Friday, 21 April 2017

Jewel in the Crown: Who would want to lose it?


That is a reasonable question and the reality answer would be, ‘no one.’ Who in the right sense of their mind would let go of a valuable and beautiful jewel in the crown? No one really.

What if the jewel was India as a country, with all its natural wealth, its potential as a market for manufactured goods and the given geopolitical strategic position in the world map? And what if the crown were to belong to the Queen of England? Would they let it go? Not if they can help it! That is what they did over decades and decades.

Having got a strong foothold in India politically in 1757 after the Battle of Plassey, there was a steady consolidation of power over the subcontinent, until by 1857, the Sepoy Mutiny, when almost the whole of India was within the ambit of British Raj.

In 1857, the rule of the subjugated India passed on to the Crown of England and the Parliament of England. Indians quietened down to the inevitable and accepting the foreign rule as a fate, started to make the best of the options available before them. They took to English education, introduced by Lord Macaulay, became employable by the British Raj.

Those who could afford, mainly the Zamindars and the successful advocates and the business men sent their sons and sometimes daughters too, to England for higher studies and generally a tour in Europe, giving them an advantage over the others, at the start of their careers.

It was these who became the torch bearers of freedom movement in India, and fought the British, first by petitioning them, and later by violent or peaceful movements. British kept promising them first that they would be given self-governance, then Dominion status, then Dominion status within the Commonwealth, when they had absolutely no intentions of giving up India. To this end they played the Muslims against the Hindus and the Princes against the pauper, the people of India.

For more than three decades the British dilly dallied, and wasted precious years, which they could have utilized in preparing the leaders and people of India in self-governance, which would have left India prepared for her self-rule and most probably, India would have been one country today, instead of being a ‘moth-eaten’ subcontinent.

To trace the events,[1] of the last thirty or forty years, from the time Indians were demanding self-rule and were given to believe that it is in the offing, let’s start with the Minto-Marley Reforms of 1909. It assured progress towards a responsible government and increased the participation of Indians in the provincial and central legislative councils, subject to a from British control.

By the Great War, the World War I, Indians increasingly wanted only independence. The British officials like Sir Edmund Barrow in 1916 thought it would take generations for Indians to really start governing themselves. The Indian National Congress, formed in 1885, through the initiatives of a retired British ICS officer, was mainly into petitioning the government.

India sent millions of people to fight overseas for Britain in the First World War and some 54,000 died. Gandhi who had joined Indian politics by 1914, expected the British to extend at least Dominion status for India as a reward. This proved elusive.

Montagu declaration of 1917 assured to increase Indians in every branch of administration. The landmark declaration laid down, “the gradual development of self-governing institutions with a view to the progressive realization of responsible government of India as an integral part of the British Empire.”

So, it was never to be presumed that India will be fully independent, but always be an integral part of the British Empire! Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms followed in 1919, as Government of India Act. Elections were held on limited franchise of about three and a half percentage of the population.

A Diarchy came into being with Indians taking care of the safe responsibilities like Pubic Health, Education and Agriculture, while irrigation, police, finance and justice were in the hands of the British. But the Viceroy could always veto anything that the Indian selected representatives had passed. Communal divisions were encouraged to keep the Indians embroiled in petty quarrels.

In the same year, 1919, Rowlatt Act was passed giving power to the government to deport or imprison activists without trial up to two years. Gandhi unleashed Satyagraha on the British. Though non-violent, the move led to riot, disorder and violence.

It also led to the Jallianwala Bagh massacre of the innocent civilians who had gathered for a peaceful demonstration against the government. That was the end of a beginning. Gandhi started to agitate for full independence and declared civil disobedience. In 1922, he was imprisoned for six years, but released after two years. Jinnah, Nehru were all in the fry.

Simon Commission came in 1928, and were asked to ‘go back.’ Irwin declaration of 1929 indicated a dominion status within British Commonwealth, but nothing concrete came out of it. A Round-table conference was convened in 1929, but since it was not prepared to discuss the Dominion status, Congress boycotted it. Gandhi called upon its members to resign from provincial legislatures and launched civil disobedience, which concluded in the Salt March in 1930. Gandhi was arrested, so also the other leaders.

The Second Round-table conference was held in 1931, with Gandhi in attendance, as he had a pact with Irwin, the then Viceroy. Nothing came out of it. Satyagraha started once again. Churchill, then an MP, was totally against even Dominion status to India, because he feared the Hindu majority would crush the untouchables and the minority Muslims.

Churchill’s opposition in the British Parliament to any compromise on India delayed the passing of the India Act, to 1935, when the Second World War had started. The Act in its spirit meant to preserve British India for another generation (30 years).

On paper, it proposed an All India Federation of the princely states, Muslims and Hindus, who will all have an equal representation. It would not allow Congress to become a majority government. Moreover, control of foreign policy and defence would still be with the British.

Princes, the Congress party, all rejected the Act. In 1937, the first provincial elections were held under the Act. Congress won majority in six of eleven provinces. It refused to consider sharing of power with the Muslim League. The prospect of a Hindu-dominated Raj loomed large.[2] Muslims started to harp on Pakistan by 1940, encouraged by the then Viceroy Linlithgow, who adopted the  policy of divide and rule. 

Churchill became the Prime minister of England in 1940 during the War. He steered the country to victory in the war, but was a constant barrier to giving India freedom. He was not prepared to give up the ‘Jewel in the Crown.’ 

Cripps Mission came to India in 1942 promising Dominion status and an Indian constitution to be prepared in India by a Constituent Assembly, but all after the war and support of India to the war. Partition of India was promised for the first time. The intention of Churchill was not to honour the promises given during war time. The Mission failed, as Congress wanted full independence and nothing less. Gandhi launched ‘Quit India’ movement in its wake.

American President Roosevelt was pressurising Churchill to give independence to India. British government tried a draft keeping the capital Delhi within its powers within the British Commonwealth of nations. Churchill made his famous remark, “I have not become the King’s First Minister in order to preside over the liquidation of the British Empire.”

While millions died in 1943-44 famine in Bengal, Churchill still wanted the grains to be diverted to wartime destinations and Indian merchants hoarded stocks to inflate the prices and make a killing.

In 1945 after the war, Attlee, of Labour party, who was favourable to Indian independence became the Prime Minister in Britain. After the war, there was an economic collapse in England with a national debt of 238% of GDP. Pound was weak and the capacity to hold on to India by police or military power became less.

Indian soldiers of INA[3] who fought with Japanese army and were returning after the war were put on trial for treason. Three were tried at Red Fort and hanged. India erupted into riots. Further trials were stopped. But it was becoming increasingly difficult for the British to hold on to the Jewel. Wavell, the Viceroy began the withdrawal of military personnel from India.   

Attlee appointed Mountbatten as the last Viceroy on 20th February 1947 with a mandate to pack up and leave India by June 1948. But sensing the situation in India, Mountbatten preponed the date to 15th August 1947, the anniversary of Japanese surrender and pushed the matters hard. Communal violence was erupting almost every day.

Sir Cyril Radcliffe, was asked just 38 days before independence, to go to India and demarcate the boundaries between the new countries-to-be, India and Pakistan. What could have been done in a peaceful manner was done in a mad-hat hurry and Radcliffe sat on maps produced before him and dissected the country. He flew out of the country on 15th August itself. It is said that he was haunted by the experience for the rest of his life.

The award was not given till after the independent celebrations. Once it became known, the country erupted in communal violence that took millions of lives, Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs. The single British achievement of creating a united India from fragments of myriads of rulers, castes and communities, utterly failed on the last day. The country was left divided into two and people died and suffered with the hastily drawn boundaries. That is how the British left India, in blood shed, hatred and confusion.

Well, one wishes it would have been otherwise. But given the near death-wish of the British to hang on to the jewel in the crown until the very last by dubious means, and also the adamant principle of the Congress, not to adjust with the Muslim minorities, all ended in a carnage. People paid with their lives for the folly of their leaders.    





[1] Walter Reid beautifully traces these events in his book, “Keeping the Jewel in the Crown: The British Betrayal of India,” Penguin Random House, India, 2017, starting from 1916 to 1947, some three decades before independence.
[2] May be this Hindu Dominated majority rule had been just postponed by some 70 years in the independent India. Today BJP under the leadership of Modi are almost inching towards such a rule, which would mean, suppression of Muslim and Christian minorities, Dalits and even women. The apprehensions of the then rulers of India were not imaginary, but very real.
[3] INA – Indian National Army under the leadership of Subash Chandra Bosh. 

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