Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
India

Did The British Empire Have Any Benefits For India? No, Says Shashi Tharoor

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jan, 2016 12:11 PM
  • Did The British Empire Have Any Benefits For India? No, Says Shashi Tharoor
How should we view the British Empire and its legacy for its former colonies? Was it one of the world's greatest modernising forces, as some historians claim, or was it only a destructive bane? The latter, says Congress politician Shashi Tharoor who maintains the only two benefits for India were cricket and the English language.
 
Tharoor contested the contentions of co-panellist, British historian, author and MP Tristram Hunt, that the benefits included rule of law and an effective parliamentary system, saying he was not sure how good the latter has been for India.
 
"The system of governance of a small island nation was sought to be transplanted to a nation where there were not only ideological differences, but a bewildering range of diversities," he said, at a session titled "Empire" at the Jaipur Literature Festival here on Monday.
 
On the idea of rule of law, Tharoor contended it was part of the normal evolution of society and India could have achieved it for itself.
 
"You don't need foreigners to come and oppress you for benefit of development," he asserted.
 
"(Historian) Niall Ferguson (who has termed the British Empire a great modernising force) has not questioned for whose benefit it was done. I only accept cricket and the English language," said Tharoor.
 
Hunt, who had stepped in for Ferguson who wasn't able to make it for the event, contended that there was renewed interest in the Empire in his country -- where it had been absent for years from the school curriculum -- as Britain took decisions on its place in the world.
 
 
The author of "Ten Cities that Made an Empire", which seeks to chart the changing nature of the British Empire through 10 (formerly) imperial cities spread though out the world, Hunt said the empire had had an influence on his country too -- and still has.
 
"British politics are becoming like Indian politics. The centralised system is shifting to a more federal system... we are willing to take coalition partners," he said.
 
On the question of financial compensation for the damages to the former colonies' social and economic fabric, Tharoor, who had made headlines by making the demand at a debate in Oxford, said it should be a token amount, say a pound for every year of rule, rather than a ridiculous amount as had been calculated and would be "an exercise in absurdity and futility", could never be paid and besides, "India couldn't even know what to do with all that money".
 
Hunt noted that such a demand was more advanced in the former Caribbean colonies, but they instead of money, had sought help in education and development.
 
On whether bygones should be bygones, Tharoor said he agreed. "History cannot be undone. But it haunts our past and affects the future. By all means let bygones be bygones, but never forget it... we must remember it."
 
 
 
Hunt said he agreed. "We must interrogate, analyse and reinterpret the bygones," he said, adding he was quite sceptical of official apologies for historical wrongs.

MORE India ARTICLES

These Indian Women Mountain Bikers Are On A Roll

These Indian Women Mountain Bikers Are On A Roll
Mountain Biking Himalaya has been billed as the third toughest mountain biking event in the world, next to the Trans-Alps Challenge (Europe) and Trans Rockies (Canada)

These Indian Women Mountain Bikers Are On A Roll

Meat Ban: Indian Supreme Court Declines To Interfere With Bombay High Court Order

Meat Ban: Indian Supreme Court Declines To Interfere With Bombay High Court Order
A bench of Justice T.S. Thakur and Justice Kurian Joseph, while refusing to entertain the plea by a trust, said that there should be a spirit of "tolerance and accommodation".

Meat Ban: Indian Supreme Court Declines To Interfere With Bombay High Court Order

Art Icon M.F. Husain: Forgotten On Birth Centenary!

Art Icon M.F. Husain: Forgotten On Birth Centenary!
One of India's greatest painters of modern times, the snowy-haired and bearded, barefoot Maqbool Fida Husain -- who died in self-exile in London four years ago -- is a forgotten figure on his birth centenary on Thursday

Art Icon M.F. Husain: Forgotten On Birth Centenary!

Saudi Diplomat Accused Of Rape Leaves India

Saudi Diplomat Accused Of Rape Leaves India
The Saudi Arabian diplomat accused of rape by two Nepalese women has left India, an official said on Wednesday.

Saudi Diplomat Accused Of Rape Leaves India

Dengue Kills Three More In Delhi, Kejriwal Government Caps Tests At Rs.600

Dengue Kills Three More In Delhi, Kejriwal Government Caps Tests At Rs.600
Dengue claimed the lives of three more people in the national capital -- a 41-year-old woman, a seven-year-old boy and a 14-year-old -- taking the toll to 16, even though officially the toll stayed at five.

Dengue Kills Three More In Delhi, Kejriwal Government Caps Tests At Rs.600

Another Child Dies Of Dengue, Delhi Mulls Law To Tackle Hospital Apathy

Another Child Dies Of Dengue, Delhi Mulls Law To Tackle Hospital Apathy
The Delhi government on Tuesday also issued instructions to schools to ensure that for the next one month students come to classes wearing clothes which fully cover them irrespective of school uniforms.

Another Child Dies Of Dengue, Delhi Mulls Law To Tackle Hospital Apathy