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Prabhu Guptara's claim that the reign of the British in India between the
1830s and 1900 was more benign than the ruling class in India after
independence is surely meant as a statement of contemporary political
rhetoric? Or is he serious? In that case it is necessary to recall that the
Indian Resistance (variously known also as the Indian Mutiny and the First
War of Indian Independence) took place in 1857. Marx wrote extensively on
this and I do not recall his describing British Rule as particularly
benign. In fact there is a line where he refers to the atrocities from the
Indian side as being only the distilled form of the character of British
Rule in India. This Revolt, itself bloody in character, was suppressed
brutally.Surely it had economic causes too?
Nor can post-independence India be considered as a unified category. I
should think that Nehruvian India and the present BJP-ruled India need to
be distinguished? Also culturally, the post-independence India of the
Mahatma Gandhi-Jawaharlal Nehru framework and the current India in which
Hindutva forces have been becoming more powerful need to be distinguished.
Anil Nauriya
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