http://scroll.in/article/721194/Netaji-snooping-controversy-shows-how-India%E2%80%99s-system-of-archiving-state-documents-is-utterly-broken

LOST HISTORY
Netaji snooping controversy shows how India's system of archiving
state documents is utterly broken
The lack of a functional archival policy has led to a disastrous loss
of information for historians looking to write about India.
Shoaib Daniyal
Today ยท 09:00 am



Photo Credit: Creative Commons

The controversy over whether the Indian government spied on Subhash
Chandra Bose's family has kicked up a lot of political dust. The
Bharatiya Janata Party government, which declassified some of the
Intelligence Bureau files on Bose, sparking the row, used the issue to
try and attack Jawaharlal Nehru (even if Nehru's role in the matter is
still to be verified). In response, the Congress accused the BJP of
running a "sinister campaign" against national icons. The noise that
this political tug of war created ended up drowning out the real
lesson to be learnt from the episode: the sorry state of archiving
Indian state documents for posterity.

Modelled on the systems of the United Kingdom, the Indian government
has a 30-year window after which files are to be selected and sent
over to the National Archives from where historians and researchers
can then access them. The selection is carried out by the ministry in
question and irrelevant or sensitive documents are held back from
being archived. Of course, this system exists mostly in the breach,
with bureaucratic apathy ensuring that most ministries simply never
bother to archive their files.

The Netaji controversy had echoes of a row that had similarly erupted
a year ago. In the run-up to the 2014 general election, the Bharatiya
Janata Party had made a big deal of the classified Henderson-Brooks
report on the 1962 Indo-China war, with Arun Jaitley hinting that the
United Progressive Alliance government had kept it under wraps because
the report contained information that would be "embarrassing to those
in power in 1962" (read: Nehru).

However, within weeks of coming to power, the Modi government did a
volte-face: it ruled out the release of the report. Jaitley himself
told Parliament that releasing the Henderson-Brooks report would be
against "national interest", thus parroting the line of every
government that had come before his. Moreover, even setting aside the
political embarrassment, the continued secrecy over the report was all
the more inexplicable given that large parts of it had been made
public anyway by Australian journalist Neville Maxwell.

Archiving in shambles

As these two incidents show, India's shambolic archiving process has
created a window for misrepresentations and political one-upmanship.

Sucheta Mahajan, a professor at the Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University, explains that "it's not as if India
doesn't have a policy of for historical archiving". The issue,
however, is in implementing this policy. "It only exists on paper,"
Mahajan said.

While India's archiving systems are modelled on the United Kingdom,
the difference is that in Britain these policies are scrupulously
followed and are updated from time to time, given the keen interest in
archiving historical documents. Historian Patrick French explained:
"In Britain, there was an 'open government' initiative in the late
1990s, which led to more government papers being released, including
material relating to the Indian national movement. The United Kingdom
is now moving to a situation where all official records will be
released to the National Archives or elsewhere after 20 years".

As a result, even for something as integral as India's freedom
struggle, researchers are mostly forced to use British documents as a
source, the Indian ones being still locked up.

Deeply embedded

Historian Ramachandra Guha says that the culture of historical neglect
is deeply embedded in Indian's current system. "Our government
archives are headed by civil servants on deputation rather than
trained historians or archivists," he said. "Ideally every ministry
should have a historian to help archive documents, but of course we
have nothing of the sort." Guha lamented that "Indians are culturally
bad at record keeping".

In Delhi, things were so bad that when historian Mushirul Hassan took
charge of the National Archives, he found that some ministries had
stopped sending files to the National Archives since 1950. The gaps
for anyone thinking of writing a history of independent India were
immense.

In a series of articles written for the New York Times, historian
Dinyar Patel points out that things are so mismanaged here that
something as basic as choosing the right sort of building to house our
archived documents has not been thought through. "The Maharashtra
State Archives in Mumbai," Patel writes, "is housed in an open-air
structure built in 1888." Air-conditioning, a basic need to preserve
documents, has not been considered.

Losing our history

While the Netaji and the Henderson-Brooks controversies hit the
headlines because of their political impact, the Indian government's
neglect of archiving means there is a much bigger, if silent impact:
we are losing out on our history. "If today, someone wants to write a
history of, say, the Green Revolution, which changed the face of
modern India, he'll have a very tough time because we simply haven't
preserved the papers which tell us which government did what," said
Guha.

Currently, the Netaji issue has been treated as a thoroughly political
matter. The BJP's national spokesperson, MJ Akbar, said that Nehru was
"afraid of the political ghost of Subhash Chandra Bose" and even
speculated that Bose had not died in an air crash - as commonly
accepted by most historians - but was spirited off to "a prison in a
foreign country".

Political compulsions make the scoring of quick brownie points against
an ideological rival easy. But for the Modi government to really do
some long-term good, it should look to reform India's archival policy
for state documents, making sure we document our history scrupulously
for posterity.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to