SACW | May 11-12, 2007 | 1857

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Sat May 12 03:29:32 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | May 11-12, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2403 - Year 9

[1]  Bangladesh: Army Arrests Tasneem Khalil of Human Rights Watch
+ Tasneem Khalil's Blog
[2]  Pakistan:  Bad news from Bagh (Daily Times, Editorial)
[3]  India - Gujarat: Taking moral policing to a new level ; ()
[4]  India: 1857 rebellion : A selection of articles +  select reading list:
       - Kill The White Man (Rudrangshu Mukherjee)
       - 1857 - 2007: 'Clash of civilisations' or 
people's resistance to imperialism? (Kalpana 
Wilson)
       - Who were the sepoys of 1857? (Amaresh Misra)
       - The Revolt And Its Historiography: An Overview (Biswamoy Pati)
       - 1857 Revisited (Rosie Llewellyn-Jones)
       - Lost and found (Dhirendra K. Jha)
       - One man's fight to save 1857 heroine's memory (Sudeshna Sarkar 2007)
       - 1857 a Malegaon story
       - Select Reading list on 1857, on the Mughals, on British India
[5]  Events:
  (i) The Free Chandramohan Committee: Public Meeting (Baroda, 12 May 2007)
(ii) Artists Alert: Public meeting, Rabindra Bhavan (Delhi, 14 May 2007)
(iii)  Join Protest at Arts Faculty, (Baroda, 14 May 2007)
(iv) Invitation workshop / seminar on Media and 
Communalism (Mangalore, 18-19 May 2007)
(v) Performance - Ghadar (1857 - 2007) (Vancouver, 12 May, 2007)
(vi) 150th Anniversary Commemoration of the First 
War of Indian Independence (Vancouver,12 May, 
2007)

____


[1]

Human Right Watch Press Release

BANGLADESH: RELEASE JOURNALIST AND RIGHTS ACTIVIST
ARMY ARRESTS TASNEEM KHALIL OF HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

(London, May 11, 2007) - Bangladesh's 
military-backed care-taker government should 
immediately release Tasneem Khalil, an 
investigative journalist and part-time Human 
Rights Watch consultant, who was detained by 
security forces late last night, Human Rights 
Watch said today.

Khalil, 26, is a journalist for the Dhaka-based 
Daily Star newspaper who conducts research for 
Human Rights Watch. According to his wife, four 
men in plainclothes who identified themselves as 
from the "joint task force"came to the door after 
midnight on May 11 in Dhaka, demanding to take 
Khalil away. They said they were placing Khalil 
"under arrest" and taking him to the Sangsad 
Bhavan army camp, outside the parliament building 
in Dhaka. 

"We are extremely concerned about Tasneem 
Khalil's safety," said Brad Adams, Asia director 
at Human Rights Watch. "He has been a prominent 
voice in Bangladesh for human rights and the rule 
of law, and has been threatened because of that." 

The men did not offer a warrant or any charges, 
Khalil's wife said. Using threatening language, 
they searched the house and confiscated Khalil's 
passport, two computers, documents, and two 
mobile phones. 

"It is an emergency; we can arrest anyone," one 
of the men said. Another asked if Khalil suffered 
from any particular physical ailments. They drove 
Khalil off in a Pajero jeep. 

Khalil is a noted investigative journalist who 
has published several controversial exposes of 
official corruption and abuse, particularly by 
security forces. He assisted Human Rights Watch 
in research for a 2006 report about torture and 
extrajudicial killings by Bangladesh security 
forces. 

According to Bangladeshi human rights groups, the 
army has detained tens of thousands of people 
since a state of emergency was declared on 
January 11, 2007. A number of those detained are 
picked up in the middle of the night, as Khalil 
was, and then tortured. 

In Bangladesh, security forces have long been 
implicated in torture and extrajudicial killings. 
The killings have been attributed to members of 
the army, the police, and the Rapid Action 
Battalion (RAB), an elite anti-crime and 
anti-terrorism force. The Human Rights Watch 
report Khalil worked on, "Judge, Jury, and 
Executioner: Torture and Extrajudicial Killings 
by Bangladesh's Elite Security Force," focused on 
abuses by the RAB. 

Killings in custody remain a persistent problem 
in Bangladesh. To date, no military personnel are 
known to have been held criminally responsible 
for any of the deaths. 

Khalil was called in for questioning by military 
intelligence last week, apparently as part of the 
military's campaign to intimidate independent 
journalists ahead of May 10, 2007, when the 
army's three-month legal mandate for ruling under 
a state of emergency came to an end. 

"The Bangladeshi military should be on notice 
that its actions are being closely watched by the 
outside world," Adams said. "Any harm to Tasneem 
Khalil will seriously undermine the army's claims 
to legitimacy and upholding the rule of law."

o o o

[SEE ALSO TASNEEM KHALIL'S BLOG]

  http://www.tasneemkhalil.com/

______


[2]

Daily Times
May 11, 2007

Editorial: BAD NEWS FROM BAGH

Following attacks and threats from "certain 
quarters", the United Nations office in Islamabad 
has announced closure of all its operations as 
well as offices in Bagh, Azad Kashmir. Why did 
the UN take such a drastic decision? It took the 
decision because the houses of two UN officials 
were torched by "extremists" who had been warning 
the UN and other NGOs "against employing females".

Pakistanis who count all sorts of people as part 
of Pakistan's civil society and condemn the NGOs 
for being "foreign agents" should carefully read 
this. The Islamists who have forced the UN to 
stop its work in an area where Pakistan needs all 
the help it can get, are on the side of the 
state, not civil society. If you are not 
convinced, pay heed to what happened in the 
National Assembly when the minority MNA, Mr MP 
Bhandara, proposed an amendment to the Blasphemy 
Law and was told to shut up by the federal 
minister for parliamentary affairs.

Not even our politicians are representatives of 
civil society which is completely at the mercy of 
the state and its "extremist" agents. When 
President General Pervez Musharraf was requested 
to stop some of the "extremist" jihadi 
organisations from taking part in rescue and 
reconstruction in Azad Kashmir after the quake in 
2005, he did not listen. He did not react when a 
jihadi organisation began to take on the foreign 
humanitarian agencies helping the quake victims.

Now the UN office says that all the mission 
staffers were under security threats for the last 
many months and it had become difficult to 
continue operations under these circumstances. 
The houses of two UN workers were burnt down in 
Bagh by a mob that was not stopped by the state. 
The UN will close its offices for two weeks, then 
talk to the government to ascertain if it is 
willing to protect the people who have come to 
help the poor of the stricken area.

The government had enough time to prepare its 
reaction to the "extremists" that the president 
keeps talking about. It all started as far back 
as July 2006 when a local group, Awami Action 
Forum (AAF), warned the United Nations and other 
NGOs against employing females in the earthquake 
affected areas. Who was backing this AAF? 
According to the UN officials, "extremist 
religious leaders and members of an opposition 
party". What should the UN have done? Back down 
in the face of threats? It did not and expected 
the government to protect its workers.

Hundreds of foreign and local NGOs are working 
for reconstruction and rehabilitation of 
earthquake-hit areas of AJK and NWFP. These 
organisations landed immediately after the 
natural calamity struck the region in October 
2005, killing and displacing hundreds of 
thousands. The state of Pakistan, instead of 
being grateful and protecting them, allowed the 
local extremists to threaten them. Then signs of 
danger began to appear. Local goons harassed a 
female worker of the American Refugee Council 
(ARF) who was spending time with her cousin at a 
picnic spot. A UN driver, who was passing by when 
the extremists were harassing the girl, stopped 
and tried to rescue her. But he was beaten up by 
the mob. The next day they burnt the houses. The 
UN then decided to close down the operations and 
freeze all the funds badly needed by the people 
affected by the quake. What kind of role has the 
state of Pakistan played in this sorry drama? And 
what has the government done after hearing that 
the UN was being threatened under its very nose? 
What happened the same day in the National 
Assembly is instructive.

A bill was moved by a minority MNA, Mr MP 
Bhandara, to amend the blasphemy laws in order to 
render them more rational and to include in them 
a mechanism that would prevent misuse of the law 
and wilful negligence of the "conditions" already 
attached to it at the administrative level to 
prevent innocent people from being victimised. 
The administrative "rider" to the law is that the 
police will not act on complaint but will consult 
the top bureaucrats of the district before 
registering an FIR under blasphemy. But no one 
abides by this provision.

A group of people were arrested by the police in 
Karachi Monday after a magistrate thought that a 
book published by them was blasphemous. The press 
did not reveal the sectarian identity of those 
arrested but it was quite apparent from the title 
of the book (a classic) and their names that they 
belonged to the Shia community. President 
Musharraf should look at this very carefully. 
Blasphemy laws have begun to target the Shia and 
not only Christians and Ahmedis.

What was the response of the government to Mr 
Bhandara's move in the National Assembly? The 
parliamentary affairs minister Mr Sher Afgan 
ruthlessly shot it down. What did he say while 
opposing the bill? "Pakistan was made in the name 
of Islam and is not a secular state". Mr Afgan 
should take a good look into his conscience and 
recall that not long ago he was counted as a 
liberal PPP politician. The Blasphemy Law was 
imposed by General Zia-ul Haq and unfortunately 
padded up to include the minimum punishment of 
death by the Muslim League under prime minister 
Nawaz Sharif.

If today the state of Pakistan is hurting its own 
children it is because of turncoat politicians 
like the federal minister and a military ruler 
who cannot spare time from double-speak. One is 
also saddened by the rhetoric of President 
Musharraf who has such men on his leash but goes 
on lamenting the growth of "extremism" in 
Pakistan. *

______


[3]

Indian Express
May 12, 2007

BLACK FRIDAY: CHANDRAMOHAN'S CLASSMATES PUT UP 
EXHIBITION OF INDIAN EROTICA TO PROTEST HIS 
ARREST; CHANCELLOR SAYS CAN'T INTERVENE WITHOUT 
KNOWING FACTS
MSU V-C seals Fine Arts dept
Express News Service

Vadodara, May 11: Taking moral policing to a new 
level, Vice-Chancellor of the prestigious 
Maharaja Sayajirao University (MSU), Manoj Soni, 
today ordered the fine arts department to be 
sealed after defiant students put up an 
exhibition of Indian erotica to protest the 
arrest of one of their fellow classmates on 
Wednesday. The fine arts department, known the 
world over as a cradle for art expression, has 
never seen interference from any quarters. This 
is the first time in its 55 years of existence 
that it finds the BJP and VHP moral police 
brigade telling it what to do.

Vice-Chancellor Manoj Soni, living up to his 
reputation as an RSS stooge, took the decision to 
seal the department after BJP municipal 
councillors complained about the erotica 
exhibition. On Wednesday, the BJP and VHP 
activists roughed up Chandramohan, a fine arts 
student, as they found his exam works put on 
display, objectionable. Chandramohan was later 
arrested by police.

Marking a "black friday" in M S University's 
history, the V-C sealed the Fine Arts 
department's Regional Documentation Centre, and 
joined the saffron brigade in removing the 
exhibition comprising sculptures and photos.

After gagging the faculty, Soni himself ducked 
all criticism and questions raised about his 
action by remaining confined to his cabin and not 
taking any calls.

MSU's Chancellor Mrinalinini Devi Puar, grand 
daughter of Sir Sayaji Rao Gaekwad who founded 
the university, said she was out of town and 
could not intervene without knowing the facts.

On Friday, instead of students, teachers and MSU 
senate members, it was BJP councillors and senate 
members (owing to their saffron affiliations) 
were the ones who called the shots both at MSU 
main office and Fine Arts department. Meanwhile, 
Chandramohan continued to be in judicial custody 
for the third consecutive day, with no one 
officially coming to his aid from MSU. Additional 
Senior Civil Judge M J Parashar on Friday 
deferred the decision on his bail till Monday in 
a hearing held in Vadodara local court, where 
Chandramohan is facing serious offences 
registered by BJP leader Niraj Jain.

Fresh trouble began on Friday when Fine Arts 
students were putting up an art exhibition on 
Indian art erotica around 4.30 pm.

"We are seeing people affiliated to certain 
political ideology, entering the campus and 
imposing their narrow viewpoint without knowing 
that the erotica/shringara/copulation as a part 
of the nava-rasas exist in traditional 
practices," said the Fine Arts student exhibition 
note. Sculptures, copies of erotica art in the 
department, photographs of erotica art from 
Khajuraho and from Geet Govinda were put up by 
the students.

The news of the art exhibition had BJP 
councillors like Girish Parekh, Kishen Sheth, 
Ashok Pandya, Balu Shukla, Kishen Sheth and 
others trooping down into the University, but 
before that they had a meeting with the MSU V-C. 
While abuses were being hurled at the students 
and female lecturers by BJP councilors, MSU 
authorities ordered the removal of exhibition, 
which Shivaji Panikkar, incharge fine arts dean 
refused, asking for orders in writing.

"We have received representations from several 
organisations and also society, which has 
requested us to intervene. It's a matter of 
prestige for MSU and Vadodara," said MSU pro V-C 
S M Joshi, who with university engineer N N Ojha, 
syndicate members Mukesh Pandya, S K Agrawal, 
technology faculty dean Bhuvan Parekh personally 
removed exhibits and sealed the department.

In a late night development Panikkar was 
suspended from all the positions with immediate 
effect for three months. The suspension will be 
in effect till an inquiry committee, which is yet 
to be formed does not complete its inquiry, said 
the notice which was pasted at his residence 
around 10 pm on Friday. He has been also directed 
not to enter the campus.

______


[4]   [Big celebrations on the 1857 rebellion are 
happening in India. Hardly any it seems in 
Pakistan and Bangladesh. They should have held 
joint celebrations; Events outside south asia are 
being organised by groups in the diaspora; Posted 
below is a compilation of articles on 1857 + a 
select reading list that should interest SACW 
readers. -HK]

o o o

The Telegraph
May 10, 2007

KILL THE WHITE MAN
- The revolt of 1857 was too violent an event to celebrate
Rudrangshu Mukherjee

Mani Shankar Aiyar at the inauguration of the 
150th anniversary celebrations of the "First War 
of Independence", New Delhi, May 8

I must declare a vested interest in the revolt of 
1857. Immediately after I finished my Master's in 
history, I decided, much to the surprise of all 
my teachers, save one, to write a doctoral 
dissertation on the revolt in the area the 
British called Oudh - a quaint anglicization of 
the name Awadh. The reason that all my teachers 
were surprised at my choice of subject was the 
belief, common among most historians in the 
Seventies, that there was nothing new to be said 
about the revolt. The subject was sterile and all 
that had to be said had been said in the 
centenary year and its immediate aftermath.

The lone voice of encouragement came from Barun 
De, who believed that 1857 was an event which had 
not really been worked upon. There was another 
source of inspiration. This was the famous 
Cambridge historian, Eric Stokes, whose essays on 
the subject I had read with excitement and 
profit. I was to get to know Eric later and learn 
an enormous amount from him, till cancer claimed 
him very untimely.

The point of this autobiographical sojourn is to 
set the context for my surprise at the sudden 
burst of enthusiasm among historians about the 
great uprising. There is nothing like a 
state-sponsored anniversary to stoke the 
interests of historians in a subject. The 
adjective, state-sponsored, is used advisedly. In 
a country with as rich and as diverse a history 
as India's, every year is an anniversary of 
something or the other. In June will come the 
250th anniversary of the battle of Plassey. Is 
the Indian state celebrating that anniversary? 
The answer is no. The decision to celebrate the 
revolt of 1857 with some fanfare is based on the 
conclusion - put forward by some historians and 
accepted by the government of India - that the 
rebellion is worth celebrating because it 
represented India's first war of independence.

I hold a dissenting view, since I believe that 
1857 should be remembered but not commemorated. 
Let me try and explain my reasons for holding 
this particular opinion. The reasons are embedded 
in the events themselves.

One hundred and fifty years ago today, the sepoys 
in the cantonment of Meerut mutinied. They killed 
their superior officers and every single British 
man, woman and child they could find. They burnt 
the bungalows in which the white people lived, 
and destroyed all government offices and 
buildings. "Maro firanghi ko [Kill the white 
man]" was the cry and the destruction was near 
total. A group of sepoys, after having cut the 
telegraph wires to Delhi, sped off towards the 
old Mughal capital. Arriving there on the morning 
of May 11, they entered the walled city and the 
Lal Qila. They asked the old Mughal emperor, 
Bahadur Shah, to accept the nominal leadership of 
the revolt. Outside the Red Fort, violence and 
destruction reigned and Delhi passed out of 
British control by May 12. In both Meerut and in 
Delhi, common people, peasants from the 
surrounding countryside, artisans and the poor 
joined the sepoys in the killing, looting and 
destruction. A mutiny of the soldiery, as soon as 
it occurred, acquired the character of a general 
uprising.

The fall of Delhi was followed by the spread of 
the uprising all over north India. In station 
after station and cantonment after cantonment, 
the soldiers mutinied and killed white men, women 
and children. In every place, common people 
joined the sepoys. All over north India - from 
Delhi to Patna and from the Terai to Jhansi, 
British rule, one British officer noted, had 
collapsed "like a house made of cards''. The 
Britons who had escaped the wrath of the rebels 
cowered in fear within the walls of the Residency 
in Lucknow, behind the "entrenchment'' in Kanpur 
and in the Ridge in Delhi.

British administration was quick to recover from 
the shock and to retaliate. The shock grew, in 
the words of John Kaye, who wrote in the 19th 
century a magisterial history of what he called 
the Sepoy War, from "the degradation of fearing 
those whom we had taught to fear us''. The 
retaliation was brutal. In the summer of 1857, 
through a series of Acts, individual Britons were 
given powers to judge and to execute any Indian 
they suspected of being a rebel. The result was 
devastating. Kaye wrote, "It is on the records of 
our British Parliament, in papers sent home by 
the Governor-General of India in Council, that ' 
the aged, women and children, are sacrificed, as 
well as those guilty of rebellion'. They were not 
deliberately hanged, but burnt to death in their 
villages. Englishmen did not hesitate to boast 
that they had 'spared no one'.''

The events of 1857 churned around a vicious cycle 
of violence. The rebels killed mercilessly 
without considerations of gender and age. Witness 
the massacre on the river in Kanpur where nearly 
the entire British population was killed in a 
spectacular show of rebel power. The British 
killed indiscriminately to punish a population 
that had transgressed the monopoly of violence 
that rulers have over the ruled.

The British won and, like all victors everywhere, 
they memorialized their triumph. In Kanpur, to 
take one example, they transformed the well into 
which the bodies of the victims of a massacre had 
been thrown into a shrine. A weeping angel carved 
in marble by Marochetti was placed over the well. 
The shrine was an exclusive preserve of the white 
man till August 15, 1947. On that day, people 
damaged the nose of the angel, which had to be 
removed. In its place, a statue of Tantia Topi 
was erected. One icon was replaced by another.

Today, as the celebrations begin to mark the 
150th anniversary of the rebellion, some 
questions need to be asked: is 1857 an occasion 
to celebrate? Can the Indian state uphold the 
violence that is inextricably linked to that 
year? Can the Indian state say that it is loyal 
to the ideals of Mahatma Gandhi, the apostle of 
non-violence, and in the same breath celebrate 
1857 when so many innocent people, on both sides, 
were brutally killed?

The questions are important because in India, 
there is no mode of remembering without 
celebrating. We commemorate to remember, 
sometimes even to forget. Eighteen fifty-seven is 
an event to remember, as all events of the past 
are; it is an event to comprehend and analyse 
because, as Jawaharlal Nehru wrote, it showed 
"man at his worst''. That comprehension and 
analysis is best done outside the aegis of the 
State.


o o o


28.4.2007


1857 - 2007: 'CLASH OF CIVILISATIONS' OR PEOPLE'S RESISTANCE TO IMPERIALISM?

A review of The Last Mughal: The Fall of a 
Dynasty, Delhi, 1857, by William Dalrymple, 
London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2006, 578pp. 
£25.00, ISBN 978-0-7475-8639-5

by Kalpana Wilson, Race and Class (forthcoming)


William Dalrymple's new book on Delhi at the time 
of the uprisings against British colonial rule 
which swept India 150 years ago promises to 
present for the first time 'an Indian 
perspective' on the siege of Delhi and the 
experiences of 'ordinary people' who lived in the 
city at the time. Yet despite the work which 
Dalrymple and his colleagues Mahmoud Farooqi and 
Bruce Wannell have clearly put into translating a 
large number of 'virtually unused' Persian and 
Urdu documents stored in the National Archives of 
India, he striking fails to fulfil this promise, 
with the material forced awkwardly into a 
currently all-too-familiar framework in which 
'culture' is viewed in isolation from power or 
material relations, and crucially, religion is 
emphasised in order to obscure the key questions 
of race and imperialism.
1857 saw uprisings spread across much of the 
northern half of what is now India, Pakistan and 
Bangladesh, which were to continue for almost a 
year. At their centre was a massive mutiny by 
Indian soldiers (known as sepoys) in the British 
East India Company's army: of 139,000 sepoys in 
the Bengal Army, all but 7, 796 rebelled. But the 
uprisings were also marked by the breadth of 
popular participation which 'simultaneously drew 
together and cut through multiple religious, 
caste, and regional identities' [1].
Dalrymple's book focuses exclusively on the 
experiences of Delhi, the seat of the Mughal 
dynasty which had ruled for 330 years. Beginning 
a few years before the uprising when the Mughal 
emperor had already been reduced to a puppet 
ruler by the East India Company officials, his 
writ extending only as far as the walls of the 
Red Fort (and 'even there it was circumscribed'), 
Dalrymple argues that this period nonetheless 
represented the coming to fruition of a 
syncretic, tolerant, highly literary culture, 
which the Mughal court had encouraged among its 
subjects, both Muslim and Hindu. He then traces 
the events which unfolded after the first major 
rebellion of sepoys took place in Meerut and the 
insurgent forces headed for Delhi to claim the 
Mughal emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar II, as their 
leader, narrating the flight of the British from 
the city, the siege of Delhi, and the wholesale 
massacre of Delhi's citizens by the victorious 
British which followed.
Dalrymple portrays the uprisings as primarily a 
'war of religion' between Islam and Christianity: 
while acknowledging that the 'great majority' of 
the Sepoys were Hindus, he places unprecedented 
emphasis on the presence in Delhi of 'insurgents 
(who) described themselves as mujahedin, ghazis 
and jihadis' and who, towards the end of the 
siege, came to constitute 'about a quarter of the 
total fighting force' in the city.
His graceless caricaturing of all Indian 
historians writing in English who have preceded 
him in this field – whether lamenting the 
'Marxists'' emphasis on British economic policy 
or the approach of the Subaltern Studies group 
who 'ingeniously theorised about orientalism and 
colonialism' (clearly not valid categories for 
Dalrymple) – may appear to be simply a means of 
self-promotion. But it has significant 
contemporary political implications.
Dalrymple claims to have uncovered 'jihad' in 
1857, pointedly ignoring the work of many 
established Indian historians who have over the 
last thirty years documented the religious idioms 
through which resistance to imperialism was 
expressed among people of a variety of 
backgrounds. Most recently, an in-depth study by 
Ray [2] has described how, in the case of 1857, 
people sharing a syncretic culture but 
identifying with distinct religions consciously 
united to fight the British colonizers: 'it was, 
in their view, a struggle of the Hindus and 
Muslims against the Nazarenes - not so much 
because the latter were supposed to be determined 
to impose the false doctrine of the Trinity, but 
because the identity of "the Hindus and Muslims 
of Hindustan" was being threatened by the moral 
and material aggrandizement of the arrogant 
imperial power' (Ray, 2003:357).

Dalrymple dismisses these more complex 
understandings of the anti-imperialist mass 
movements which pre-dated the emergence of 
bourgeois nationalism in India in favour of the 
notion of a 'clash of rival fundamentalisms'. 
This often flies in the face of his own evidence 
to the contrary: for example, he refers to the 
ambiguity and multiple meanings of the term 
'jihad' itself, which is used, among others in 
the book, by a Hindu rebel general to describe 
the uprising; later, Dalrymple notes the 
concerted attempt by the British authorities to 
reconstruct the uprisings as an exclusively 
Muslim affair after their suppression, (this in 
fact marked the beginning of a consolidated 
colonial policy of rewriting Indian history along 
communal lines).

Even more significantly, British actions both 
before and during the uprisings are attributed to 
the growing influence of evangelical 
Christianity, which allows the author to both 
downplay other changes in the character of 
imperialism in this period, and to romanticise an 
earlier era of British plunder under the East 
India Company from the mid-18th century onwards. 

Dalrymple contrasts his apocalyptic, proto-9/11 
view of 1857 with a previous golden age where 
British officers of the East India Company 
adopted Indian dress and 'cohabited' with 'Indian 
Bibis'. Displaying a remarkable insensitivity to 
issues of power, race and gender, Dalrymple 
lovingly portrays these 'white Moghuls' with 
their 'numerous' wives as 'splendidly 
multicultural' and furthering an idyllic 'fusion 
of civilisations'. 

He ignores the fact that following the British 
victory at the Battle of Plassey in 1757, they 
presided over a century of intensive plunder and 
destruction of India's economy, through the twin 
weapons of rapacious taxation and coerced trade. 
Thus, for example, Warren Hastings, one of the 
'orientalist' British scholars whom Dalrymple 
refers to with admiration (and so clearly wishes 
to emulate), is better known for his achievement 
of actually increasing the rate of taxes 
collected by the East India Company at the height 
of the 1770 famine brought on by the company's 
policies in Eastern India which killed an 
estimated 10 million people.

The years leading up to 1857 however, saw major 
changes in the objectives, methods and dominant 
ideology of imperialism, of which the rise of 
evangelical Christianity was only a symptom. 
India was now seen not solely as a source of 
enormous tax revenues  (and valuable consumer 
goods procured by force), but as a market for 
Britain's own manufacturing industries and, 
increasingly, a source of raw materials. By 1830, 
India's thriving textile industry had been all 
but destroyed, and by the middle of the century, 
India was importing one-quarter of all British 
cotton textile exports. In the decades which 
followed, Indian cultivators would be forced to 
grow indigo, cotton and wheat for export to 
Britain. Such policies required the expansion of 
areas of direct British rule and an enhanced 
colonial state apparatus with much larger numbers 
of British officials. This 'age of empire' saw 
the consolidation of the ideology of white 
superiority, racial segregation and the 
'civilising mission'. While Dalrymple notes that 
by 1850, British army officers had 'become 
increasingly distant, rude and dismissive' to the 
men under their command, he completely ignores 
the dominant notions of racial supremacy which 
underpinned the daily racist abuse faced by the 
sepoys. To do so would be to shift attention from 
the media-friendly focus on 'religious 
fanaticism' and acknowledge the overarching 
structures of racialised imperial power within 
which missionaries and evangelical Christian 
preachers played a specific role.

On several occasions, Dalrymple's own evidence 
only serves to confirm that for the British it 
was 'race' rather than religion which really 
mattered: for example (while British converts to 
Islam who fought alongside the insurgents were 
welcomed into their ranks) Indian converts to 
Christianity who had sided with the British 
described how they were repeatedly attacked and 
abused by British officers after the fall of 
Delhi. 

So how far does 'The Last Mughal' represent 
an'Indian perspective' on the events it 
describes? Unlike most British accounts to date, 
Dalrymple describes in detail the 'astonishing 
violence and viciousness' of the colonial 
response to the uprisings, which 'in many cases 
would today be classified as grisly war crimes'. 
In this he avoids the distortion identified in 
the British press coverage of the time by Karl 
Marx (who was a contemporary commentator) and 
still present in recent historiography, where 
'while the cruelties of the English are related 
as acts of martial vigour, told simply, rapidly, 
without dwelling in disgusting details, the 
outrages of the natives, shocking as they are, 
are still deliberately exaggerated'[3]

Yet despite this, Dalrymple seems unable to fully 
comprehend the nature of colonial violence. Thus, 
referring to the mass rapes of Indian women 
following the fall of Delhi, he comments that, 
'believing that the British women in Delhi had 
been sexually assaulted at the outbreak - a 
rumour that subsequently proved quite 
false
.British officers did little to stop their 
men from raping the women of Delhi.'. In the 
absence of an analysis of racism he can neither 
understand why the 'quite false' allegations of 
rape of British women by Indian men were so 
effective and so widespread at the time, nor can 
he acknowledge that with or without such 
allegations, the rape of colonised women has been 
an integral element in colonial repression across 
the continents and centuries. Perhaps it is not 
surprising, then, that Dalrymple ultimately 
conforms to the dominant version of events: that 
British atrocities were carried out specifically 
as 'retribution' for the massacre of British 
women and children at Kanpur. In reality, the 
terror had already been unleashed in the 
countryside by Colonel James Neill whose troops, 
burning villages and hanging 'niggers', massacred 
thousands of men, women and children well before 
the Kanpur killings.   

And while Dalrymple enthuses about the 
'street-level nature' of the documentation he has 
unearthed relating to 'ordinary citizens of 
Delhi', the fact is that the overwhelming 
majority of the book, where it is not revisiting 
the oft-cited accounts of various British 
officers and civilians in Delhi, is written from 
the perspective of the Mughul elite of the city. 
This perspective, while of historical interest, 
is also clearly limiting when it comes to the 
events of the uprising, ignoring as it does some 
of the most significant phenomena such as the 
formation of the semi-republican Sepoy Councils 
by the rebels. In fact, Dalrymple makes no 
attempt to portray the sepoys, who formed the 
core of the uprisings, in anything but the terms 
in which they were viewed by the Mughal elite: as 
'boorish and violent peasants from Bihar and 
eastern Uttar Pradesh'.

At a time when the US establishment is trying to 
persuade us to view current events through the 
distorted lens of the 'clash of civilisations', 
Dalrymple, with his insistence that economic 
transformations are of no relevance to the lives 
of 'ordinary individuals', and his dogged 
emphasis on solely religious motivations, appears 
to be attempting to remake history in the same 
image. The real parallels between 1857 and the 
contemporary world, however, lie not, as he would 
have us believe, in a clash between militant 
Islam and Christianity, but in a struggle between 
an aggressively expansionist imperialism and 
people's resistance which is expressed in a 
multiplicity of forms.  

[1] Krishna, P., 'Who is Afraid of 1857?', 
Liberation, Vol.12, No.8, December 2006
http://www.cpiml.org/liberation/year_2006/December/1857_who_is_afraid.html
[2] Ray, R.K. The Felt Community – Commonalty and 
Mentality before the Emergence of Indian 
Nationalism, Delhi, Oxford Univesity Press, 2003
[3] cited in Newsinger, J., The Blood Never Dried 
- A People's History of the British Empire, 
London, Bookmarks: 2006, p74

o o o

[other recent material]

WHO WERE THE SEPOYS OF 1857?
by Amaresh Misra (Indian Express, May 09, 2007)
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/30394.html

THE REVOLT AND ITS HISTORIOGRAPHY: AN OVERVIEW
by Biswamoy Pati (People's Democracy, February 04, 2007)
http://pd.cpim.org/2007/0204/02042007_1857.htm

1857 REVISITED
by Rosie Llewellyn-Jones (The Times of India, 10 May, 2007)
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2020186.cms

LOST AND FOUND
Dhirendra K. Jha (The Telegraph, May 10, 2007)
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070510/asp/nation/story_7758714.asp

ONE MAN'S FIGHT TO SAVE 1857 HEROINE'S MEMORY
by Sudeshna Sarkar  (Hindustan Times, May 12, 2007)
http://tinyurl.com/23cnnt

1857 A MALEGAON STORY
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/TOIonline/India/1857_a_Malegaon_story/articleshow/2024177.cms

+

RECOMMENDED READINGS BY SACW


1857 REBELLION

Jim Masselos and Narayani Gupta, Beato's Delhi 1857-1997, New Delhi: 2000
S.A.A. Rizvi and M.L. Bhargava (eds), Freedom 
Struggle in Uttar Pradesh: Source Materials, 6 
vols, Lucknow: 1957-1961
P.C. Joshi (ed), Rebellion, 1857: a Symposium, Delhi: 1957
S.B. Chaudhuri, English Historical Writings on 
the Indian Mutiny, 1857-1859, Calcutta: 1979
S.B. Chaudhuri, Theories of the Indian Mutiny, 1857-1859, Calcutta: 1965
S. Chaudhuri, The Literature on the Rebellion in 
India in 1857-1859; a Bibliography, Calcutta: 1971
Barbara English and Rudrangshu Mukherjee, 
"Debate: the Kanpur Massacres in India in the 
Revolt of 1857," Past and Present, 142(1994)
G.W. Forrest, A History of the Indian Mutiny, 3 vols, London: 1904-1912
Christopher Hibbert, The Great Mutiny: India, 1857, London: 1978
J.W. Kaye and G.B.Malleson, Kaye's and Malleson's 
History of the Indian Mutiny of 1857-1858, 6 
vols, London: 1897-1898
Joyce Lebra-Chapman, The Rhani of Jhansi: a Study 
in Female Heroism in India, Honolulu: 1986
T. Metcalf, Aftermath of Revolt: India, 1857-1870, Princeton: 1964
Charles T. Metcalfe, Two Native Narratives of the 
Mutiny in Delhi, Delhi: 1974 reprint
Rudrangshu Mukherjee, Awadh in Revolt, 1857-1858: 
a Study in Popular Resistance, Delhi: 1984
Rudrangshu Mukherjee, "'Satan Let Loose upon 
Earth': the Kanpur Massacres in India in the 
Revolt of 1857", Past and Present, 128(1990)
J.A.B. Palmer, The Mutiny Outbreak at Meerut, Cambridge: 1966
M.N.Pearson (ed), Legitimacy and Symbols: the 
South Asia Writings of F.W. Buckler, Ann Arbor: 
1985
S.N. Sen, Eighteen Fifty-Seven, London:1959
Eric Stokes, The Peasant Armed, Oxford: 1986


THE MUGHALS

M. Athar Ali, The Mughal Nobility under Aurangzeb, Calcutta: 1966
Muzaffar Alam, The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India, Delhi, 1986
Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam, The Mughal State, 1526-1750, Delhi: 1998
Richard Barnett, North India between Empires: 
Awadh, the Mughals and the British, 1720-1801 New 
Delhi: 1987
Irfan Habib, Medieval India I: Essays in the 
History of India 1200-1750, New Delhi: 1999
Stephen Blake, Shahjahanabad: the Sovereign City 
in Mughal India, 1639-1739, Cambridge: 1991
Andre Wink, Al-Hind, Delhi: 1990
Richard M. Eaton, The Rise of Islam and the 
Bengal Frontier, 1204-1760, Berkeley: 1993
B. Gascoigne, The Great Mughals
Stewart Gordon, Marathas, Marauders and State 
Formation in Eighteenth Century India, Delhi: 1993
Peter Jackson, The Delhi Sultanate, Cambridge: 1999
John F. Richards, The Mughal Empire: the New 
Cambridge History of India, I:5, Cambridge: 1993
G.V. Scammell, The First Imperial Age; European 
Overseas Expansion, c1400-1715, London: 1989
Percival Spear, Twilight of the Mughals, Oxford: 1973
Jadunath Sarkar, The Fall of the Mughal Empire, 4 vols, Calcutta: 1932-50


BRITISH INDIA - 1750-1900

David Arnold, Police Power and Colonial Rule: Madras, 1859-1947, Delhi: 1986
C.A. Bayly, The Imperial Meridian, London, 1989
C.A. Bayly, Indian Society and the Making of the 
British Empire, Cambridge: 1988
Seema Alavi, The Sepoy and the Company, New Delhi: 1995
Michael Fisher, A Clash of Cultures: Awadh, the 
British, and the Mughals, Delhi: 1987
Michael Fisher, Indirect Rule in India, Delhi: 1990
Philip Lawson, The East India Company: A History, Harlow: 1993
P.J. Marshall, Bengal: the British Bridgehead, Cambridge: 1988
P.J.Marshall, "Economic and Political Expansion: 
the Case of Oudh, 1765-1804", Modern Asian 
Studies, 9(1975)
P.J. Marshall, East Indian Fortunes; the British 
in Bengal in the 18th Century, Oxford, 1976
Thomas Metcalf, Ideologies of the Raj, Cambridge: 1994
Rudrangshu Mukherjee, "Trade and Empire in Awadh, 
1756-1804", Past and Present, 94(1982)
J.A Moor and H.L. Wesseling (eds), Imperialism 
and War: Essays on Colonial Wars in Asia and 
Africa, Leiden: 1989
David Omissi, The Sepoy and the Raj, London: 1994
D.M. Peers, Between Mars and Mammon: Colonial 
Armies and the Garrison State in Early 
Nineteenth-Century India, London: 1995
John Rosselli, Lord William Bentinck; the Making 
of a Liberal Imperialist, Berkeley: 1974
Burton Stein, Thomas Munro, Delhi: 1990
Malcolm Yapp, Strategies of British India, Oxford: 1980
J. Newsinger, The Blood Never Dried - A People's 
History of the British Empire, London, Bookmarks: 
2006


_____


[5]   EVENTS:


(i)

  THE FREE CHANDRAMOHAN COMMITTEE: PUBLIC MEETING, 12 MAY 2007 [BARODA]


The Free Chandramohan Committee will hold a 
public meeting on Saturday,  12 May 2007, at 6 pm 
at Gallery Chemould Prescott Road, to protest 
against the arrest of the young artist 
Chandramohan by the Baroda police earlier this 
week.
The meeting will be addressed by a number of 
speakers, among them noted cultural activists, 
commentators, film-makers, lawyers and artists, 
who will express solidarity with Chandramohan and 
draw up practical measures to secure his release.
Among other issues, the meeting will discuss the 
ways by which the constitutional  safeguards can 
be implemented, as well as legal redress by which 
the onus in cases of alleged incitement of 
communal disharmony can be placed squarely on 
demagogues who distort artworks for their own 
political ends. More significantly, a lunatic 
fringe cannot claim monopoly over public space. 
Let us resolve not to cede public space to the 
forces of intolerance.

  Date: 12 May 2007 (Saturday)
  Time: 6 pm
  Place: Gallery   Chemould Prescott Road
           Queens  Mansion (3rd Floor)
           A K Naik Marg
           Fort, Mumbai 400 001
           Phones: 91 22 22000211, 91 22 22000212, 91 22 22000213
           Email: gallerychemould at gmail.com


(ii)

http://communalism.blogspot.com/2007/05/artists-alert-public-meeting-re-baroda.html

Date:	Fri, 11 May 2007 10:03:07 -0700 (PDT)
From:	ram rahman
Subject:	ARTISTS ALERT: PUBLIC MEETING, 
RABINDRA BHAVAN, DELHI, MON, MAY 14, 6 pm

Dear Friends,

While we were holding a press conference in 
solidarity with MF Husain at the Press Club in 
Delhi last Tuesday, the assault on the Faculty of 
Fine Arts and the arrest of Chandramohan took 
place in Baroda.  Events now seem to be moving 
faster than we ever imagined and with 
Chandramohan  having not been granted bail as 
yet, and the closure of the exhibit of 
reproductions of classical Indian Art by the 
University authorities in Baroda today, May 11th, 
we are holding a large protest meeting in the 
lawns of Rabindra Bhavan, Mandi House New Delhi.

We urge all members of the arts community as well 
as other concerned citizens to join us to raise 
our voice against this rapidly widening 
censorship taking place through violence or 
threats of violence. The governments, both state 
and central remain mute spectators, and in almost 
every case, the perpetrators go scot free while 
their targets are enmeshed in legal cases for 
years.
Ram Rahman, Vivan Sundaram
for SAHMAT


o o o

(iii)

http://communalism.blogspot.com/2007/05/join-protest-at-arts-faculty-baroda-on.html

  Join Protest at Arts Faculty, Baroda on 14th May 2007
WE APPEAL ALL FRIENDS, FELLOW ACTIVISTS, YOUNG 
STUDENTS TO JOIN THE PROTEST ORGANISED BY 
VADODARA GROUPS. INFORMATION PASTED BELOW.

SHABNAM HASHMI/ MANAN TRIVEDI - ON BEHALF OF ANHAD

--

Dear All,

You are all aware of the latest Sangh Parivar 
offensive against the democratic rights of the 
students and Faculty members of the well known 
Fine Arts Faculty of Baroda, M.S.University. The 
Fine Arts Faculty is one of the best institutions 
within the M.S.University, which has managed to 
retain high academic standards, in the face of 
the general academic deterioration within the 
University.

The recent incident of hooliganism and blatant 
bullying unleashed by the Sangh Parivar has sent 
shock waves all over the country. It took place 
on Wednesday, 9th May 2007, at around 3 p.m. As 
part of the examination procedure underway in the 
Faculty, students are supposed to put up their 
works which are to be assessed by external 
examiners who come in from outside the city for 
this purpose. Accordingly, students had put up 
their installations around the Faculty campus. 
Some of these installations, (graphic prints) by 
Chandra Mohan attracted the wrath of the BJP 
leader Neeraj Jain, who barged into the campus 
with a bunch of goons and started disrupting the 
atmosphere, using abusive language and mouthing 
threats.

They roughed up the Chandra Mohan and accused him 
of offending their religious sentiments, saying 
that he had portrayed Durga Mata in an obscene 
way. Not by any stretch of imagination did the 
prints actually portray any goddess. Under the 
leadership of Neeraj Jain (who had incidentally 
played a very dubious role in the May 2006 riots 
that followed the demolition of a 200 year old 
dargah in the heart of the city), and with the 
police in tow, they took Chandra Mohan and a 
friend of his away to the Sayajiganj police 
station. Shivji Panickkar, the acting Dean of the 
Fine Arts Faculty, was also threatened with dire 
consequences by Neeraj Jain and his goons.
Chandra Mohan's friend was released later, but he 
was himself charged under sections 153 and 114. 
Later, on 10th May, when the bail application 
came up for hearing, two more charges were 
slapped on him, namely, Section 295 A and 295 B, 
and he was taken under judicial custody, and 
moved to the Central Jail. By now, Christian 
fundamentalists had joined hands with the 
Hindutvavadis. Alongwith the VHP and BJP crowds, 
reportedly, there were at least 40 priests in the 
court when Chandra Mohan's bail application came 
up for hearing. The priests were objecting to 
some painting to do with a cross - which, they 
thought offended their religious feelings.

In the meantime, Shivji Panickkar met the Vice 
Chancellor, who basically, wanted him to make a 
statement that was nothing short of an apology 
for putting up offensive installations. Panickkar 
refused to do so. After this, the students 
submitted a statement expressing thier concern 
over such tactics, and with a set of their 
demands, which included police bandobast for the 
Faculty. Reportedly, Neeraj Jain barged into the 
Vice Chancellor's office on the same day, and 
threatened that he would make sure that the 
entire city would shut down if a single case is 
registered against him.

As of now, all efforts are on to get Chandra Mohan released.
However, what is of grave concern in this entire 
unfolding of events is the fascist agendas that 
underly the actions of the likes of Neeraj Jain.

Citizenship and democratic rights face a grave 
crisis in the State of Gujarat and elsewhere. The 
nexus between the police and elements of the 
Sangh Parivar is so clearly established (it has 
been so since 2002) and it is also clear that 
fascist tactics affect everybody. In this 
instance, it is not only a matter for the artist 
community to agitate about. It is for ALL of us 
to sit up and take notice of what is going on in 
the name of religion. If we do not counter these 
tactics NOW, we are all going to be crushed 
sooner or later, either in our work arenas or 
within the confines of our homes. The dangers of 
giving in to or being cowed down by these forces 
cannot be underestimated.

THE FACULTY OF FINE ARTS HAS PLANNED A LARGE 
DEMONSTRATION FOR 14TH MAY 2007, MONDAY WHERE 
ARTISTS, LAWYERS, DOCTORS, ORDINARY CITIZENS FROM 
ALL OVER THE COUNTRY WILL GET TOGETHER IN PROTEST 
AGAINST SUCH GAGGING OF EXPRESSION AND VIOLATION 
OF DEMOCRATIC RIGHTS. PLEASE DO COME FOR THE 
DEMONSTRATION, AND MOTIVATE OTHERS TO JOIN IT. 
THE TIME TO ACT IS UPON US, WE CANNOT ABDICATE 
OUR RESPONSIBILITY TOWARDS SOCIETY, OURSELVES AND 
THE YOUNGER GENERATIONS.
VENUE: FINE ARTS FACULTY, M.S.UNIVERSITY , FATEHGANJ,
BARODA
TIME: 2 PM ONWARDS

CONTACT PHONE NUMBERS:
BINA SRINIVASAN: 9879377280
SHIVJI PANICKKAR: 9898403097
Best
Bina

o o o

(iv)

http://communalism.blogspot.com/2007/05/mangalore-workshop-seminar-on-media-and.html

INVITATION TO WORKSHOP AND SEMINAR ON MEDIA AND COMMUNALISM

18, 19 May 2007

Shanti Kiran, Bajjodi, Mangalore

Speakers include:

Arundhati Roy, writer and activist, New Delhi
Justice Rajinder Sachaar, New Delhi
Praful Bidwai, senior journalist and columnist, New Delhi
Saeed Naqvi, senior journalist and columnist, New Delhi
Nupur Basu, filmmaker and journalist, Bangalore
R.Poornima, Editor, Udayavani, Bangalore
Gauri Lankesh, Editor, Lankesh, Bangalore

The workshop and seminar is an effort to focus on 
the increasing communalization of society through 
out the Karavalli belt - the situation continues 
to remain communally tense with an incident of 
violence being reported every single day from the 
region.
Media has a potential to effectively intervene in 
the public discourse during times of communal 
conflict, When infused with secular voices and 
with a realization of its responsibility, the 
media plays an important role in diffusing myths, 
misconceptions and hatred that is propogated in 
society by communal forces.

The seminar and workshop is geared to address 
students, young journalists and activists in the 
attempt to understand the slow communalization of 
the public sphere through mainstream media.

Do email us if you would like to register, food 
and accommodation will be available for those who 
register before hand.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For more details, contact Deepu - 94483 67627 or 
Ashok - 94482 56216      or email 
souharda.vedike at gmail.com

o o o

(v)

GHADAR (1857 - 2007): MARKING 150 YEARS OF ANTI-COLONIAL RESISTANCE
  Saturday May 12, 2007, 7:00 - 11:00 pm
  Rhizome Café (317 East Broadway (near Main and Kingsway) [Vancouver]

Organized by a group of South Asian Youth

Ghadar: The Hindi/Punjabi/Urdu word for 
'rebellion'.  We use this word to refer to the 
1857 rebellion against the British in South Asia, 
and the actions it has inspired since.

  It has been 150 years since Indian members of 
the British East India Company's army revolted. 
This grew into a full-fledged rebellion involving 
large segments of India's population opposing the 
British, which was met with unflinching brutality 
against civilian populations.  The Ghadar's 
memory has continuously reinvigorated 
anti-colonial movements both in South Asia and 
beyond. We use this term to highlight the flame 
of resistance
that led various segments of Indian society to reject and oppose colonialism.

  We wish to mark the anniversary of this fiery 
moment in anti-colonial resistance not only to 
honour a historic event but to highlight the 
importance of remembering the Ghadar as an 
ongoing mobilizing force against neo-colonial and 
imperialistic ventures today.

  In the spirit of ongoing resistance, we share a 
night of music and poetry, including works by 
Faiz Ahmad Faiz
and Agha Shahid Ali, as well as performances by 
local artists. We will also feature clips of 
Bollywood representations of the Ghadar and an 
open mic for people to reflect on what the Ghadar 
means to them today, followed by dj'ing and dance.

  We hope you will join us to mark this 
anniversary and share in the spirit of resistance.

  Organized by a group of South Asian Youth
  For more information:
  Email uahmad at sfu.ca or gskambo1 at hotmail.com
  Call 778 552 2099

(vi)

And at the same date and time, and organized by East Indian Defence Committee:

150TH ANNIVERSARY COMMEMORATION OF THE FIRST WAR 
OF INDIAN INDEPENDENCE, 1857-59
Saturday, May 12, 2007, 6 p.m.
Bear Creek Community Hall
8580 - 132 Street, Surrey [Vancouver]

East Indian Defence Committee cordially invites 
you to attend a memorable evening commemorating 
the outstanding heroism and sacrifice of 
patriotic Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, 
Nepalis, Sri Lankans, Bhutanese and Sikkimese and 
other nationalities of all religious 
denominations who fought against British 
colonialism  and for genuine independence in the 
period 1857 to 1859.

For further information contact: H. Cheema 
604-377-2415; G. Thandi 604-583-4749; I. Purewal 
604-583-7984: K. Bains: 604-270-3588.



We in SANSAD endorse and support both events, and 
hope people will find it possible to attend one 
or the other, both happening at the same time.

A big debate has been raging in the 
sub-continent, especially in India, if the 
year-long struggles of the people actually 
amounted to the "First War of Independence" or 
these were just the last gasps of a dying and 
decadent order. It is a futile, intellectually 
sterile, debate. So also are the many 
"Orientalist" assertions of the last 150 years 
that this glorious struggle was only a "Sepoy 
Mutiny" triggered by irrational religious beliefs 
around beef or pork fat. At the very least, these 
discussiona and asserttions ignore the vital fact 
that by 1857, the "the Honourable East India 
Company" had not only destroyed the economic base 
of India and its all-too-powerful and 
all-too-pervasive mercantialist bourgeiosie that 
had already emerged, but had also created a 
comparador class of landlords and intellectuals.

One has to know as to what had been happening to 
the polity and economy of the subcontinent for at 
least 350 years before 1857 (the first European 
settlement on the Indian soil was established in 
1498) in order to adequately grasp the 
significance of those struggles.

It was a War of Independence, par excellance.

We will circulate our analytical perspective on 
this very shortly, benefited largely by some 
ground-breaking research that has been carried 
out by historians.

In the meantime, as we celebrate the 
anti-colonial struggles of the people of the 
sub-continent, it is important to recognize that 
while the people then were fighting only the East 
India Company, today - in the decadent and yet 
aggressive phase of imperialism - there are 
hundreds of  "East India Companies" 
simultaneously emnating from the multitude of 
western societies, penetrating every aspect of 
the economy, culture, political establishment, 
and creating also a powerfully vocal class of 
comprador intellectuals.

Remembering and Celebrating 1857 also means a 
firm commitment to develop comprehensive 
anti-imperialist struggles. The "independence" 
for which large number people fought and laid 
their lives in 1857-58, and since then, is still 
out there to fight for.


hari sharma
for SANSAD


_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
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Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
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