History is oftentimes an unjust mistress often
choosing to forget or ignore those who deserve to be cherished or at the very
least remembered. The First World War fought between imperialist powers anxious
to annexe more chunks of the planet for themselves irrespective of whether they
called themselves the Central or Allied Powers, truly upped the ante when it
came to large – scale carnage. By the time the unmitigated horror of it all,
came to an end more than 16 million were dead. Many a tome or movie have been
devoted to the heroics of the Allied forces for having successfully held on to
their ill – gotten gains and having put themselves in a prime position to
satiate their gluttonous appetite for more land and power but not much is known
about the contribution of the 1.5 million (not counting those who volunteered
or were coerced into serving) Indian soldiers who fought in the Great War and
left their own indelible prints in the sands of time.
George
Morton – Jack in his ‘The Indian Empire at War’ puts in painstaking effort into
piecing together the lives of these intrepid warriors who lived in a
tumultuous, topsy-turvy age where they were asked to fight for democratic
ideals by their masters who had denied them and their countrymen the same. The
book focuses not only on the nitty-gritty of an Indian soldier’s personal
reality and the cultural as well as practical factors which motivated him to
pick up arms on behalf of the loathed imperial overlords but also beyond and
into the decision making processes of higher forces at play in a deadly game of
bloody conflict.
This
historian’s account is thorough and painfully blunt which is readily apparent
when he discusses the mind-set of the Indian soldiers who pulled their triggers
against peaceful protestors in the infamous Amritsar Massacre simply because
General Dyer and ‘the British told them to.’ It is a chilling example of men
who are trained to obey and kill because they have been taught to put aside
principles and feelings when in uniform. The puzzle of Indians who fought and
killed other Indians is hard to unravel despite the divided identity of the
nation and an even harder reality to stomach.
The
indictment of British rule in India is readily apparent given that few
practised what they preached when it came to denouncing tyranny. For all their
high – flown rhetoric of fighting the Great War for all the right reasons, the
British to ‘ensure their primacy over Indians as their racial inferiors’
subjected them to constant belittlement and abuse while practising segregation
and denying the Indian troops their basic rights such as forcing them to live
in hovels, depriving them of decent medical care and rations, while of course
their British counterparts were living it up in style and given double their
wages. Of course, the Indian troops despite years of loyal service could not
expect to be promoted to a rank that meant anything or given their own command.
Worse, they were not allowed to fight white armies in case they got new-fangled
ideas about their place in the racial hierarchy.
There is a balance to the narrative
which includes anecdotes about the bravery as well as cowardice evidenced by
Indian troops and a fascinating tale of two brothers - Mir Dast and Mir Mast,
brothers one of whom remained loyal, while the other, who had won a medal for
bravery was persuaded to desert when a holy – Jihad was declared by the Turkish
Sultan makes for compelling reading. Even among the British officials, care has
been taken to document actions that were fair, decent as well as disgraceful.
Ultimately it is a stirring tribute to those troops whose ‘achievement was
bearing their humiliations at the hands of the British with such strength in
the face of adversity and not letting go of their humanity’. This book review originally appeared here.
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