless, these popular resistance movements continued for almost a century.


The timeline of the progress of British control, and Indian resistance to it, tells its story – battle of Plassey 1757; Sannyasi Rebellion in north Bengal 1763; battle of Buxar 1764; battle of Srirangapatna 1799; the last battle with Marathas 1818-19; the first war of independence 1857.


What was the process of awakening in terms of perceptions? In 1803 the theologian Shah Abdul Aziz of Delhi proclaimed: “Our country has been enslaved. The struggle for independence to put an end to this slavery is our duty.” This conditioned Muslim perceptions till well after 1857. In Bengal, the presence of the foreigner induced Rammohan Roy’s introspections to “to reexamine the presuppositions of his own society” and initiate a reformation in the second and third decade of the 19th century. Demand for freedom of press followed. Alongside, resentment to foreign rule developed and culminated in the upheaval of 1857 that shook the British rule to its foundations. It is another matter that it failed in the face of superior military technology and organization.


After the travails of 1857, good sections of our people (particularly the feudal and affluent classes) responded to the British policy of cooption and reconciled themselves, partially or wholly, to aspects of British rule. They also developed newer methods of dissent and protest. Apart from political activities within permissible limits and occasional resort to individual and group acts of violence against the state, activists resorted to the pen, particularly satirical poetry, often in Urdu.


Khaichon na kamanon ko na talwaar nikalo

Jab top muqabil ho to akhbaar nikalo.


Some years back the National Archives published a collection of poems that were confiscated by government for being seditious. One of these, bearing the caption ‘Khoon-e-Shaheedan’ opened with a telling verse:


Naheen mit-ta nishan-e-khoon kabhi damaan-e-qatil se

Likhi jati hai ek tehreer-e-khoonin khoon-e-bismil se


Chapters 4 and 5 dwell on the methodology by which divide et empera was implemented. The author rightly points out that it was effectively and regularly supplemented by “famine, forced migration and brutality” – the ‘three examples of why British rule over India was despotic and anything but enlightened.”


But is this not the story of all colonial and imperial ventures in history?


Jai Hind.”

***
 
The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari at the function to release the book titled ‘An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India’, authored by Dr. Shashi Tharoor, in New Delhi on November 04, 2016.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari releasing the book titled ‘An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India’, authored by Dr. Shashi Tharoor, in New Delhi on November 04, 2016.
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The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari addressing the gathering after releasing the book titled ‘An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India’, authored by Dr. Shashi Tharoor, in New Delhi on November 04, 2016.
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They all say this about british but they have bank accounts in swizland or assets in britain or kid abroad education.
rothshcild british empire east india company, how come they never mention rothshchilds. Got a central bank havnt you & imf anyone,
 
They all say this about british but they have bank accounts in swizland or assets in britain or kid abroad education.
rothshcild british empire east india company, how come they never mention rothshchilds. Got a central bank havnt you & imf anyone,


I think its more to do with colonial repatriation

Dr. Shashi Tharoor have already talked about colonial repatriation in UK conference.
 
Ingrates! The Brits gave you democracy which enables you guys to mock at the Chinese for not being democratic whenever the Chinese mock at you for being laggard and braggart. :D
Thats like expecting a Chinese to be grateful to Imperial Japanese for introducing industrialization or Germans to be grateful to Soviets for resucing them from Nazism
 
Thats like expecting a Chinese to be grateful to Imperial Japanese for introducing industrialization or Germans to be grateful to Soviets for resucing them from Nazism

You don't even make sense. Yes, indeed, we are grateful that the Soviets rescued us from the Nazis. But it's bit more complicated because the russian Revolution as well as the rise of Nazism in Germany were financed by the same cabal. That's the more interesting aspect of history.

It's news to me that Japan introduced industrialisation to China. Mind to enlighten me with sources? Anyway, it's beside the point as the Chinese don't make silly excuses whenever something went wrong that it's because of Japanese introduction of industrialisation nor do we blame the Soviet/ Russia whenever something went wrong in Germany. So, that's how logic works. Learn something! :)
 
You don't even make sense. Yes, indeed, we are grateful that the Soviets rescued us from the Nazis. But it's bit more complicated because the russian Revolution as well as the rise of Nazism in Germany were financed by the same cabal. That's the more interesting aspect of history.

It's news to me that Japan introduced industrialisation to China.

Refer Japanese colonization of Manchuria, research something!:)

Mind to enlighten me with sources? Anyway, it's beside the point as the Chinese don't make silly excuses whenever something went wrong that it's because of Japanese introduction of industrialisation nor do we blame the Soviet/ Russia whenever something went wrong in Germany. So, that's how logic works. Learn something! :)
My logic is not too difficult to comprehend, but then again..............;)

Hint: I have seen several Chinese and Germans complain about atrocities committed by Japanese and Soviets and both request these nations to acknowledge the events
 
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British colonization was bad but worse was the moghul invasion. The Brits converted only a small percentage of Indians culturally whereas the moghul ones managed to change a much bigger proportion. It is a wonder and a miracle that after almost 900 years of slavery a majority of Indians somehow managed to keep their cultural roots somewhat intact.
 
Refer Japanese colonization of Manchuria, research something!:)

So? Other parts of China such as the Yangze Delta region didn't have industrialization at the same time?


My logic is not too difficult to comprehend, but then again..............;)

Modern Indian logic has been a laughing stock in the world. :lol:

Hint: I have seen several Chinese and Germans complain about atrocities committed by Japanese and Soviets and both request these nations to acknowledge the events

What a stupid argument. We are grateful for the Soviets who got us rid of Nazis, but that doesn't mean that we can't address the atrocities they have committed.

And it's just disgusting of you to mix the Soviet with the Japanese together as the Japanese were the Nazis in the East and the Chinese have every right to condemn them for not apologising for their atrocities.

You are stupid and disgusting as neither we blame the Soviets for whatever goes wrong right now in Germany, nor do the Chinese blame the Japanese for what goes wrong in China. You many Indians on the other hand blame democracy for whatever goes wrong in your country and the next minute you mock others for the lack of democracy.
 
@Götterdämmerung

You can insult and vilify me all you like. But rape is rape wherever its done or by whom ever its done.

But colonial rape apologists like you have strong cognitive inertia against such and differentiate between good rapists and bad rapists just because the later was on the loosing side of the war.

For people like you Japanese rapists are bad but American soldiers who raped Japanese women are idols because they won WW2.

Sad to see such distinction, i hope sanity prevails.

I appreciate the fact atleast you are not a closeted one and proud of it.
 
You ought to offer your homage at the Yasukuni shrine .On behalf of all your compatriots .

What for when the chinese won the war against the japs in the end, while subordinated indian soldiers were polishing their british master's boots, while desi women were offering up themselves to colonial governors or even soldiers in return for a better life?


Hahahaha thats the difference. Some ppl have no fight in them, they were n still are the enslaved up to the modern day.
 
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