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In
many ways, we live as prisoners of history. And this collective
bondage also interferes with our individual lives. Take the case
of the Partition of August 1947 and how its dark shadows still hold
sway over the entire subcontinent. There is always that 'what-if'
riddle in the study of history. The evolution of the freedom struggle
in British India and its eventual outcome can initiate some very
interesting assumptions about possible alternatives to what actually
happened. There is always this anguished reminder of mass killings
across the newly drawn frontiers.
In
this respect, there have been intense debates about the role of
individual leaders, such as Jinnah, Gandhi and Nehru, at critical
moments and how their decisions set the direction of momentous events.
But we now have considerable evidence to suggest that the one man
who bungled the process and was responsible for some of the immediate
disasters, in human terms, of Partition was Admiral Louis Francis
Albert Victor Nicholas 'Dickie' Mountbatten, the last viceroy of
British India.
In
his compelling book, Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the British
Empire in India, Stanley Wolpert has discovered some new material
and has sifted through available archives to paint a fresh portrait
of an illustrious military leader who was reputed for his charm.
But what we have here is a representation of almost absolute wickedness
and incompetence.
Wolpert,
it should be appreciated, is eminently qualified to revisit the
Partition because of his life-long interest in this region of sorrow.
We can sense a surge of passion in this 79-year-old historian who
has already documented the lives of the top leaders of the freedom
movement. What he uncovers, as he investigated the role and performance
of Mountbatten, was apparently so horrifying that we find him becoming
rather emotional in his narration.
At
the heart of this account is the incredible human cost of Britain
's hasty withdrawal from India, as designed by Mountbatten. In the
wake of this "shameful flight," as Wolpert describes it,
"a tsunami of more than 10 million desperate refugees swept
over North India: Hindus and Sikhs rushed to leave ancestral homes
in newly created Pakistan, Muslims fled in panic out of India."
Estimates vary as to the number of people who were murdered or who
died in this upheaval. According to Wolpert, "a conservative
statistic is 200,000; a more realistic total, at least one million."
One
reason why Wolpert seems so sensitive about the manner in which
the partition of India was handled by Mountbatten is that he believes
that "the tragedy of Partition and its more than half century
legacy of hatred, fear, and continued conflict - capped by the potential
for nuclear war over South Asia - might well have been avoided,
or at least mitigated, but for the arrogance of a handful of British
and Indian leaders." Mountbatten, of course, played the leading
role.
Incidentally,
Mountbatten himself was known to have been remorseful about how
he had handled his assignment. Wolpert has referred, in his introduction,
to an account by the BBC's John Osman of a dinner he had had with
the 65-year-old ex-viceroy shortly after the 1965 Indo-Pakistan
war. During that conversation, Mountbatten admitted that he had
"got things wrong." In an e-mail that was published in
London's Spectator of September 4, 2004, John Osman recalled: "Mountbatten
was not to be consoled. To this day his own judgement on how he
had performed in India rings in my ears and in my memory. As one
who dislikes the tasteless use in writing of
. 'vulgar slang'
I shall permit myself an exception this time because it is
the only honest way of reporting accurately what the last viceroy
of India thought about the way he had done his job: 'I fucked it
up.'"
What does one do with this belated repentance? There is this perennial
debate about how far individuals who find themselves at the helm
of affairs in times of deep crises, can define the course of events
in the presence of the powerful forces of history. After all, the
independence of India was eventually inevitable though it was surely
hastened by the Second World War. Indeed, the first chapter of Wolpert's
book begins with the fall of Singapore and concludes with the failure
of Cripps's mission - the events of February-April 1942. However,
when Britain decided to divest itself of what was the crown jewel
of its empire, the task of doing it in a planned manner was assigned
to King George VI's favourite cousin.
We
know that the British government wanted to leave India by 1948 but
Mountbatten was in a hurry and cut the time by half to mid-August
1947. In his impatience, he committed the blunder of partitioning
the Punjab and Bengal in an arbitrary and conspiratorial manner.
He kept the maps secret, until it was opportune for him to make
the announcement. These lines were drawn by Sir Cyril Radcliffe,
a barrister who had never set foot on Indian soil before 1947. Besides,
he was told to accomplish his work in a month - a job that should
have taken at least a year. Radcliffe left India hurriedly because
he was so afraid of what he had done. He worried that Sikhs, Hindus
or Muslims would kill him.
Wolpert
sees this as Mountbatten's gravest mistake, one that would unleash
a surge of violence that could not be controlled. He says that had
the governors of Punjab and Bengal known about the way the two provinces
were being partitioned, "they could have, with their early
knowledge, saved countless lives by dispatching troops and trains
to what would soon become the lines of fire and blood."
This,
then, is a very disturbing book. About 60 years after the partition,
we are still unable to come to terms with that trauma. Wolpert has
also recorded Mountbatten's villainous role in the Kashmir dispute.
The first Indo-Pakistan war over Kashmir from October 1947 to July
1948 constitutes the tenth and last chapter of the Oxford University
Press book.
It
is significant that Wolpert has dedicated this book "To the
memory of the million defenseless Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh victims
of British India's Partition." He confesses to having pondered
the question of the tragedy of Partition for half a decade, though
he had dealt with aspects of it in many of his books. "After
half a century of studying and teaching Indian history and writing
20 books on the subcontinent, I finally got an opportunity to reflect
on one of the most momentous events in history," he said in
an interview late in 2006. In this interview, he saw parallels between
the aftermath of 9/11 and what happened in India in 1947. Wolpert
noted "the same kind of madness, the same kind of arrogance
in going to war in Iraq." In this case, obviously, so much
of madness and arrogance resided in decisions made by Mountbatten.
This observation does lend a sense of urgency to the book. We are
still living with the aftermath of that critical period in our history
as the world must contend with the folly of the war in Iraq.
Wolpert's account of the most crucial period in his story, from
June to August 1947, provides a true insight into the making of
the tragedy that attended Partition. It begins with Nehru's acceptance
of the Partition plan in a broadcast on the night of June 3, in
which he said that "the sands of time run out and decisions
cannot await the normal course of events." Jinnah also broadcast
nationwide that evening in which he said that "it is clear
the plan does not meet in some important respects our point of view."
At a pace that would be appropriate for a detective story, Wolpert
summarises the salient features of that time. We learn that mistrust
between Congress and League leaders was so intense that "Nehru
and Liaquat almost came to blows in the council chamber of the interim
government over Nehru's insistence on appointing his sister, Madame
Pandit, to serve as India's ambassador to Russia."
Wolpert has made good use of new material that he got, including
private correspondence and de-classified official documents. There
is this letter that Bengal's secretary, John Dowson Tyson, sent
to his home from Calcutta on July 5: "Mountbatten is a hustler;
ever since he came out he has pursued shock tactics... He made his
plan (and) soon after that the blitz began. And since the time when
he launched his blitz he has given no one any rest - the Indian
leaders least of all
The India of 'after-August 15th' will
not be the kind of country I should want to live in."
We should be grateful to Wolpert for allowing us to revisit Partition
and seriously reflect on what we can learn from those derelictions
to create a new South Asia of peace and well-being for its teeming
millions. It may even be a controversial book, particularly with
reference to the decline and fall of the British Raj. The end of
a colonial era, it would appear, is bound to be messy. In the final
analysis, however, we need to understand our freedom movement and
put specific events in a broader historical perspective to be able
to resolve our present contradictions at the domestic and regional
level.
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