Features
Western Rebels in the Indian Independence Struggle
A friend in Australia sent me this article from the Daily Telegraph of 15 June by Amit Roy, which I wish to share with the readers
of this column. Historian Ramachandra Guha has won the Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography 2023.
The introductory first paragraph in the article runs thus: “Modern Britons have honoured historian Ramachandra Guha for a rather unusual book that is mainly about white people who were severely punished for going against the British establishment of their day to give their all for Indian independence.”
Over lunch with friends after reading the article, I mentioned it and added that Leonard Woolf gave up his civil service appointment in colonial Sri Lanka around 1911 once he went on furlough to Britain because he was disappointed and disapproving of the method of British government in Ceylon. Leelananda de Silva corrected me. He said Woolf gave up his career in Ceylon because he wished to marry Virginia Stephen and bring her to Ceylon and thus asked for an extension of home leave. This was refused, precipitating his leaving the Civil Service.
Leelananda added that at that time Woolf was an imperialist but disillusionment grew in him as the years passed. All at the lunch I mentioned agreed however, that reading his autobiography of that period of his life: Growing: autobiography of the years 1904-1911 and discerning the underlying theme of his Village in the Jungle, written some years later, his disappointment with British rule in its empire was a given.
Guha received the highly regarded Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography in its 20th anniversary year for his most recent book – Rebels against the Raj: Western fighters for India’s Freedom – pub. William Collins. The prize was 5,000 pounds sterling. He also received a bound copy of Longford’s autobiography, The Pebbled Shore (1986)
First a note about the prize. Countess Elizabeth Pakenham Longford CBE (1906-2002), was an acclaimed British historical biographer, whose best known book was Victoria RI (1964). She was the mother and grandmother respectively of biographer-writers Antonia and Flora Fraser. Lady Antonia was equally talked about because of her long standing love affair with playwright Harold Pinter, and subsequent second marriages for both once his wife died.
The rebels
Guha’s book features seven Westerners who worked for independence from the British Raj alongside Indians. Many were staunch followers of Gandhi and rallied round him. Those featured in Guha’s biography are Annie Besant, B G Horniman, Phillip Spratt, Richard Ralph Keithahn, Samuel (later Satyanand) Stokes, Madeline Slade (later Mira Behn), and Catherine Mary Heilemann (later Sarala Behn). They were from Britain, America and Ireland
“They adopted India’s struggle for independence and in doing so found their own destinies. The experience of India changed their ideologies, their spirituality and often their names.” Six of them died in India. Besant, theosophist, was the first female President of Congress. Mira Behn was an admiral’s daughter who was featured in Richard Attenborough’s Oscar winning film Gandhi. Stokes was a Quaker, became a Hindu and married an Indian woman. Phillip Spratt, a Cambridge graduate, helped establish the Communist Party of India. American Missionary Keithahn worked to improve health care in Indian villages, while Heilemann – Salara Behn – set up a girls’ school and was a pioneering environmentalist campaigner in North India.
At the prize awarding in London, the chairman of the judging panel said: “In tracing their relationships revolving around the magnetic figure of Gandhi, Guha adds a new perspective to the Mahatma’s life, on which he has already focused so rewardingly in his multi volume biography.” The judges stressed that the book has particular relevance to contemporary India. As Guha points out: “Oppression does not disappear with the ending of colonial rule, and the ideas and priorities incisively drawn out in this book deserve urgent attention in today’s India.”
When the book was published Guha elaborated to The Telegraph where he was a columnist: “The lives and doings of these individuals constitute a morality tale for the world we currently live in. This is a world governed by paranoia and nationalist xenophobia, with the rise of jingoism in country after country, and a corresponding contempt for ideas and individuals that emanate from outside the borders of one’s nation.” He mentioned Donald Trump, Boris Johnson and Brexiteers in England, Xi Jinping and even Narendra Modi. “The focus of my book is on individuals who decisively changed sides, identifying completely with India, meeting Indians on absolutely equal terms as friends and lovers, and as comrades on the street and in prison too.”
The prize winner
Ramachandra ‘Ram’ Guha, a Brahmin, was born to a forestry officer father and teacher mother in Dehradun on April 29, 1958. He is a historian, environmentalist, writer and public intellectual whose research interests include social, political, contemporary and cricket history. He is an authority on the history of modern India. He attended Doon School then graduated in economics from St Stephen’s College, Delhi, and Masters from the Delhi School of Economics. His PhD is from the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta.
He has taught at the universities of Stanford, Yale, LSE and Indian Institute of Sciences. He is the distinguished recipient of many awards and honours and is the third Indian historian to be recognised by the American Historical Association, with Romila Thapar and Jadunath Sarka. Among his several publications are three major books on modern India’s socio-political history; Gandhi before India (2013); Gandhi: the years that changed the world (2018); and two volumes of biography of the Mahatma.
India After Gandhi records the history of India from 1947- to 2017. He is married to a graphic designer and has two children; the young son already a recognised novelist. They live in Bengalaru, Bangalore, and Guha now never stays long overseas as his mother, 94, lives with them.
He has paid tribute to Verrier Elwin (1902-1961) “A maverick British anthropologist who worked with Indian Adivasis,” who inspired him when he was an MA student at the Delhi University. Elwin was an Oxford scholar who was a priest, came to India, met Gandhi and left the church. He became an expert on tribes and the Adivasis of Central India; Adivasi being a name coined in the 1930s by political activists to give tribal people in the Indian Subcontinent an indigenous identity. Nehru sent him to the Northeast India where he spent his last ten years.
Guha said he moved to sociology and history being inspired by Elwin. “I was charmed by his work and his writing and decided economics is not for me and I did a PhD in sociology and moved to history because of Elwin…. Without Elwin I would not have written this book, without Elvin I would not have become a biographer, without Elwin I would not have done a PhD, I would have become a boxwallah. Like most Indians of my generation, I might have joined the IAS or something rather mundane. So reading Elwin changed my life.”
(The term boxwallah has two distinct and opposite meanings. One denotes a street peddler in British India and the other is a name for an elite corporate executive, chiefly in the city of Calcutta, in early postcolonial India).
Features
The challenge of keeping value-based politics alive
The current outbreak of anti-immigrant protests in Durban, South Africa is bound to have taken many a subscriber to value-based politics or political idealism quite by surprise. After all, this is evidence that despite the historic accomplishments of nation-builders of the stature of the late President Nelson Mandela it cannot be taken for granted that identity politics, including racism in its worst forms, is no more in South Africa.
At the time of this writing details are scarce on the substantive root causes of the protests but it could very well be that economic grievances, particularly on the part of the majority community in South Africa, are contributing considerably to the disaffection. Shrinking employment and material prospects are likely to figure majorly among the factors igniting the unrest.
Fortunately, the local authorities in Durban are losing no time in calling for peaceful co-existence among the relevant communities and are pointing to the vital importance of stepping-up national integration processes. Apparently, immigrants in sizable numbers from neighbouring countries are present in Durban. However, international TV footage of the protests quoted some local authorities as saying that the majority of the immigrants in some centres that housed them were not illegal migrants and had the documents that entitle them to be in Durban.
In the Durban protests the world has fresh proof of the socially divisive consequences of the gathering globe-wide economic disaffection, touched off particularly by the continuing crisis in West Asia. Going ahead, the world would need to brace for increasing identity-based unrest of the kind it is just witnessing in South Africa.
Considering that the material lot of ordinary people everywhere could only aggravate progressively, with the US and Iran showing no signs of negotiating an end to their confrontation any time soon, it will be left to the more democratic and progressive sections of the world community to initiate positive measures collectively to bring a measure of relief to the discontented.
The swiftness with which such relief will be provided would depend crucially on the importance those sections taking up these undertakings attach to value-based politics as opposed to Realpolitik of power politics.
Going by these yardsticks, Italy could be considered to be moving in the right direction. Recently Italy came to the fore in initiating the collective named, ‘Rome Coalition for Food Security and Access to Fertilizer’, which has as one of its aims the swift provision of fertilizer to economically weak African countries.
In a recent statement Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Antonio Tajani, said that a principal aim of the project was to ensure that the farmers of Africa gained easy access to fertilizer, considering that food security is a growing concern among some of Africa’s economically vulnerable countries.
The statement went on to mention that some 30 countries hailing from the Mediterranean region, the Middle East, the Balkans as well as the FAO had been invited to join the coalition. The venture is far-seeing in that food security is main among the reasons for social discontent which in turn could degenerate into endemic political turmoil and bloodshed. Separatist violence and geographical fragmentation of countries wouldn’t be too far behind these developments, as Africa itself has often proved.
It is hoped that more G7 countries would take the cue from Italy and do what they could to ease the hardships of economically distressed countries, particularly of the global South. In these efforts they would need to break rank with the US, which is today brutally indifferent to the consequences of its policy of making ‘America First’, come what may.
Going by current developments, the Trump administration seems to be blithely oblivious to the wider, deleterious effects of its policy course in West Asia. Besides rendering Iran militarily and otherwise impotent nothing else seems to matter to Washington, as regards West Asia. This is policy short-sightedness of an extreme kind. After all, right now West Asia could be said to be sitting on the proverbial powder keg.
On the other hand, Iran is not giving the world the impression that it is doing anything constructive to get out of the policy straitjacket that it wove for itself decades ago. Rather than enter into a policy of ‘live and let live’ in relation to Israel in particular and initiate a process of reconciliation with the latter, it has chosen to operate within policy parameters that continue to damn Israel. This has put Israel always on the ‘defensive’ so to speak and prevented the opening up of space for meaningful dialogue.
That said, Israel is obliged to explore the possibilities of entering into a negotiatory process with the Arab-Islamic world that could lead to a de-escalation of tensions and bloodshed. It cannot continue to look at its neighbours through lenses that distort them as archetypal enemies who should be ‘wiped off completely from the face of the earth.’
In other words, the need is urgent for Realpolitik to give way to value-based politicks. Italy is beginning to prove that the latter approach could be pursued with some success. May be the EU and the UK could throw their weight behind these initiatives as well and establish that international politics could be refashioned on the basis of humane, civilized norms. The UN would need to be fully supportive of these moves and prove an organizational nucleus of the operations that follow.
In fact the time is ripe for people of conscience to collectively stand up on the side of peace and say ‘No’ to war and violence. Organizations such as the ICRC, the WHO and Medicines Sans Frontiers have already taken up this call. Referring to the widespread destruction of health facilities and their dehumanizing results these organizations have said, among other things, that ‘This is not a failure of the law. It is a failure of political will.’
True, ‘failure of political will’ among those powers that matter accounts for the runaway, uncontrollable nature of war and destruction in contemporary times, but more fundamentally it is a failure of the human conscience. It could very well be that the phenomenal levels to which violence and war have been unleashed today have had the effect of deadening consciences. This is a matter for urgent study and wide discussion.
Features
Vesak celebrations … with Cuteefly
I would describe Indunil Kaushalya Dissanayaka as innovative and creative, and she operates under the name of Cuteefly.
Indunil always comes up with something novel to celebrate special occasions, and she does it with candles … and that’s her profession.
She was in the spotlight when she created a happening scene, with candles, for Christmas, Sinhala and Tamil New Year, and Valentine’s Day.
As lanterns light up Sri Lanka for Vesak, the Colombo-based candle maker is quietly turning wax and wick into little pieces of the festival.

Candles reflecting Vesak themes
Her candles reflect Vesak themes – light, peace, remembrance, giving, etc., to enable you to fill your Vesak celebration with devotion and beauty.
Among her Vesak creations is a lotus-shaped soy candle, scented with sandalwood, lavender, etc., meant to burn during this Vesak Poya Day.

Indunil Kaushalya Dissanayaka: Customers
praise her for her creativity
These handcrafted Vesak candles are perfect for offering at the temple, she says.
What makes her creations so novel is that they come in different shapes, scents, themes, and all are handmade.
What’s more, her customers have heaped praise on her for her creativity.
According to Indunil, her creations are perfect as a thoughtful gift … to bring beauty, unity, and light into every moment.
Says Indunil: “Our beautifully handcrafted Unity candles are designed with premium detail and love, making them perfect for celebrations, gifts, and meaningful occasions.”
Cuteefly, says Indunil, is available online.
Readers could contact Indunil on 0778506066 for more details.
He Facebook Page is: Cuteefly.

Handmade with love
Features
Dark Spots …
Yes, dark spots do crop up on the skin, especially with sun exposure and, of course, as the skin ages.
However, these tips should be of immense benefit to those who are faced with dark spots.
* Lemon and Honey Glow Mask:
You will need 01 teaspoon lemon juice and 01 teaspoon honey.
Mix the lemon juice and honey well and then apply this mixture, only on the dark spots.
Leave for 10–15 minutes and then rinse with cool water.
Benefits:
Lemon helps brighten pigmentation.
Honey moisturises and heals skin.
Gives a natural glow.
* Aloe Vera Gel Treatment:
All you need is fresh aloe vera gel.
Apply the gel apply on dark spots, before going to bed.
Leave overnight and wash in the morning.
Benefits:
Reduces acne marks and pigmentation.
Soothes irritated skin.
Helps skin repair naturally.
* Turmeric and Yoghurt Paste:
You will need 01 teaspoon yoghurt and a pinch of turmeric
Mix the yoghurt and turmeric into a smooth paste and apply on affected areas.
Leave for 15 minutes and then wash gently with lukewarm water.
Benefits:
Turmeric brightens skin naturally.
Yoghurt removes dead skin cells.
Helps fade dark spots gradually.
Use these packs 02-03 times a week as results are generally seen over time.
You can also try this out: Mix a ripe papaya into a smooth paste and apply to the face, or directly on to the dark spots. Leave for 15-20 minutes and then wash with lukewarm water.
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