The Asian Age

New book uncovers Indian mystery probed by author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

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London, Feb. 28: Arthur Conan Doyle, the British creator of the worldfamou­s fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, was drawn to investigat­e just one real-life crime during his lifetime and it involved a British Indian man wrongly accused of a series of mysterious crimes in an English village in the early 20th century.

The story of that Indianorig­in barrister, George Edalji, has now been dug up in detail and brought to life in a new book by London-based historiana­uthor Shrabani Basu, who chanced upon the mystery and pursued it through archival records and letters over the years. The result is ‘The Mystery of the Parsee Lawyer: Arthur Conan Doyle, George Edalji and the case of the foreigner in the English village’, which is released in the UK next week and in India on March 10.

“I think Indian readers will find it interestin­g that in 1907 Arthur Conan Doyle responded to a letter by a young Indian lawyer appealing to him for help to clear his name, and he took up the cause,” said Basu, the author of previous historical accounts such as ‘Spy Princess: The Life of Noor Inayat Khan’ and ‘Victoria and Abdul: The

Extraordin­ary True Story of the Queen’s Closest Confidant’. “Even Jawaharlal Nehru, who was an 18-year-old student at the time in Harrow School in London, got fascinated with the case and remarked that George had no doubt been targeted because he was Indian,” she said.

The story, which revolves around several threatenin­g letters and the distressin­g killing and mutilation of animals, was one of the most famous cases of miscarriag­e of justice in Edwardian England which was forgotten over time. Conan Doyle, whom George Edalji had turned to for help after being jailed for crimes he did not commit, encountere­d a mystery worthy of his fictional detective.

The Sherlock Holmes author meticulous­ly pieced clues together to conclude that George had been the victim of racism for being a “Hindoo” – as all Indians were referred to at the time. “What fascinated me was the fact that the only true crime that Arthur Conan Doyle investigat­ed personally was to do with an Indian.

To me, it was a story that was calling out to be told. Like most people, I am a fan of the Sherlock Holmes books and love a mystery,” said Basu. While the intriguing incident took place over 100 years ago, the scenario has resonance even in modern-day Britain.

“The more I read the letters and the press coverage at the time, the more it felt that this could be happening now. Mistrust of immigrants, the fear of the foreigner, have been issues in Western society for a while now. The whole Brexit debate focussed on immigrants from eastern Europe entering the country and taking local jobs. Anonymous letters continue today, in the form of hate mail and online trolling,” reflects Basu. —

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Arthur Conan Doyle

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