In the summer
of 2015 at Oxford Shashi Tharoor delivered a speech on the topic: ‘Britain Owes
Reparations to Her Former Colonies’. The book ‘An Era of Darkness’ is the
extension of that speech. The video of this speech went viral through chatting
apps and social media platforms. In the speech Tharoor demanded that the
British must seek apology from India for its 200-year misrule in the country.
Well, in 18th century, India’s contribution to world economy was well up to 23
percent and by the time India got independence the contribution was as low as 3
percent.
Actuated by
the interest thus generated, Shashi Tharoor embarked upon the book and charted
the British rule from its victory in Plassey, to its steady procurement of
provinces, Sepoy Mutiny, the nation rising for independence, the Empire’s
shenanigans in partitioning the country, and finally, the independence that was
paid in blood. He writes eloquently about how the British intensified the country’s caste divide; how they played the
divide and rule game thereby heightening the Hindu-Muslim discord; how their
sole interest in the India venture was profits, fat pensions and not
integration or a better society, as many colonists claimed; how the laying of
rails, introduction of press, democracy, the parliamentary system, English
education were all a means to further their goals of strengthening their rule
in India without any care for social elevation and progress; how they
systematically looted India and turned it from a glittering jewel to a third
world country in two centuries.
The book,
however, doesn’t talk about the role Indians played in bringing about their own
defeat; about the infighting between rulers, nobles; about internal politics,
betrayals, etc. Hence the book should be taken as one stance on the British empire
in India, and not, the complete history.
Written in the
unique Shashi-Tharoor style and language, all the arguments are backed with
data and research. It is not a light read, since the book is full of long
passages and at times bit repetitive. The book will definitely add new
perspectives about colonial India, and will help readers to understand the
complex socio-cultural and political landscape of that era.
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