Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
India

Has Dalrymple Stirred Fresh Controversy With Marwari Remark?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Oct, 2019 09:59 PM

    Scottish historian and award winning author William Dalrymple recreated his latest work, "The Anarchy" at the launch of a seven-city book tour here, contending that the East India Company (EIC), which later morphed into the British Raj, was the "greatest corporate coup in history".

     

    But, has he stirred a controversy by contending that this was fuelled by the Marwari businessmen of Bengal?


    "This will come as a surprise to most Indians, but Marwari businessmen and their capital aided the East India Company," Dalrymple said adding that the EIC and the businessmen "came from different lands and spoke different languages but they both understood the common language of accounts and profit".


    The Marwaris "knew that their capital would be safe with the Company", he maintained before a packed audience at The Imperial hotel here on Thursday evening.


    Why would the Marwaris side with the EIC, was there no sense of patriotism, his interlocutor, journalist Vir Sanghvi, asked during a tête-à-tête after Dalrymple unveiled, with the aid of a slide show, the basic elements of "The Anarchy".


    The Marwaris, as also the Indian "elite" of the time, realised that the Mughal empire was crumbling and switched to the winning side.


    "It would be like voting for the Congress...you know they're not going to win," Dalrymple said amidst much laughter in a reference to the 2004 general elections that saw the Grand Old Party voted out of power by the Bharatiya Janata Party.


    "The Company seemed to be on the winning side and it made business sense to keep it happy," the author said.


    He also ascribed the fall of the Mughal empire largely to Mohammad Shah Rangeela (1719-48).


    "Delhi, at the time, was the biggest city between Istanbul and Tokyo. It was an overripe mango waiting to be picked and Nadir Shah (the founder of Persia's Afsharid dynasty) was the first to strike. Despite being heavily outnumbered, he defeated the Mughal army (at what is now the city of Karnal). He then invited Rangeela for lunch and the idiot accepted. He then stayed in Delhi for a while and departed with wagon-loads of wealth, including the Peacock Throne," Dalrymple said.


    Many historians believe that had Nadir Shah not invaded India, the history of the Mughal empire, as also that of British colonial rule in India, could have been quite different.


    "The East India Company remains today history's most ominous warning about the potential for the abuse of corporate power - and the insidious means by which the interests of shareholders can seemingly become those of the state. For, as recent American adventures in Iraq have shown, our world is far from post-imperial, and quite probably will never be," the book says.


    Imperialism is transforming itself into forms of global power that use campaign contributions and commercial lobbying, multinational finance systems and global markets, corporate influence and the predictive data harvesting of the new surveillance -capitalism rather than - or sometimes alongside - overt military conquest, occupation or direct economic domination to effect its ends.


    "Four hundred and twenty years after its founding, the story of the East India Company has never been more current," Dalrymple writes.


    "We still talk about the British conquering India, but that phrase disguises a more sinister reality. It was not the British government that began seizing great chunks in India in the mid-eighteenth century, but a dangerously unregulated private company headquartered in one small office, five windows wide, in London, and managed in India by a violent, utterly ruthless and intermittently mentally unstable corporate predator - (Robert) Clive. India's transition to colonialism took place under a for-profit corporation entirely for the purpose of enriching its investors," the book says.


    "The Company's conquest of India almost certainly remains the supreme act of corporate violence in world history. For all the power wielded today by the world's largest corporations - whether ExxonMobil, Walmart or Google - they are tame beasts compared with the ravaging territorial appetites of the militarised East India Company," Dalrymple writes.


    The book tour will take Dalrymple to Bengaluru, Mumbai, Pune, Kolkata, Chennai and Kochi before concluding on October 22.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    International Yoga Day: B-Town Celebs Urge Fans To Practice Yoga

    From veterans like Dharmendra and Hema Malini to younger actors such as Akshay Kumar and Bipasha Basu -- Bollywood celebrities, for whom fitness is a way of life, advocated the benefits of yoga on the occasion of International Yoga Day on Friday.

    International Yoga Day: B-Town Celebs Urge Fans To Practice Yoga

    Kids' Dance Reality Shows: Where Does The Buck Stop?

    The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, in an advisory, noted how several dance based reality TV shows portray young children performing dance moves originally done by adults in movies and other popular modes of entertainment.

    Kids' Dance Reality Shows: Where Does The Buck Stop?

    Tanzanian Woman Killed Kenyan Neighbour In Delhi Over A Beer Bottle: Cops

    During interrogation, the accused told the police that two days ago, she had asked the Kenyan woman for a bottle of beer, which she had denied.

    Tanzanian Woman Killed Kenyan Neighbour In Delhi Over A Beer Bottle: Cops

    Doctors Loot Funds For Poor In Ayushman Bharat Scheme, Probe On

    Concerned about the ongoing scandal, the Uttarakhand High Court has now directed the Trivendra Singh Rawat government to probe threadbare the financial irregularities related to the health scheme which ensures treatment up to Rs 5 lakh per year for poor patients.

    Doctors Loot Funds For Poor In Ayushman Bharat Scheme, Probe On

    VHP Appeals To CJI, Government To Pave Way For Temple In Ayodhya

    VHP Appeals To CJI, Government To Pave Way For Temple In Ayodhya
    "We call upon the Chief Justice of India to make a decision by completing the hearing on the matter at the earliest", said the VHP statement.

    VHP Appeals To CJI, Government To Pave Way For Temple In Ayodhya

    Heroin Worth Rs. 25 Crore Recovered Near International Border In Jammu

    Heroin Worth Rs. 25 Crore Recovered Near International Border In Jammu
    The consignment, seized about 100 metres ahead of the fence inside Indian territory in Suchetgarh sector, was smuggled from Pakistan  

    Heroin Worth Rs. 25 Crore Recovered Near International Border In Jammu