(published in Oriëntalistische Literaturzeichnung, December 2016, p.528)
Masani, Zareer: Macaulay.
Pioneer of India’s Modernization. Noida: Random House India 2012. XV, 269
S. 8°. Hartbd. INR 450,00. ISBN 978-81-8400-303-1.
There are a lot of things wrong with
many Indians’ unquestioning trust in and use of the thesis put forward by
Edward Said in his unjustly famous book Orientalism (1978). This work is
full of factual errors, leaves unconsidered the German-language mainstay of orientalism
(to which its main proposition linking Orientalism with colonialism happens not
to apply), and essentially is a conspiracy theory, turning all scholars
concerned into colonial agents. But with regard to Indians specifically, it
uses “Orientalism” in a sense different from the original application relating to
India, which in turn is distinct from its academic use as the name for a
philological discipline. “Orientalist” originally refers to those British
administrators of India who, around 1800, opined that the native languages were
more suited as mediums of education and modernisation than English. Whereas “Orientalism”
has become a dirty word among Hindu nationalists as much as among ‘postcolonial’
Marxists, the historical Orientalists actually pursued nativist education
policies still advocated by the same Hindu nationalists.
Now a book has appeared which
presents the man who put the Orientalists out of business by pushing through an
Anglicist education policy: Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800–1859).
Finally, we have an up to date biography of this person extremely influential
in Indian history. As Zareer Masani says on the cover of his book Macaulay.
Pioneer of India’s Modernization: “If you’re an Indian reading this book in
English, it’s probably because of Thomas Macaulay”. His last biography was one
by his nephew George Otto Trevelyan, still in the nineteenth century.
The present
book is a pleasant enough read, giving all the relevant data. It
is marred by only one factor, which may even garner the author sympathy among some
of his readers, namely his all too conspicuous sympathy for his subject, not to
say his unconcealed admiration.
By birth and upbringing, Macaulay
was part of a British circle of elite people who were both liberal and
Christian. The best known example of this movement was William Wilberforce (1759–1833), who
successfully campaigned both for the abolition of slavery and for allowing
missionary activity in India. We see Macaulay going to India not to fulfil a
historical mission, but as the only way seemingly open to him to boost his
finances. He worked as an assistant to Governor-General William Bentinck, most
famous for prohibiting the self-immolation of widows on their husbands’ funeral
pyres (satī). It was formally in a
written advice to him that he formulated his famous Minute on Education
in 1835. Apart from determining education policy for centuries to come (we
still have an education system sensibly called Macaulayan) , he also made his
mark in other areas: e.g. he drafted the Indian penal code. Then he returned to
stay in England for twenty more years as a scholar and a famous poet, to die at
age 59.
It will not endear the man to Indian
nationalists that he used his spare time in Calcutta to pursue his interest in
the Graeco-Roman classics while spurning the native ones. His contempt for
Sanskrit writings is well-known and comes through in his Minute, where
he equates the whole of Sankrit literature in terms of knowledge content with a
single shelf of a popular library in Britain. Or, according to the approving
author: “Macaulay was notoriously dismissive, if not downright hostile and
contemptuous, about native Indian, and particularly Hindu, customs and
religious superstitions” (p. xiii).
Hindu nationalists tend to use his
name when they mean the Anglicised elite. However, he did not spin a conspiracy
that made the influence of the British long outlast their presence in India, as
nationalist narrative implies. Instead, Indians themselves have opted for his
and against nativist policies regarding language and education. Maybe they have
chosen to pursue a wrong course (or maybe not, as this book affirms), but it is
at any rate their own doing, not that of a Western conspiracy.
Was Macaulay’s education policy good
for the former untouchables, here called “Dalits” (the choice of words in this
case being very sensitive)? As Dharampal
has shown in his book The Beautiful Tree. Indigenous Indian Education in the
Eighteenth Century (New Delhi: Biblia Impex 1983), basing himself
on contemporaneous British surveys carried out in preparation of the
implementation of Macaulay’s policies, Indian schools were by no means backward,
and the school system was definitely more democratic than the contemporaneous one
in England. It did not serve many untouchables, but they were represented,
contradicting the usual assumption that low-castes were forbidden from learning
to read and write. Moreover, positing a causal relation between the
introduction of the English medium and the emancipation of the low-castes is
factually incorrect. China pursued a radical policy of equalisation and
achieved near-general literacy without using one word of English. Many Chinese
engineers of whatever social background work at high-tech jobs without knowing
English.
Macaulay also did not have the egalitarian
reforms in mind which his present-day Dalit fans ascribe to him. Britain at
that time had steep class differences, which helps explain why, as
administrators in India, the British could so easily accommodate the caste
system. As we learn in this book, Macaulay was not in favour of universal
franchise, preferring to keep it restricted to people owning property or
diplomas. The Indian leftists and subalterns the very circles that celebrate his memory opposed the latest Gulf War in which a
superpower bludgeoned a backward country in the name of human rights (and probably
in the service of private capital). Exactly the same conditions prevailed in
the First Opium War, which Macaulay passionately and prominently
supported. In this case, the author is
more even-handed, observing that today, “Macaulay’s ideas about an imperial
mission to inform and educate still underpin the way the West exports its
values to the rest of the world, especially through ‘soft’ power and the subtle
transfer of cultural and economic norms” (p. xv).
Did
Macaulay provide the glue that still holds independent India together, as his
fans, including the author, believe? The Constituent Assembly envisaged two
alternatives to English as the official language: Hindi, taken to be more or
less spoken as a mother tongue by some 40% of the population, which was chosen
and badly failed (partly but not wholly by sabotage from the English-speaking
elite); and Sanskrit, which had a history as an official language and was
highly respected both in India and abroad. Sanskrit was little spoken (as was
English), but learning it as a common second language would have proved easier
than making Hebrew the first language for Jews migrating to Israel, also
because of the many vocabulary links between Sanskrit and the vernaculars. If
Sanskrit was a difficult language, it was difficult for everyone, and it did
not seriously favour one region over another, the way Hindi did. Even Bhimrao Ambedkar, Law Minister and
venerated ideological light of most low-caste Macaulay fans, strongly supported
Sanskrit. India might have been united under its own classical language.
However, after a 50–50 vote,
Assembly President Rajendra Prasad cast the fateful deciding vote in favour of
Hindi, thus aborting the possibly successful Sanskrit experiment and indirectly
making English the only viable alternative. Macaulay might have been history by
now, but he is back with a vengeance. And if Masani has his way, Macaulay is
here to stay.
4 comments:
"Hindu nationalists tend to use his name when they mean the Anglicised elite. However, he did not spin a conspiracy that made the influence of the British long outlast their presence in India, as nationalist narrative implies. Instead, Indians themselves have opted for his and against nativist policies regarding language and education."
Thanks for speaking plainly!
Ananth Sethuraman
KE QUOTE: "in his unjustly famous book Orientalism (1978). This work is full of factual errors"
To call it unjustly famous assumes things like having an audience capable of or interested in finding and evaluating those errors. In the absence of such an audience, any fame the book may have is actually well deserved. Like audience, like fame?
KE QUOTE: "prohibiting the self-immolation of widows on their husbands’ funeral pyres (sati)."
A successful sati would require spiritual purity of a marital relationship. This is becoming a rarity in the age of Kali Yuga, thus not recommendable for the large majority of current or future widows. The British colonialists probably did not catch this angle, so this may be an example where their ignorance benefited the Hindu society, which needed to modify (some of) the traditional habits to fit realities of the current age.
KE QUOTE: "Hindu nationalists tend to use his name when they mean the Anglicised elite. However, he did not spin a conspiracy that made the influence of the British long outlast their presence in India, as nationalist narrative implies. Instead, Indians themselves have opted for his and against nativist policies regarding language and education."
Influence of the British will long outlast their presence in India simply because the influence of things from the past cannot be erased from the future, the future is built upon them. This includes that chapter involving British colonialism, which was, to their shame, based on illusions of own supremacy over other nations around the world.
Seems Indians were far-sighted here, as being able to handle and understand the most widely used language in the world is of strategic importance during times of globalization. The most valuable thing about India is Hinduism/spirituality, which can now enrich their neighbors all over the world, on a much larger scale than before, precisely due to having a common language to communicate it through. It may even prove that (moderate) nativist goals got millions of unexpected supporters from numerous countries this way. It is said that God moves in mysterious ways.
@Hari: Indians farsighted? They could have taken a native language as link language. Indeed, the Constituent Assembly, only divided over Hindi vs. Sanskrit, was in entire agreement on this: 100% voted to phase out English. Only the anti-democratic anglicised Nehruvian elite chose to sabotage this. Even today, it will be far more democratic to introduce a native link language than to try the alternative route to real democracy, viz. to anglicize the entire population.
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