India's secret history:
A holocaust, one where millions disappeared..
\Author says British reprisals involved the
killing of 10m, spread over 10 years
A controversial new history of the Indian
Mutiny, which broke out 150 years ago and is acknowledged to have been the
greatest challenge to any European power in the 19th century, claims that the
British pursued a murderous decade-long campaign to wipe out millions of people
who dared rise up against them.
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. Britain was then the
world's superpower but, says Misra, came perilously close to losing its most
prized possession: India.
Conventional histories have
counted only 100,000 Indian soldiers who were slaughtered in savage reprisals,
but none have tallied the number of rebels and civilians killed by British
forces desperate to impose order, claims Misra.
The author says he was
surprised to find that the "balance book of history" could not say
how many Indians were killed in the aftermath of 1857. This is remarkable, he
says, given that in an age of empires, nothing less than the fate of the world
hung in the balance.
"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," Misra told the
Guardian.
His calculations rest on
three principal sources. Two are records pertaining to the number of religious
resistance fighters killed - either Islamic mujahideen or Hindu warrior
ascetics committed to driving out the British.
The third source involves
British labour force records, which show a drop in manpower of between a fifth
and a third across vast swaths of India, which as one British official records
was "on account of the undisputed display of British power, necessary
during those terrible and wretched days - millions of wretches seemed to have
died."
There is a macabre
undercurrent in much of the correspondence. In one incident Misra recounts how
2m letters lay unopened in government warehouses, which, according to civil
servants, showed "the kind of vengeance our boys must have wreaked on the
abject Hindoos and Mohammadens, who killed our women and children."
Misra's casualty claims
have been challenged in India and Britain. "It is very difficult to assess
the extent of the reprisals simply because we cannot say for sure if some of
these populations did not just leave a conflict zone rather than being
killed," said Shabi Ahmad, head of the 1857 project at the Indian Council
of Historical Research. "It could have been migration rather than murder
that depopulated areas."
Many view exaggeration
rather than deceit in Misra's calculations. A British historian, Saul David,
author of The Indian Mutiny, said it was valid to count the death toll but
reckoned that it ran into "hundreds of thousands".
"It looks like an
overestimate. There were definitely famines that cost millions of lives, which
were exacerbated by British ruthlessness. You don't need these figures or talk
of holocausts to hammer imperialism. It has a pretty bad track record."
Others say Misra has done
well to unearth anything in that period, when the British assiduously snuffed
out Indian versions of history. "There appears a prolonged silence between
1860 and the end of the century where no native voices are heard. It is only
now that these stories are being found and there is another side to the
story," said Amar Farooqui, history professor at Delhi University.
"In many ways books like Misra's and those of [William] Dalrymple show
there is lots of material around. But you have to look for it."
What is not in doubt is
that in 1857 Britain ruled much of the subcontinent in the name of the Bahadur
Shah Zafar, the powerless poet-king improbably descended from Genghis Khan.
Neither is there much
dispute over how events began: on May 10 Indian soldiers, both Muslim and Hindu,
who were stationed in the central Indian town of Meerut revolted and killed
their British officers before marching south to Delhi. The rebels proclaimed
Zafar, then 82, emperor of Hindustan and hoisted a saffron flag above the Red
Fort.
What follows in Misra's
view was nothing short of the first war of Indian independence, a story of a
people rising to throw off the imperial yoke. Critics say the intentions and
motives were more muddled: a few sepoys misled into thinking the officers were
threatening their religious traditions. In the end British rule prevailed for
another 90 years.
Misra's analysis breaks new
ground by claiming the fighting stretched across India rather than accepting it
was localised around northern India. Misra says there were outbreaks of
anti-British violence in southern Tamil Nadu, near the Himalayas, and bordering
Burma. "It was a pan-Indian thing. No doubt."
Misra also claims that the
uprisings did not die out until years after the original mutiny had fizzled
away, countering the widely held view that the recapture of Delhi was the last
important battle.
For many the fact that
Indian historians debate 1857 from all angles is in itself a sign of a
historical maturity. "You have to see this in the context of a new, more
confident India," said Jon E Wilson, lecturer in south Asian history at
King's College London. "India has a new relationship with 1857. In the 40s
and 50s the rebellions were seen as an embarrassment. All that fighting, when
Nehru and Gandhi preached nonviolence. But today 1857 is becoming part of the
Indian national story. That is a big change."
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