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1857 War and the unsung heroes of Bengal

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  • 1857 War and the unsung heroes of Bengal

    The News Today (Bangladesh.)
    December 27, 2013 Friday


    1857 War and the unsung heroes of Bengal



    In the annals of modern Indian history, the year 1757 was a watershed
    year when Robert Clive defeated Siraj ud - Daulah of Bengal at the
    Battle of Plassey. Exactly 100 years after this historical event, the
    Sepoy Mutiny of 1857, or the first Indian War of Independence as Marx
    called it, cleared the path for the British monarchy to take over the
    reins of India from the East India Company, which had established its
    control over large parts of the country over the preceding 200 years.
    Though most history texts describe this revolt, which originated from
    Delhi, Meerut and Lucknow, as seeking to re-establish Moghul rule,
    there is more to the uprising. Revisiting the Sepoy Mutiny on its
    150th anniversary in 2007, an officer of West Bengal State Archives,
    Ananda Bhattacharya, took up the task of unearthing forgotten pieces
    of history to explore the role of Bengal in the 1857 revolt. The
    revolt began early in 1857 with rumours that the catridges provided
    with the new Enfield Rifles issued to the sepoys of the British army
    were saturated with animal grease - the fat of a swine used to pollute
    one community and the fat of the cow to degrade another.

    While there has been a gamut of historical literature on the revolt,
    revisiting and exploring its various aspects, the author has
    undertaken a probe into contemporary accounts and dug out valuable
    information on hitherto unknown socio-economic aspects of the Great
    Revolt. In this respect, the history books only mention the episode of
    Mangal Pandey, a Native Infantry sepoy from Barrackpore, who was
    hanged on April 8, 1857 for his active role in inciting sepoys against
    their British masters. In his findings, Mr. Bhattacharya points out
    that Bengal was not left behind in the uprising even though Calcutta
    was the Capital of British India. "It is a marvel and a mystery that
    so many years should have passed away without an explosion. At last a
    firebrand was applied to what a single spark might have ignited; and
    in the course of a few weeks there was a general conflagration; but a
    conflagration which still bears more marks of accident than of
    deliberate conspiracy and incendiarism" (Edinburgh Review No. 216).
    Being the chief British colonial city, Calcutta and its surrounding
    towns had native Infantry platoons in Dum Dum and Barrackpore.

    Though Bengal was not the epicentre of this great political upheaval,
    Eastern India was not immune to its impact. The mutinies in Bengal
    have from the beginning drawn the sympathy of the country. The
    mutineers were joined and aided by the civil population. In some
    regions of Bengal, the rebellion took on the attributes of a patriotic
    revolt against the British Raj. As in the case of Mangal Pandey
    (Barrackpore revolt), sometimes the leaders became folk heroes in the
    nationalist movement. In the case of Dacca revolt, this book quotes a
    recollection of a witness who said that "without delay the prisoners
    were tried the next day and were hanged near Episcopalian Church,
    close to the maidan at Antaghar ... these sepoys were hanged in the
    open, in the heart of the town, perhaps to create an impression on the
    mind of the people of Dacca".

    While the Native Infantry sepoys were echoing the revolt of Lucknow
    and Delhi, the British Indian Association, under the secretaryship of
    Iswar Chander Singh, viewed the happenings at Meerut and Delhi with
    disgust and horror of the soldiery at those stations and said that "it
    would not meet with support from the bulk of civil population or from
    any influential classes". Three days after this resolution, another
    meeting under the chairmanship of Raja Radhakanta Deb was of the
    opinion that "it would be the duty of native portion of Her Majesty's
    subjects to render the government every aid for the preservation of
    civil order and tranquillity". So was the case of Mohammedans of
    Calcutta such as Haji Mohammed Ispahane and Aga Mohammad Hassan.

    The Armenian residents in the city and the French inhabitants too
    echoed similar sentiments in support of the government and against the
    sepoys. In case of need, these groups said, "their services may be
    accepted for the common good and as a proof of their loyalty and
    attachment towards Her Majesty of England". This book also contains
    some unpublished documents based on the military despatches by Forrest
    and Mutiny papers of Kaye (preserved in the India Office Library,
    London). Some of them show a different light of Bahadur Shah and Rani
    Lakshmibai of Jhansi about their roles in the Mutiny of 1857.

    The concluding part of the book contains the deposition of Shaik
    Hedayut Ali, Subedar and Sirdar Bahadoor of Bengal Sikh Police
    Battalion, commanded by Captain T. Rattray which gives a broad
    background of the mutiny of the Bengal Army and the consequent
    rebellion in the Bengal Presidency. The details of reaction of British
    soldiers during this crisis shows the valiant minds of local leaders
    and the chicanery of the rulers who were living in palaces. This
    section is really an eye-opener. In a nutshell, this book throws new
    light on the possibility of unearthing untold stories of our valiant
    fighters such as Mangal Pandey et al. In that sense, the attempt is a
    valid one.

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