*By Tushar Gandhi*

The “Mumbai for Marathi Manoos” war cry has once again been raised to shore
up the sagging political fortunes of the Thackeray family. When the Shiv
Sena-BJP combine came to power in the year 1993, under the guise of
reverting to the original name, they replaced Bombay with Mumbai.

I wonder when they will discard the anglicized Thackeray and revert back to
their original Marathi surname Thakre?

According to ancient history, a grouping of seven islands comprising Colaba,
Mazagaon, Old Woman's Island, Wadala, Mahim, Parel, and Matunga-Sion formed
a part of the kingdom of Ashoka the Great of Magadh, ironically in North
India.

The Bhaiyas and Biharis whom the Thackerays accuse of being outsiders in
Mumbai, come from the region, which was a part of Ashoka the Great’s empire.
We judge everything according to history and the *history of Mumbai proves
that its earliest known ownership was with a North Indian.*

The seven islands of Mumbai passed through many hands, the Sultans of
Gujarat, the Portuguese and the British. Every ruler left behind proof of
residence in Mumbai.

The Mauryans left behind the Kanheri, Mahakali and the caves of Gharapuri
more popularly called Elephanta.

The Sultans of Gujarat built the Digraphs at Maim and Hajji Ali.

The Portuguese built the two Portuguese churches, one at Prabhadevi and the
other St Andrews at Bandra. They built forts at Sion, Mahim, Bandra and
Bassien.

The Portuguese named the group of seven Islands ‘Bom Baia’, Good Bay. The
British built a city out of the group of seven islands and called her
Bombay. The original settlers of the seven islands, the Koli fishermen,
worshiped Mumbaidevi, her temple still stands at Babulnath near Chowpatty.
The Kolis called the island Mumbai, ‘Mumba, Mother Goddess’.

In 1662, King Charles II of England married the Portugese Princess Catherine
of Braganza, and received the seven islands of Bom Baia as part of his
dowry. Six years later, the British Crown leased the seven islands to the
English East India Company for a sum of 10 pounds in gold per annum.

It was under the English East India Company that the future megapolis began
to take shape, after the first War for Independence Bombay once again became
a colony of the British Empire. History has forgotten this, but the first
Parsi settler came to Bombay in 1640, he was Dorabji Nanabhoy Patel.

In 1689-90, a severe plague epidemic broke out in Bombay and most of the
European settlers succumbed to it. The Siddi of Janjira attacked in full
force. Rustomji Dorabji Patel, a trader and the son of the city’s first
Parsi settler, successfully defeated the Siddi with the help of the Kolis
and saved Bombay.

Gerald Aungier, Governor of Bombay built the Bombay Castle, an area that is
even today referred to as Fort. He also constituted the Courts of law. He
brought Gujarati traders, Parsi shipbuilders, Muslim and Hindu manufacturers
from the mainland and settled them in Bombay.

It was during a period of four decades that the city of Bombay took shape.
Reclamation was done plug the breach at Worli and Mahalakshmi, Hornby
Vellard was built in 1784.

The Sion Causeway connecting Bombay to Salsette was built in 1803.

Colaba Causeway connecting Colaba island to Bombay was built in 1838.

A causeway connecting Mahim and Bandra was built in 1845. Lady Jamsetjee
Jeejeebhoy, the wife of the First Baronet Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy donated Rs
1,57,000 to meet construction costs of the causeway. She donated Rs 1,00,000
at first. When the project cost escalated and money ran out half way through
she donated Rs 57,000 again to ensure that the vital causeway was completed.
Lady Jamsetjee stipulated that no toll would ever be charged for those using
the causeway.

Today Mumbaikars have to pay Rs 75 to use the Bandra-Worli Sea link,
connecting almost the same two islands.

Sir JJ Hospital was also built by Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy.

The shipbuilding Wadia family of Surat was brought to Bombay by the British.
Jamshedji Wadia founded the Bombay Port Trust and built the Princess Dock in
1885 and the Victoria Dock and the Mereweather Dry Docks in 1891. Alexandra
Dock was built in 1914.

A Gujarati civil engineer supervised the building of the Gateway of India.

The Tatas made Bombay their headquarters and gave it the iconic Taj Mahal
Hotel and India’s first civilian airlines, Air-India.

The Godrejs gave India its first vegetarian soap. Cowasji Nanabhai Daver
established Bombay’s first cotton mill, ‘The Bombay Spinning Mills’ in 1854.
By 1915, there were 83 textile mills in Bombay largely owned by Indians.
This brought about a financial boom in Bombay.

Although the mills were owned by Gujaratis, Kutchis, Parsis and Marwaris,
the work force was migrant Mahrashtrians from rural Maharashtra.

Premchand Roychand, a prosperous Gujarati broker founded the Bombay Stock Ex
change. Premchand Roychand donated Rs 2,00,000 to build the Rajabai Tower in
1878. *Muslim, Sindhi and Punjabi migrants have also contributed handsomely
to Mumbai. *Mumbai is built on the blood and sweat of all Indians. Apart
from its original inhabitants, the Kolis, everyone else in Mumbai, including
Thackeray’s *‘Marathi Manoos’, *are immigrants.


*(The writer is founder president, Mahatma Gandhi Foundation. He is Mahatma
Gandhi's grandson)*

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement?hl=en.

Reply via email to