*What did Colonialism do to India? *

*Ram Puniyani*

A video of Shashi Tharoor speaking at Oxford
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7CW7S0zxv4>on a debate related to the
colonial period has been ‘viral’ on the social circuit for a while. In this
video Tharoor makes a passionate plea to the British that they make
reparations for the losses to Indian economy during the British rule. He
puts the blame of India’s economic decline on the British and also recounts
Jalianwala Bag, Bengal famine as the major highlight of British rule which
reflected the attitude of British towards this colony of theirs’. Tharoor
points out that resources from India were used by British to build there
economic prosperity and to fund their Industrial revolution.

However, Dr. Manmohan Singh (2005), the previous prime minister, had made a
very different kind of argument
<http://www.thehindu.com/2005/07/10/stories/2005071002301000.htm>. In this
Dr. Singh as a guest of British Government extols the virtue of British
rule and gives them the credit for rule of law, constitutional government,
and free press as the contributions which India benefitted from.

So where does the truth lie? Not only the context and tone of the speeches
by these two Congressmen is totally different, the content is also totally
on different tracks. Dr. Singh as the guest of the British Government is
soft and behaving as an ideal guest and points out the contributions of the
British rule and there is some truth in that. Tharoor as an Indian citizen
with memory of the past; is narrating the plunder which this country
suffered due to the British rule. He is also on the dot. These are two
aspects of the same canvass. What Tharoor is saying is the primary goal of
British and what Dr. Sigh is stating is an incidental offshoot.

British (East India Company) did come here looking for markets for their
industrial products, gradually went on defeating one after another king,
ruling in different areas and brought the whole subcontinent under a single
rule, which became one of the ‘Jewel in the Crown’ for British as the whole
wealth, raw material, resources from India were pumped out to Britain. In
order to achieve this goal they did go on to introduce railways,
communication network-postal, telegraph-telephone and modern administrative
system and modern education to create the assistants for their officers
ruling here.

The lacuna in our systems were primarily because the primary goal of
British was to plunder the country and as an incidental thing; as by
product; the new institutions, rule of law and later some reforms against
ghastly social practices also began (like abolition of Sati). Perceptions
do matter while Singh and Tharoor are talking of the same phenomenon from
two different angles. The third angle is the one that was articulated by
British themselves. British presented their rule as part of “Civilizing
mission of the East”! There is very little truth in this, but it can be
said that British also did help in the process of social reforms at times.

The major point which is unseen in these perceptions is one which had
dangerous consequence on the social-political scenario and that was-
British planted the seeds of divisive politics. As such broadly speaking
the colonial-imperialist rule sows the seeds of ‘divide and rule’ and in
this subcontinent they did it with gay abandon. In the wake of 1857 revolt,
when the British East India Company’s rule was shaken, British identified
existence of two major religious communities where the wedge could be
driven. This is where they introduced communal historiography as a part of
‘divide and rule’ policy. James Mill with his ‘History of British India’
periodized the history on communal lines (Ancient Hindu Period, medieval
Muslim period and modern British period). Supplementing this were Elliot
and Dawson with ‘History of India as told by her historians’, which reduced
the history to the eulogizing account of the courtiers of the kings. These
played a major role in deepening the communal understanding of the past.

At social level we see emergence of modern classes, industrialists-workers
and modern educated classes while the old classes of feudal lords and kings
survive though with some reduced influence. The modern classes came forward
to build up anti colonial movement; this movement led by Gandhi with people
from all regions, religions, men and women both is what built modern India
on the infrastructure of industrialization-modern education. This movement
tied the people together in the bond of ‘Indian-ness’ and had imbibed the
values of the central pillars of transformations of caste and gender
relations. The latter aspects most highlighted by Jotirao Phule, Bhimrao
Ambedkar and Periyar Ramasamy Niacker on one side and introduction of girls
education with Savitribai Phule opening the girls school on the other. This
group underlined that ‘India is a nation in the making’.

On the other hand the declining sections of landlords-kings, both Hindu and
Muslim, threatened by the modern changes and seeing the rise of their
vassals who were escaping from their grip, shouted that their religion is
in danger. They upheld the communal historiography introduced by British.
Muslim elite gradually came to form Muslim League. For them the raison
d’être of their coming together was Islam being in danger. They held that
here the Muslim Nation had been there since the time Muhammad bin Kasim had
won over Sindh from Hindu Daher in eighth century and so they have to work
for creation of a Muslim nation. That’s how they remained aloof from the
freedom movement, which was aiming at the Secular democratic India.

The Hindu landlords Kings in due course came to form Hindu Mahasabha and
then RSS. For them this had been a Hindu nation from times immemorial and
Muslims and Christians are the alien invaders. They also remained aloof
from freedom movement and harped on building Hindu nation in contrast to
the goal set by National movement, that of secular democratic India. They
constructed their own history of a glorious past of the Hindu rulers and
its corruption by the Muslim invaders. Gradually they came to construct the
ideology that all the ills of Hindu society are due to the Muslim invaders.

While the national movement brought together the people of all the regions,
religions, castes: women and men both, the communal streams nurtured the
seeds of divisiveness sown by British, and this is what led to communal
violence and later the tragic partition of the country. Here also what is
generally analyzed mostly is the fault of leader A or B for partition while
overlooking the fact that partition was the part of continuing British
policy, to have their interests preserved in the sub continent and that’s
how they played their cards well enough to create a situation where
partition became an inevitable calamity.

If one has to point the major problem which the British rule introduced;
apart from the impact on the socio economic life of the sub continent; it
is undeniably letting the feudal classes-kingdoms to continue in the face
of changing scenario of industrialization-modern education. So in the sub
continent on one side we see the emergence of the values of Liberty,
Equality, and Fraternity as an ideology of the emerging classes, while the
feudal ideology of ‘caste and gender hierarchy’ persists as the flag-mast
of declining sections of society which came to be represented in the
communal organizations, Muslim League, Hindu Mahasabha and RSS. These
declining groups construct the ideology of ‘Religion based Nation state’
which is a unique synthesis of feudal values with the modern concept of
nation state, their communal politics is a modern phenomena but derives its
identity from as ancient as time as possible. As neither Hindu nor Muslim
nor Christian Kings were ‘religious nationalist’ so to say; as actually
they presided over on the empires based on taxation of the toiling peasants
in their kingdoms. Their goals of power-wealth were written on their
sleeves; sometimes they adorned the masks of Dharmyudh, Jihad or Crusade
for their ambitions of expanding power.

So during freedom movement we see those working for anti colonial movement
are saying, ‘India as a nation in the making’ the concept which runs
parallel to modernization in transport, industrialization, education and
administration in particular. Muslim League said we have been a Muslim
nation from eight century and Hindu Mahasabha-RSS asserting that we are a
Hindu nation from times immemorial Muslim league derives identity from the
Kings’ rule while Hindu Mahasbha-RSS project the concept of nation to times
when people were having pastoral pattern and later made a transition to
settled agriculture.  For the communalists the major transition of
industrialization and modern education is of no consequence.

While the declining classes do eulogize the kings of their religions, it is
interesting that none of the kings in the history set out to spread his
religion, they set out to expand their empires. To make this rule grounded
there of course is an exception, Emperor Ashok who did spread his religion.

Today we cannot say what might have been the course of History had India
not been colonized, what patterns of Industrialization-modernization would
have taken place, but one thing can be hypothesized that this communal
politics, abuse of religions’ identity for political goals might not have
been here to torment us, to kill and maim the innocents, may not have been
ruling our streets and asserting for authoritarian structures right within
the democratic institutions which the country has nourished from last six
decades.

So while Tharoor and earlier Manmohan Singh are pointing to two
supplementary aspects of British rule, we also need to delve deeper and see
the result of their policies which gave rise to communal politics, the
politics which is tormenting South Asia as a whole and India is witnessing
the worst in the form of Hindu Nationalism, Hindutva which is dominating
the political ideology.



# Colonialism, Shashi Tharoor, Hindu and Muslim Nationalism, Gandhi, Indian
Nationalism

(www.kafila.org)

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