Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Yankee Who Roamed In Central Asia, Served The Khalsa

Darpan News Desk, 29 Mar, 2017 11:54 AM
    Title: The Tartan Turban: In Search of Alexander Gardner
     
    Author: John Keay
     
    Publisher: Kashi House
     
    Pages: 352; Price: Rs 2,400 (approx)
     
    In one of his exploits, Flashman encounters a scary-looking Pathan in Khalsa-ruled Lahore and believes him an adversary. He, however, turns out to be an ally -- and an American to boot. But while our anti-hero narrator is fictional, the American was not, with a long, colourful career of intrigue in Afghanistan, travels in Central Asia, and service to Ranjit Singh and his heirs.
     
    "There were some damned odd fellows in the earlies...," observed Flashman, but why is Alexander Haughton Campbell Gardner, alias "Gordana Khan", probably the first American in the region, and his remarkable story not better known?
     
    Possibly due to the confusion and controversy over Gardner's early travels and his antecedents, says Asian and British India history expert and author John Keay, although his service to the Khalsa and subsequent quieter life in service of the Dogra maharajas of Jammu and Kashmir is fully attested.
     
     
    And in this meticulously-researched and argued book, the first on this mysterious American in over a century, he seeks to explain why Gardner, "a hired gun transposed from the American West to the Asian East", who fought in Dost Mohammad's Afghanistan for "the good cause of right against wrong", has not received his due, or rather, fallen out of favour.
     
    It also seeks set the record straight on a man, who, Keay contends, may "reasonably be claimed as the most extraordinary of all the 19th century's great adventurers", having spent over a decade as white-gone-native in the wild heart of Asia and travelling to places unvisited by westerners for centuries, if at all. (Flashman's creator George MacDonald Fraser also thought the same, placing Gardner in a list with the likes of "Sekundar" Burnes, Count Ignatiev, Yakub Beg, Arthur Connolly and James Stoddart, Paolo di Avitabile, and John Nicholson in that area and age).
     
    Gardner's reputation did not survive much after his death in 1877, says Keay, admitting that though he mentioned him in his two books on the Himalayas and their exploration in the 19th century, he did not find him fit to include in his "The Royal Geographical Society History of World Exploration" (1991) due to persisting doubts.
     
     
    "Yet, nearly a century later and after making due allowance for the revisionist's perversity, he seemed worth one last look," says Keay, contending that as the story of Gardner's Sikh service is beyond dispute, the account of his travels might be too, and "anyone with even a mildly romantic bent must surely take his side".
     
     
     
    And at the urging, and support, of Britain-based, over-decade-old independent publisher Kashi House, which specialises in works on Sikh heritage and history of Punjab, Keay has produced what could be the last word on the subject, though he holds it is neither a "rounded biography" or a "comprehensive vindication".
     
    Beginning with the story of Gardner's daughter and her attempts to both preserve his reputation and find his treasure -- another mystery in the tangled issue of Kashmir -- the work covers much new ground, with the breakthrough discovery of first-hand material -- reports and papers written by Gardner himself -- which shed greater, though not full light, on some contentious episodes involving him.
     
    Offering a balanced account of Gardner's life and work, Keay also judiciously addresses doubts on his nationality and antecedents while debunking the hatchet jobs with plausible reasons that may have inspired them.
     
     
    This aspect is also one of the two important lessons of this account.
     
    On history itself, it shows that it can be easily re-fashioned or re-interpreted to serve the interests of the powers-that-be while one of its biggest fallacies is to assess a past figure in light of contemporary mores. (In Gardner's case, if he was cruel in a cruel age, why should he be condemned in a more peaceful future?)
     
    More empirically, the account of the murderous succession battle that doomed Ranjit Singh's hard-built kingdom within a decade of his death is eye-opening. While the British takeover of India may have been brutal and treacherous, most native Indian politics it supplanted were not very principled or peaceful themselves.
     
    That should offer some thought to those who label the Raj an unmitigated, unnecessary evil.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Ottawa Paramedics Say A Traffic Stop Likely Saved A Man From A Fatal Overdose

    OTTAWA — Police in Ottawa say a traffic stop early Wednesday may have prevented a deadly overdose.

    Ottawa Paramedics Say A Traffic Stop Likely Saved A Man From A Fatal Overdose

    Texas Bride's Wedding Dress Goes Down The Aisle Again In Thunder Bay, Ont.

    Texas Bride's Wedding Dress Goes Down The Aisle Again In Thunder Bay, Ont.
    "I just wanted someone else to enjoy a pretty dress," says Rhodes, who used the website Once Wed to sell it for $800, about half of what she originally paid.

    Texas Bride's Wedding Dress Goes Down The Aisle Again In Thunder Bay, Ont.

    WATCH: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates Make Light of Being Harvard Dropouts in New Video

    WATCH: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates Make Light of Being Harvard Dropouts in New Video
    Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, one of Harvard University's most famous dropouts, will return to his one-time alma mater this summer to deliver the commencement address at the convocation ceremony.

    WATCH: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates Make Light of Being Harvard Dropouts in New Video

    Americans Are Having Less Sex Now Than Before

    Americans Are Having Less Sex Now Than Before
    US adults are today having sex less often than they did in the 1990s and it is not because of their busier lives, says a study.

    Americans Are Having Less Sex Now Than Before

    Acid Attack Survivors Redefine Beauty In Bangladesh Fashion Show

    Acid Attack Survivors Redefine Beauty In Bangladesh Fashion Show
    DHAKA, Bangladesh — Teen model Shonali Khatun strutted the catwalk as the audience cheered and clapped for a fashion show held in the capital of Bangladesh.

    Acid Attack Survivors Redefine Beauty In Bangladesh Fashion Show

    Tips For Selling Or Buying A Used Wedding Dress Online

    Tips For Selling Or Buying A Used Wedding Dress Online
    For those looking to part with their wedding dress, selling it can help them recoup some of the costs of a pricey ceremony. And for brides-to-be, the sites can help them buy a used designer gown at a discount

    Tips For Selling Or Buying A Used Wedding Dress Online