A persistent Indian myth gleefully
accepted as truth by the country’s liberals and Macaulayites – a class
of people western in outlook but Indian in looks – is that freedom came
too easy. The British, the myth goes, after ruling India for 190
years, became so tired of the responsibilities of running an empire
that they simply wound up their empire and left.
Yeah, right! This myth would be
laughable if it weren’t so sinister. Though it was clearly invented by
the British to cover their ignominious and hasty retreat from India,
millions of Indians have been brainwashed into swallowing the myth
wholesale. Many Indians believe M.K. Gandhi used the weapon of
non-violence and shamed the British colonialists into leaving India,
and since then both countries have been best friends.
Freedom didn’t come overnight. It was
obtained at a great cost – the sacrifice of millions of Indian lives.
Contrary to the belief that the British period was a time of great
stability, India was in fact roiled by uprisings and rebellions
everywhere, virtually throughout colonial rule.
The First War of Independence of 1857 was the biggest uprising against the British. The sweep of the war covered nearly the entire country and for months India was turned into one massive battlefield. Britain came perilously close to losing its most prized possession: India. (Dr B Ambedkar considered the 1857 Mutiny to be a revolt by Muslims to reestablish their rule over India - Editor.)
In War of Civilisations: India AD 1857,
Amaresh Misra, a writer and historian based in Mumbai, argues that
there was an “untold holocaust” which caused the deaths of almost 10
million people over 10 years beginning in 1857. Speaking to The Guardian
newspaper, Misra said, “It was a holocaust, one where millions
disappeared. It was a necessary holocaust in the British view because
they thought the only way to win was to destroy entire populations in
towns and villages. It was simple and brutal. Indians who stood in their
way were killed. But its scale has been kept a secret.”
After the British re-conquered India, The Guardian
itself wrote about the savage retribution that followed: “We sincerely
hope that the terrible lesson thus taught will never be forgotten.”
Here’s what the writer Charles Dickens
remarked: “I wish I were commander-in-chief in India … I should
proclaim to them that I considered my holding that appointment by the
leave of God, to mean that I should do my utmost to exterminate the
race.”
The Vellore Mutiny of 1806 predates
even the war of 1857 by half a century. The revolt, which took place in
the south Indian town of Vellore, was rather brief, lasting only one
full day but brutal, as mutineers broke into the Vellore fort and
killed or injured 200 British troops, before they were subdued by
reinforcements from nearby Arcot.
Again, in 1824, Rani Chennamma, the
queen of the kingdom of Kittur in Karnataka, led an armed rebellion
against the British. The queen, born 56 years before 1857 leader Rani
Laxmi Bai, was the first woman to fight against the British.
From 1858 to the beginning of 1900s the
British enjoyed some semblance of stability. This can well be
described as the time when they undertook the task of the destruction
of thriving Indian industries, including spinning, weaving and
metallurgy, as well as agriculture and trade.
Angered by the havoc being wreaked by
the British, the revolutionary forces now gathered for a new phase of
struggle. They derived inspiration from the cult of nationalism
preached by Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, Swami Vivekananda and others
during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Chatterjee’s
soul-stirring cry of Vande Mataram or Hail to the Mother, which he
penned in 1882, became the hymn of nationalism.
The spark for a full-fledged struggle
came in 1905 with the launch of Swadeshi – the refusal to buy foreign
goods and the promotion of indigenous industry. This massive pan-Indian
movement aroused the spirit of nationalism. It was Veer Savarkar who
first lit the bonfire of foreign clothes in Pune on 7th October 1905.
(Ironically, MK Gandhi, who much later became the leader of the freedom
struggle, criticized that action from far away South Africa although he
himself did precisely that sixteen years later.)
While the educated classes were
fighting the British through Swadeshi, violent outbreaks were happening
all over India. In Jharkhand, Birsa Munda led a long struggle directed
against the British. In 1914 Jatra Oraon started what is called the
Tana Movement, which drew the participation of over 25,000 tribes
people. In 1920, the Tana Movement stopped the payment of land taxes to
the colonial government. The fire of revolution spread even to the
Indian rulers – the Raja of Darbhanga at great risk fully supported the
resisting farmers. In the tribal tracts of Andhra Pradesh a revolt
broke out in August 1922. Led by Alluri Ramachandra Raju, the tribes
people of the Andhra hills succeeded in drawing the British into a
full-scale guerrilla war.
A hugely popular force was the Khaksar
Movement founded by Allama Mashriqi in Lahore. Mashriqi wanted no
compromise with the British. Comprising Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs, the
Khaksar had four million members and thousands of offices all over
India. Its activities for mobilising the nation included holding
parades in public places, staging mock wars, organizing training camps
and striving to create a strong brotherhood of Muslims and non-Muslims
in order to jointly overthrow foreign rule. Mashriqi and his young sons
were arrested and tortured.
Both Hindus and Muslims were more than
willing to unite against the British, as they demonstrated by joining
the Indian National Army of Subhas Chandra Bose. It demonstrated to the
British that there was no safety for them in India. The British were
feeling the heat at home too. Bhagat Singh exploded a bomb in the
British Parliament. The revolutionary Uddham Singh went to the UK and
assassinated Michael O’ Dwyer, the British Lt Governor of Punjab, for
the murder of over 2000 unarmed men, women and children in
Jallianwallah Bagh. While General Reginald Dyer, who personally
supervised the massacre of the peaceful gathering, had boasted in court
he would do it again, O’ Dwyer had called his action “the right
thing”.
Meanwhile, the British, addicted to the
easy loot from India, even as millions of Indians were dying in
manmade famines, were not prepared to leave. As Neville Chamberlain put
it clearly: "The astonishing gold mine that we have discovered in
India’s hordes has put us in clover.” Churchill was adamant. “I have
not become prime minister to preside over the demise of her majesty’s
empire,” he said.
But after the Second World War, the
momentum of the freedom movement led to growing militant actions that
weakened British authority in an irreparable way. According to M.G.
Agrawal in his four-volume Freedom Fighters of India, “In February 1946
the Indian Navy declared an unprecedented strike. It quickly drew
support from the Indian crews of all the 20 vessels anchored in Bombay
port; 20,000 naval ratings revolted.” The British panicked because the
single biggest factor that facilitated colonialism was the military.
Clement Atlee, the British Prime
Minster, who decided to finally quit India, told chief Justice P.B.
Chakrabarty of the Calcutta High Court that the principal reasons why
Britain decided to quit India was the erosion of loyalty to the British
Crown among the Indian army and navy personnel.
According to Fenner Brockway, political
secretary of the Independent Labour Party of England, the two major
causes of Britain’s hasty exit from India were: “One, the Indian people
were determined to gain independence. Two, was the revolt by the
Indian Navy.”
Indian soldiers, whose brilliant
performance on the battlefields of Europe had won them grudging praise
from the British as well as the Germans, had seen firsthand the
collapse of the British in the face of the German challenge, which
exploded the myth of the invincibility of British arms. Indeed, US Army
generals like Bradley and Eisenhower had expressed contempt for the
British Army's fighting skills.
Britain was also in steep decline.
London had been nearly destroyed by the German Luftwaffe and V-2
rockets. The Russians and Americans were the new superpowers, and both
wanted an end to colonialism. The British had no stomach for a fight
with Indians and were looking for a face-saving exit from India.
Independence came through the indefatigable spirit of our revolutionaries rather than the mere transfer of power at midnight.
Author:Rakesh Krishnan Simha
Source:esamskriti
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