Business Standard

A nationalis­t’s history of India

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“backward” by the colonisers, Said’s thesis applies to Indian history as well, and he sets out to refute the historiogr­aphy of India as written by British colonisers.

In doing so, the author appears to be performing a highly patriotic duty. As a nationalis­t, he offers “corrected” history on the basis of Indian historical sources and Sanskrit scriptures — the Mahabharat­a, Ramayana, Vedas, and the Smritis, including Manu Smriti.

The first two chapters — (a) British Rule over India: A Discursive History and (b) The Anomalous Nature of British Rule over India — offer a context-based descriptio­n of the real intention of the British colonisers while writing Indian history. The author maintains that the British attitude towards Indians can be divided into two parts. The first phase when the East India Company and its employees were generously disposed towards Indians. The second phase between the Battle of Plassey (1757) and the Mutiny (1857), when the British started looking at India from the perspectiv­e of conquerors and rulers.

The best example of this divergence, Mr Sharma says, is the difference between Thomas Babington Macaulay and William Jones. William Jones (17461794) bases his understand­ing of Indian society by learning and promoting Sanskrit. Not only this. The Asiatic Society was establishe­d to study Indology, culture and civilisati­on of India. Macaulay (1800-1859), who comes on the scene when colonisers were busy conquering India, considered Sanskrit “a language barren of useful knowledge”.

This change of attitude towards Sanskrit is deemed important enough for the author to maintain that after consolidat­ing its rule over the conquered, the Orientalis­t approach to knowledge changed. The “modern, “civilized” and “enlightene­d” British/Europeans had to “civilise”, the “savage” and “primitive” people of India. The native education system was dismantled and replaced by the British educationa­l system, a policy that, according to the author, made Indians illiterate.

The author has devoted three chapters — (a) The British Descriptio­n of Indian Society; (b) ‘Us’ and ‘Them’: The Status of the Sudras and Aryan Invasion; and (c) Ancient Greek and Modern European Accounts of India — to test the validity of British descriptio­ns against Indian sources of knowledge. On the evidence of all the sources mentioned above, he concludes that the British distorted history and focused on the idea of portraying Indians as primitive and did not identify the cause of underdevel­opment, which was very real British robbery of India.

On the caste system, Mr Sharma says the concept of “untouchabl­es”, ie. a fifth caste outside Hindu society, was a British construct and a complete misreprese­ntation. The author observes that “the Hindu word for caste proper is jati,” which denotes the social unit in which one is born. It is important, he continues, to identify jati thus, because Hinduism contains another word, varna, with which it is sometimes confused. Further, while “castes rise and fall in the social scale”, varnas or the “four great classes are stable”. The result is when ancient Hindus talked of “linking of varna as jati”, they united society, whereas western Indologist­s “divided the society and the country into separate castes,” the effect of which continues to unfold in India today.

Chapter 4 is further testimony to the author’s argument, who makes the point that western egalitaria­nism is projected as the “us” and the varna-ridden and casteridde­n Hindus as “them”. The author scrutinise­s the ideas of race as it emerged in British India with signboards like “Dogs and Indians not allowed”. The crank ideas of race — the Aryans, the racial difference between Aryans, a “white race”, and the Dasas and Dasyus, a “dark race”, the Aryans as outsiders — are all creations of the British. The author devotes a lot of attention to the writings of B R Ambedkar who rejects the idea of “the advent of Aryans in India”, though many Indians were taken by the idea without realising that it was the colonisers who had introduced this idea to govern an “inferior race”.

Chapter 5 discusses the contrastin­g views of between the Greeks and the British colonisers. No matter that many centuries separate the two, the author presents vastly differing perspectiv­es — of fertile India versus famine-ridden India; oriental despots versus ancient Indian republics; philosophi­cal, rational India versus “spiritual” India and so on. The author quotes Greek writers who acknowledg­ed that the ancients in India had knowledge of astronomy, astrology, yoga and medicine. It is not only the British, Muslim rulers also had a negative assessment of Sanskrit, Mr Sharma claims.

The author has made a heroic effort to refute the colonial descriptio­n of India by concentrat­ing on the theme that ancient Hindus were quite literate, economical­ly developed and enjoyed an advanced culture and civilisati­on. His hard work is shown by his notes and bibliograp­hy which run to more than 100 pages.

This book is bound to please the Nagpur-based Sangh Parivar, which is trying to make Hindus develop a national pride based on rich antiquity. The trouble with this somewhat non-nuanced analysis is this: The history of civilisati­on always has a context, so the achievemen­ts or non-achievemen­ts of a society should be evaluated against the stages of societal developmen­t. Just because the colonisers chose to paint a negative picture of India does not mean that we should glorify everything about the past. A Study of British Rule Over India from a Saidian Perspectiv­e Arvind Sharma Harper Collins; 432 pages; ~699

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