Fifty Years of Indian
Independence.
(email originally
sent out on 15th August 1997)
This day 50 years ago the British
occupation of India finally ended and India finally got
Independence.
So raise your glasses and celebrate...
Independence Day - 15th August 1997
by&(c)1997 VINOD Chhotu PATEL
It is a day for
Indian celebration
for it was fifty
years ago today
the British ended
their occupation
and the British
Empire was finally bought to bay
It has been fifty
years hence
since India was
partitioned into three
and the
peoples separated by a fence
but,
at least they were free
But let us not
feel sorrow
and think the worst of
fears
instead lets see what comes
tomorrow
and the next fifty
years
So let us stop and think in this country in which we
stand
of
the glorious bloody history of our own Indian homeland
(and for any who don't know what I'm going on about, here you go,
a very brief history)
The Struggle
for Independence
The Indian Mutiny of 1857 or The
First War of Independence
A century of accumulated grievances erupted in the
Indian Mutiny of Sepoys in the British army, in 1857. This was the signal for a
spontaneous conflagration, in which the princely rulers, landed aristocracy and
peasantry rallied against the British around the person of the last Mughal
Emperor, Bahadur Shah. The uprising, however, was eventually brutally
suppressed. By the end of 1859, the "Emperor" had been deported to
Burma where he died a lonely death, bringing to a formal end the era of Mughal
rule in India.
The Mutiny, even in its failure, produced many heroes and
heroines of epic character. Above all, it produced a sense of unity between the
Hindus and the Muslims of India that was to be witnessed in later
years.
The rebellion also saw the end of the East India Company's rule in
India. Power was transferred to the British Crown in 1858 by an Act of British
Parliament. The Crown's viceroy in India was to be the chief executive.
The Freedom Struggle
The British
Empire contained within itself the seeds of its own destruction. The British
constructed a vast railway network across the entire land in order to facilitate
the transport of raw materials to the ports for export. This gave intangible
form to the idea of Indian unity by physically bringing all the peoples of the
subcontinent within easy reach of each other.
Since it was impossible
for a small handful of foreigners to administer such a vast country, they set
out to create a local elite to help them in this task; to this end they set up a
system of education that familiarised the local intelligentsia with the
intellectual and social values of the West. Ideas of democracy, individual
freedom and equality were the antithesis of the Empire and led to the genesis of
the freedom movement among thinkers like Raja Rammohan Roy, Bankim Chandra and
Vidyasagar. With the failure of the 1857 Mutiny, the leadership of the freedom
movement passed into the hands of this class and crystallized in the formation
of the Indian National Congress in 1885. The binding psychological concept of
National Unity was also forged in the fire of the struggle against a common
foreign oppressor.
At the turn of the century, the freedom movement
reached out to the common unlettered man through the launching of the Swadeshi
movement by leaders such as Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Aurobindo Ghose. But the
full mobilisation of the masses into an invincible force only occurred
with the appearance on the scene of one of the most remarkable and charismatic
leaders of the twentieth century, perhaps in history.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi was a British trained lawyer of Indian origin from South
Africa. He had won his political spurs organising the Indian community there
against the vicious system of apartheid. During this struggle, he had developed
the novel technique of non-violent agitation which he called 'Satyagraha',
loosely translated as moral domination. He was thus heir to the ancient
traditions of Gautama Buddha, Mahavir Jain and emperor Ashoka, and was later
given the title of Mahatma, or Great Soul. Gandhi, himself a devout Hindu, also
espoused a total moral philosophy of tolerance, brotherhood of all religions,
non-violence (ahimsa) and of simple living. He adopted an austere traditional
Indian style of living, which won him wide popularity and transformed him into
the undisputed leader of the Congress. As Jawaharlal Nehru said, "He was a
powerful current of fresh air that made us stretch ourselves and take a deep
breath and revitalised the Freedom Movement".
Under his leadership,
the Congress launched a series of mass movements - the Non Co-operation Movement
of 1920 - 1922 and the Civil Disobedience Movement in 1930. The latter was
triggered by the famous Dandi Salt March, when Gandhi captured the imagination of the
nation by leading a band of followers from his ashram at Sabarmati, on a 200
mile trek to the remote village of Dandi on the west coast (now Gujarat state),
there to prepare salt in symbolic violation of British law.
These were
populist movements in which people from all classes and all parts of India
participated with great fervour. Women too, played an active role in the
struggle. Sarojini Naidu, Aruna Asaf Ali and Bhikaji Cama, to name but a few,
inspired millions of others to take the first step on the road to emancipation
and equality. In August 1942, the Quit India movement was launched. "I want
freedom immediately, this very night before dawn if it can be had... we shall
free India or die in the attempt, we shall not live to see the perpetuation
of our slavery", declared the Mahatma, as the British resorted to
brutal repression against non-violent Satyagrahis. It became evident that the
British could maintain the Empire only at enormous cost. At the end of the
Second World War, they saw the writing on the wall, and initiated a number of
constitutional moves to effect the transfer of power to the sovereign State of
India. For the first and perhaps the only time in history, the power of a mighty
global empire 'on which the sun never set', had been challenged and overcome by
the moral might of a people armed only with ideals and courage.
Independence - 15th August
1947
India achieved independence on 15th August 1947.
Giving voice to the sentiments of the nation, the country's first Prime
Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru said, "Long years ago we made a tryst
with destiny, and now the time comes when we will redeem our pledge, not wholly
or in full measure, but very substantially. At the stroke of the midnight hour,
when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom. A moment comes,
which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new,
when an age ends and when the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds
utterance... We end today a period of ill fortune, and India discovers herself
again."
The progress and triumph of the Indian Freedom movement was
one of the most significant historical processes of the twentieth century. Its
repercussions extended far beyond its immediate political consequences. Within
the country, it initiated the reordering of political, social and economic
power. In the international context, it sounded the death knell of British
Imperialism, and changed the political face of the globe.
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