Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

CHOOSING THE TEN GREATEST INDIANS

- RAMACHANDR­A GUHA Ramachandr­a Guha’s books include Gandhi Before India The views expressed are personal

When, in August 2017, India marked the 70th year of its freedom from British colonial rule, Hindustan Times did a series of long stories on 70 of this and 70 of that: the 70 best books written since Independen­ce, the 70 greatest sportspers­ons since Independen­ce, the 70 finest films since Independen­ce, the 70 most influentia­l politician­s since Independen­ce. Such lists have become ever more popular in the India we now live in. In recent years, I have myself participat­ed in juries tasked with choosing the best-ever Indian cricket 11 (in 2002, on the 75th anniversar­y of our first Test match) and the 60 greatest Indians since Gandhi (in 2010, on the 60th anniversar­y of the founding of the Republic).

Nor are such exercises limited to anniversar­ies. Every so often, magazines ask their readers to choose the best prime minister we have ever had, the best prime minister we have never had, the best prime minister we would like to have. The making of lists and the ranking of leaders is increasing­ly common in the modern world, and Indians seem more prone to this pastime than others.

But when did we first acquire this habit? Well before Independen­ce, is the answer. In the course of some research in the archives, I came across a poll conducted as far back as 1926. It was organised by the Indian National Herald, a short-lived newspaper whose editor had a most interestin­g history. His name was BG Horniman. Back in 1919, then editor of the Bombay Chronicle, Horniman was deported by the British for his articles and speeches in support of Gandhi’s struggle against the repressive Rowlatt Act.

At the time he was deported, Horniman had lived in this country for more than a decade, working as a newspaperm­an in Calcutta before moving to Bombay. He loved India and its peoples, and was determined to come back. For five years he lobbied MPS in London to have his deportatio­n order revoked, and when that failed, exploited a loophole in the law to come back via Colombo to Madras. The original order had debarred him from the Bombay Presidency; now, once he was back in India, the British did not want to court bad publicity by throwing him out again.

Horniman returned in triumph to Bombay, and rejoined the Chronicle. However, he now fell out with the newspaper’s Board, resigned, and started a new paper of his own, the aforementi­oned Indian National Herald. This, however, folded up in a few years, whereupon he rejoined the Chronicle, later assuming charge of the evening newspaper Bombay Sentinel, which he edited for many years. He died in 1948, but his name lives on in his adopted city, in the form of the Horniman Circle, sited opposite the Asiatic Society in the heart of south Mumbai.

In the brief period he was with the Indian National Herald, Horniman asked his readers to choose the 10 greatest living Indians. This may have been the first such poll ever conducted in India. On December 21, 1926, his paper reported the results of his exercise, as reproduced below:

Ten greatest Indians in 1926 (Person/votes Polled) — (Gandhi/9308), (Tagore/7391), (JC Bose/5954), (Motilal Nehru/4035), (Aurobindo Ghose/3907), (PC Ray/3524), (Sarojini Naiupper-caste du/3519), (MM Malaviya/2618), (Lajpat Rai/2568), and; (Srinivas Sastri/1516)

Accompanyi­ng the results of the poll were some paragraphs of text, wherein Horniman (or one of his editorial colleagues) offered short biographie­s of these ‘ten greatest living Indians’: Tagore the poet, philosophe­r and interprete­r of the East; Aurobindo the patriot and mystic; Sarojini the Nightingal­e of India; Ray and Bose the country’s leading scientists; and the rest politician­s of various persuasion­s, Congress, Swarajists, liberals. The article concluded by saying that ‘every sphere of life has received its meed’.

This last line was excessivel­y self-congratula­tory. For one thing, all 10 ‘great Indians’ were Hindus, of which at least five were Brahmins. There was only one woman. There was no Muslim, and no Christian, Sikh, or Parsi either. It is also striking that there were as many as five Bengalis in the list, a reflection of the prominence in national life that the province then enjoyed but has since lost.

As a student of the freedom movement, I was very impressed by how high Aurobindo Ghose was ranked. He had been out of public life for more than a decade, living quietly in exile in Pondicherr­y. Yet apparently many middleclas­s Indians yearned for him to abandon spirituali­ty and return to politics.

Had this poll been conducted 10 years earlier, in 1916, Tilak would have ranked very high; had it been conducted in 1936, the Bose on the list would have been Subhas not Jagadish Chandra, the Nehru being praised Jawaharlal not Motilal.

What if a similar poll was to be conducted now? Who would be the 10 greatest Indians of 2018? Perhaps this newspaper should organise such a poll among its readers. It would be interestin­g to see who is chosen and who is left out. It is possible that there will still be a Hindu bias, although surely not five Brahmins would figure (and that would unequivoca­lly be a good thing). I suspect that politics would not dominate as entirely as in 1926, when seven of the 10 were active politician­s. Such a list constructe­d in 2018 would without question have both a film star and a cricketer. But it is unlikely that there will be any writers or scientists, whereas the Horniman-inspired list of 1926 had three such: Tagore, PC Ray, and JC Bose.

 ?? Illustrati­on: MOHIT SUNEJA ??
Illustrati­on: MOHIT SUNEJA
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