(Hindu Human Rights, Pragyata and Swarajya, April 2019)
General GD Bakshi
is not just anyone. After retiring from the army, he became a well-known
television face applying his military knowledge both to the contemporary political debate and to classical
cultures, e.g. the strategic aspect of the Mahabharata war. Everyone in India
knows the story that on his very first day in service, in 1971, he was called
to fight in the Bangladesh war,-- a Just War if ever there was one. It showed
that sometimes, going to war is the lesser evil: in this case, it was the only
practical way of stopping a Pakistani genocide that was making more victims per
day than the whole Indian military intervention made.
Mahabharata for strategists
It is at several
conferences on the Mahabharata, the classic on the theme of Just War (Dharma
Yuddha), that I first met the general. There, his cold strategic look at the
story was quite an eye-opener to historians like me, but a bit of a cold shower
to more religious types.
For pious
denouncers of arch-villain Duryodhana, whose refusal to give even five villages
to the rival Pandava brothers counts as the proverbial example of
unreasonableness, please consider the strategic angle. After their wedding with
Panchala princess Draupadi, the Pandavas might well want the fusion of the
Bharata kingdom with Panchala, meaning the conquest of the Bharata kingdom, and
in that project, the five villages would acquire tactical value as offensive outposts.
Even Krishna, a
common object of devotion, was not spared. As we know, Gandhari, mother of the
slain Kaurava brothers, curses him as the real culprit of the war. After all,
he as a prince of the Yadava tribe has egged the two sets of Bharata princes on
to fight and massacre one another. Not surprisingly, it is the non-Bharatas who
profit, with the throne of the Pandava capital Indraprastha falling to a Yadava
prince, viz. Krishna's own grandson. So, though idealized and ultimately even
divinized by the epic's pious editors, Krishna may originally have merely been
a calculating strategist mindful of the Yadava tribe's self-interest. That at
least is what the naked strategic data suggest.
It does not come as
a surprise, therefore, that regarding the independence struggle too, General
Bakshi brings down a pious legend featuring a canonized Saint.
Who achieved independence?
In the present
volume, Bose or Gandhi, Who Got India her Freedom? (Knowledge World/KW
Publications, Delhi 2019, ISBN 978-93-87324-67-1, 216 pp.), Bakshi takes on an
important topic from recent history: what factor was decisive in achieving
India's independence? The received wisdom, both in Congressite India and
internationally, is that this historical achievement was the result of Mahatma
Gandhi's non-violent agitation. But was it?
How do you wrest the
sovereignty over a Subcontinent from a world power? The British-Indian empire
was built on bluff and on the dividedness of the population against itself. This
was not threatened by the initial Congress movement, which was just a talking
shop of lawyers pleading for native interests within the British empire. By
contrast, it had really been threatened by the Mutiny of 1857, when different
communities rallied around the Sepoys (Sipahi, native soldier in colonial
service) and came together to revolt against the British. And this gives the gist
of Bakshi's narrative already away: the British were afraid of military revolt,
particularly by the native mercenaries on whom they counted to uphold their
imperial edifice, not of pious discourses and slogans.
However, the
General does give the Mahatma a part of the honour. No doubt, the shift of
Congress activity from lawyerly negotiations to agitation at the mass level was
Gandhi’s achievement. He popularized the Freedom Movement. This is undeniable,
but the point is: it is not what made the British decide to pack up and leave.
Look at it in more
detail than is done in, for example, Richard Attenborough’s propaganda movie Gandhi.
The Mahatma’s last campaign was not the camera-savvy Salt March or other events
from before the Government of India Act 1935, the reform with which the British
managed to renormalize the situation and regain control over political
developments. It was the Quit India movement started in August 1942, which was
a failure in every respect.
First off, it was
based on an assessment of the world situation that seemed plausible in 1942 but
turned out to be wrong: that the Japanese would win the war and chase the
British from India. In that event, India would be in a better position if it
was an independent Asian nation rather than a British colony (though, what
about the independent Republic of China?). Second, it created profound
dissensions in Congress, which was mostly reluctant to embark upon this
adventure. Strategically, the British were at war and on the defensive, so they
would not pull their punches in the repression of any “disloyal” agitation; and
morally, many Congressites, such as Jawaharlal Nehru, were on the British side
in that war. Indeed, it is mostly Nehru’s speech against Quit India that made
the British decide he was essentially “one of us”, so that they started
treating him rather than Gandhi as their Congress contact. Third, though
intended to be non-violent, the movement soon lapsed into violence, depriving
Gandhi of his moral high ground. Fourth, the British put the movement down
brutally but efficiently. Fifth, the Congress leaders were imprisoned and
neutralized while their rival Mohammed Ali Jinnah remained free to enlarge his
influence. Sixth, when they were released, they were demoralized and had lost credibility.
Especially Gandhi, chief responsible for the movement, had been cut to size; he
only regained his place in history by his martyr’s death.
After the Japanese
capitulation on 15 August 1945, the Freedom Movement as such was nowhere to be
seen. Paul Johnson and other historians who have lapped up the official version,
with the Mahatma as the main motor of decolonization, write that if the British
themselves hadn’t been kind enough to leave, it is unclear how independence
could have come about, as the native dynamic for it had petered out. But they have been tutored to be oblivious of
the one factor that dramatically revived the Freedom Movement within weeks: the
return (in chains) of the soldiers of Subhas Chandra Bose’s Indian National
Army (INA)/ Azad Hind Fauz.
The INA
After the war had
broken out on 3 September 1939, India’s politicians had to choose their camp.
Jinnah’s Muslim League automatically sided with the British, and so did Vinayak
Damodar Savarkar, mainly for tactical reasons: that way, numerous Hindu young
men would get a military training and experience. The sympathies of Congress
largely lay with the British, but they fell out over a procedural matter: the
Viceroy had declared war without first consulting with Congress, their partner
in administering India’s partial self-rule. So, while its political rivals were
earning the Brits’ gratitude, they remained on the sidelines, never the best
way to make the most of a war situation. The Communists, meanwhile, opposed the
“imperialist war”, blaming it after the Soviet example on the “bourgeois
democracies” France and Britain, rather than on Germany; it is only after the
German attack on the Soviet Union that they made a U-turn, supporting what had
become a “people’s war”.
One significant
leader remained on his own: Subhas Chandra Bose, born in Cuttack in 1897. He
belonged to the Congress’s Left wing but had been ousted as Congress president
by Gandhi. As a response, in 1939 he founded his own party, at first intra
Congress, the Forward Bloc. It would remain in existence after the war and be
part of the Communist-led alliance that governed West Bengal for decades. In
spite of being under house arrest in Kolkata, he fled to Afghanistan in January
1940, and thence to Moscow, where he hoped to get cooperation for military
action against Britain. He was told that the Soviet Union was not at war with
Britain, but their temporary ally Germany was.
Ideologically this
did not pose a problem: Bose had always believed that India would need a few decades
of dictatorship, which would administer the best elements from both Communism
and Naziism. (Mind you, this is my own addition to the background sketch,
General Bakshi purposely leaves the ideological aspects out of his
consideration: some readers might object to Bose’s ideological choices, yet
that doesn’t alter his strategic role in forcing the transfer of power, the
actual topic of this book.) He had already lived in Austria intermittently in
1934-37 and even had a wife and baby daughter there. So he was brought to
Germany, where at once he could raise an Indian army with 3000 Indians from among
the British prisoners of war caught in Dunkirk, with the privilege of only
fighting British enemy soldiers.
It is in Germany
that Bose received the title Netaji from his men, “revered leader”,
roughly the translation of Führer or Duce. It was in Hamburg,
during the founding of the German-Indian Friendship Association, that his
soldiers and well-wishers stood to attention for the first time for Jana
Gana Mana as national anthem. While Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop
had humoured him with vague assurances of support, Bose’s meeting with Adolf
Hitler was a cold shower. Hitler expressed his belief in the rightness of
British (“Aryan”) colonization. When Japan entered the war in December 1941,
and asked Germany for Bose after taking hundreds of thousands of Indian
prisoners-of-war in Singapore, Germany transported him by submarine in early
1943, and he was now welcome to lead some 40,000 soldiers in the INA. This
force had already been founded by expatriate Indians, notably by Ras Behari
Bose, but now it needed a credible leader, and Subhas Bose was the right man
for the job.
Bakshi informs us
cursorily that from abroad, Bose also did what he could to contribute to the
struggle within India, including the Quit India movement. Alas, the delivery of
arms and other material which he arranged for, was often sabotaged by
unreliable agents, and remained without sizable effect. His main claim to fame was
and still is the INA.
Unfortunately, in
military respect the INA came too late on the scene. It never controlled more
of India than the Andaman and Nicobar islands and some border areas of the
Northeast. When it seriously besieged the Northeastern cities of Imphal and
Kohima, the momentum of the Japanese advances had passed, and the
British-Indian army could take care of it. The INA still fought some battles
against the British forces in Burma, but its historic chance in India had passed.
Bose’s afterlife
In the chaos of
war’s end, Bose is said to have died during an aerial accident in Taiwan. That
at least is the official version, but since the beginning already, it has been
doubted. It was based solely on the eyewitness testimony of a surviving
companion and lieutenant of Bose’s, whom British intelligence immediately
suspected of merely having thereby carried out orders from Bose himself, who this
way had staged his own escape. Bakshi is not into writing a biography here, so
sensation-hungry readers will be disappointed to find that he merely gives a
nod to Anuj Dhar’s eye-catching book India’s Biggest Cover-Up, 2012, which
argues that Bose did indeed escape to the Soviet Union, where he was put in
custody. Nehru was good friends with the Soviet leaders (to the extent that
when in 1962 the Chinese, angry with Soviet manoeuvres on the Manchurian
borders, decided to pin-prick the USSR, they invaded India), so it sounds
plausible that they did his bidding, which was to keep Bose out of reach of
India. Bakshi doesn’t evaluate such questions, because no matter what Bose’s
ideology or personal destiny, one solid fact deserves to be established now
beyond future doubt: his decisive role in achieving independence.
Indeed, all speculations
on Bose’s personal life are dwarfed by the immediate effect of India’s exposure
to what the INA had meant. In autumn 1945, a large part of India’s population
immediately sided with the INA veterans upon their return (in chains) to India.
The British gradually released the ordinary soldiers in batches, which already
had a palpable effect, for as Nehru observed, these men were hard as nails and hated
British rule. The eye was mainly on three tiop defendants. Their trial, in the
Red Fort, was meant to send a message to the Sepoys never to be disloyal again.
Coincidence would have it that they were a Hindu, a Muslim and a Sikh, which
came in handy for the Congress narrative of a pan-Indian unity. Congress
leaders buried their one-time diatribes against the INA and offered to defend
them in Court.
From the Empire’s
perspective, the trial really backfired. The people’s mood proved not to be
just a fleeting sympathy but threatened to become a rebellion. A large part of
this book holds the British military correspondence of autumn-winter 1945-46
against the light. It becomes abundantly clear that the British top brass, especially
Viceroy Archibald Wavell and Commander-in-Chief Claude Auchinleck, were in a
state of panic. They had received reports from the provinces, including their
main recruiting-area Panjab, that their colonial troops could no longer be
relied upon. Every Indian had become a nationalist, galvanized by the presence
in India of thousands of Bose’s soldiers. Nobody was willing to accept the
punishment which the British would normally have given to leaders who had taken
up arms against the King-Emperor.
In proportion to
the gravity of what from the British viewpoint was a crime, they should have
been sentenced to death. Sensing that this would only trigger a revolt, Wavell
and Auchinleck arranged for a reduced sentence to transportation for life,
which moreover was at once commuted to a token prison sentence. To prevent any
incipient unrest, they made sure that this decision was immediately
communicated to the public. It became a staged trial with the outcome
determined by extra-judicial considerations, a “show trial” but this time not
to the detriment of the defendants, thanks to the emerging anti-British power
equation in society.
But this was to
prove insufficient, and the real gravity of the situation was yet to come to
light. The British troops sent to India for the war against Japan were being
demobilized and repatriated. More than before, the Empire was now dependent
exclusively on the Sepoys. And in early 1946, in a number of Naval units, these
soldiers bound by oath to the King-Emperor rose in revolt. This was the
decisive pillar under the imperial structure: if it crumbled, it was curtains
for the Empire.
A combination of
repression and of moral pressure by Congress, committed to non-violence but
also mindful of its own privileged relation with the British, managed to put
down this Naval Mutiny. But only for now; the British rulers realized that they
might not be so lucky next time. So they called on London to announce a date
for independence. The last Viceroy, Louis Mountbatten, arrived in March 1947
with the one-point programme of organizing the transfer of power.
Other
considerations
What Gandhi had not achieved in decades of campaigning, Bose’s INA
achieved postumously in less than two years: making the British decide to quit
India. And this, in fact, without firing too many bullets: if you radiate
power, you often don’t have to use it. The court historians have always
downplayed the role of the INA and attributed the merit for the achievement of
independence to the Mahatma. But this legend was gainsaid by no less an agent
that the British Prime Minister who effected the transfer of power, Clement
Attlee. During his visit to India, he was asked what considerations had made
him decide to decolonize India. He cited the military equation with the
increasing unreliability of the troops, and as for Gandhi’s role, in his
estimation, it was “m-i-n-i-m-a-l”.
As this book was going to the press, it so happened that official
India was finally extending recognition to the INA. A handful of surviving
veterans, nearly 100 years old, were driven in an open jeep in the Republic Day
parade. When Westerners hear of Bose, they consider him as a mere Axis
collaborator. For Indians, he is first of all a national hero, and the
cruelties which made the German and Japanese war machines infamous, were not
the doing of their Indian army units. These soldiers did not join their units
to fight for some German or Japanese Empire, but for their own Motherland.
In India, some had fought with the British, some against them, some
had taken different positions in succession, some had tried to stay on the sides,
but at war’s end, it was agreed that everyone had done it for the best of
Mother India. In some cases, that was a flattered assessment, but precisely in
its flawed truthfulness, it showed the generosity of spirit of Indian
patriotism. No one’s war record was scrutinized, for in India on 15 August
1945, the Second World War was really over.
Nationhood
In his introduction and his last chapter, General Bakshi also
explores issues of nationhood, India’s unity and integrity, and India’s status
as a civilizational state. It is interesting to see how a no-nonsense patriot
thinks about the current political contentions.
Of course he rejects Gandhi’s and to some extent Nehru’s option for
a defence without military strength. It is a state’s prime duty to protect its
citizens, and this requires an army. As a NATO slogan from my young days said:
“Peace through strength.” This is a truism, followed by most state leaders in
history, and it is not India’s major claim to fame that its national Saint
flatly denied it.
India’s integrity demands that the system of caste-based and
communal reservations is phased out. This system has been instituted by the
British as part of their policy of divide and rule. Since the Government of
India Act 1935, and expanded in the Constitution of India 1950, it divides
society in birth groups. Then it was in the name of “Imperial Justice”, now it
is in the name of its more modern-sounding equivalent, “Social Justice”.
That this became the central value of India’s Constitution, and not
“Liberty” or so, provides an interesting parallel with the contemporary West,
where “Social Justice” has become the justification for the craziest demands,
and indeed for an expanding system of mostly birth-based (racial, gender etc.) quota.
Yet in India, this did not originate in Marxist or quasi-Marxist sources like Antonio
Gramsci or the Frankfurter Schule, but in another system of colonial
domination, viz. British colonialism. The effect is nonetheless the same:
endless dividedness, a variation on the Marxist model of class struggle.
It has logically been the Left that made itself the heir of this
British system of reservations, and now champions quota schemes such as job
quota for Backward Castes and the 2008 Right to Education Act. Today, little
difference is left between the quota philosophy in India and in the US, except
for the Indian oddity of the caste system. Bakshi proposes to make short work
of this system and replace it with economically-based reservations. These would
automatically favour the lower castes, which have more poor people, except
their “creamy later”, those who have worked themselves up yet keep on milking
the caste-based system and now have most interest in perpetuating birth-based
reservations. With the introduction of the Aadhaar Card, a kind of identity
card including one’s financial-economic data, this is now technologically
possible.
But there, we have crossed over to the issue of “decolonization”.
India wants to get rid of the remnants of colonialism, and one of these is the
reservation system. The philosophy was that the benighted natives were
naturally unjust and that the colonizer was needed as an impartial arbiter.
Later, the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty appropriated that role to itself. By now, India
is mature enough to shake off such colonial-age solutions.
In parallel, another relic of the colonial age and its immediate
aftermath is the lionization of Mahatma Gandhi as bringer of Independence and
the concomitant downplaying of Subhas Chandra Bose’s contribution. That
motivated legend is, after this book, no longer sustainable.
I have always wondered why India remained a poor country until about 1990? Especially, in the fifties and sixties of last century, India literally went with begging bowl for rice and wheat around the world. India had same land, same mineral resources, and manpower. Why did India remain poor. On the other hand, Germany and Japan had been devastated by the war. But, they rose from the ashes of war like the legendary Phoenix. So, my conclusion is that India was methodically kept a poor country by recourse to socialist economy for over forty years. Only poverty in India would have allowed congress to raise populist slogans like Garib Hatao, or treat Tatas and Birlas as the enemy of the public. The Nehru dynasty would have become irrelevant in a prosperous India.
ReplyDeleteI have come across an old history book about ancient Indian history from prehistoric times to Magadhan empire, one Prof.Buddhaprakash of Punjab University, sometime in 1963. He gives very detailed reasons to support the view that Pandavas are outsiders. The name "Pandava" or pale suggests, according to him, their pale colour. He traces their origin to south western China based on the origin and root ofthe word "Arjuna", "Arjunayana" etc. He places the time of Mahabharata wara sometime in 10th or 9th Century BC. But, even he is not clear about how these outsiders became part of Kuru clan, and came to be known as BhAratas.
ReplyDeleteDear Dr Elst
ReplyDeleteGood article for twitter feed.
A good article on Dr BRA rejecting Aryan invasion theory ( no genetics, but very good logic)Dr. B. R. Ambedkar on the Aryan Invasion and the Emergence of the Caste System in India
Author(s): Arvind Sharma
Source: Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 73, No. 3 (Sep., 2005), pp. 843-870 Published by: Oxford University Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4139922
Interesting lines from the above article , How Sanskrit words were handled by Sayanacharya and Max Muller
The word " anasa" appears in Rig Veda V 29.10
Sayanachraya prounces as an-asa which which means devoid of good speech ( mouthless)
Max Mueller pronounces as a-nasa meaning without nose or one with flat nose to prove Max Mullers contention that Aryans were different from Dasyus. Please read the above article and you will get the message
Sayanacharyya is right and Max Mueller wrong.
At once fascinating and interesting both essay and comments. Heart felt thanks. I have been pondering the very questions raised in Dr. Elst’s essay for virtually whole of existence. The comments r a little bit too enlightening but am not surprised.
ReplyDeleteAccurate transmission of history is always oral, by word of mouth. Parents to children. But, it is reassuring and restores faith in milk of human kindness, when once in a blue moon, the written word is not in conflict with actual as it happened on the ground reality.
Personally I would like to arrange a mulaqat, a meeting with Narada Muni as he has perfect knowledge of past present future. and then v can begin the story of life on this planet, from before day one. I am concerned puranic stories may have possibly been adulterated or embellished during colonial era.
Merci beaucoup.
On a lighter note,
ReplyDeletehttps://realhistoryindia.wordpress.com/
I highly doubt founder of Islam was AryanWhiteCaucasian. First religion of Man is of RigVeda. Only injunction of RigVed one need know is NoOutOfCasteMarriage. Given marriage practices of Mohamadans, and I use the word marriage loosely as it pertains to antics of Koraimals ,it defies logic, that founder of vicious Islam was AryanCaucasianWhiteEuro. Impossible. Smearing peoples slated for extinction, those peoples being Western Aryan White Caucasian and Eastern Arya Dharmic Religions aka Hindu and Zarathustra folk is really a low blow and akin to rubbing salt into our wounds, something that literally was an atrocity committed bu kakokristokic fraud govt of Chindia back in 1984 at Darbar Sahib AkalTakht aka Golden Temple, Amritsar in Chindian occupied Panjab.
ReplyDeleteSecond Law of Aryan life just as vital as first is No Slavery.
It is race to bottom for European and Indian. Unfair. Unjust. Te great tribes of Central Asia, Asia pronounced as same as Croatia, would never mix with a nonAryan of their own free Will, never. We prefer infanticide to admixture.
https://realhistoryindia.wordpress.com/2017/11/10/nation-india-destroying-jats-the-last-ancient-aryan-progeny-in-india-by-deep-singh/comment-page-1/#comment-3069
ReplyDelete": if you radiate power, you often don’t have to use it." -- Stunning !
ReplyDeleteMaybe the americans were an exception. They ran out of choices and had
to nuke japan ?
At several conferences, the most affordable cheapest prices many participants were shocked that such facts could be perceived as something really real.
ReplyDeleteIn the year 1940, about one year from the start of the second world war, the Muslim League put up its demand for a separate state of Pakistan for the Indian Muslims.Why didn't the Muslim League raise this demand in the year 1915,one year from the start of the first world war? The reason is very simple.The freedom of the Indian subcontinent was imminent at the start of the the second world war but not during the time of the first world war.Hence the Muslim League had started to draw up their plans for the post-war period.And therefore the Muslim League was not bothered about fighting and driving away the British,who were after all going to leave the subcontinent even if the Indians had not fought them.Weren't the Muslim League proved correct? And most certainly the Muslim League wouldn't have raised their demand for Pakistan if the British were in no mood to quit Even before World War 2, that perspicacious man,Dr.Ambedkar had admonished that the Indians were going to get their independence whether they were going to fight for it or not.No,it was not an overconfident rant but a well thought out assessment.Perhaps the World War 2 had hastened the inevitability of Indian independence.
ReplyDeleteSo who had brought about the freedom of the Indian subcontinent,was it Gandhi or Bose?