[In his 1832 speech, Macaulay spoke thus: “I fully believe that a mild
penal code is better than a severe penal code, the worst of all systems was
surely that of having a mild code for the Brahmins… while there was a
severe code for the Shudras. India has suffered enough already from the
distinction of castes, and from the deeply rooted prejudices which that
distinction has engendered.” Clive won England an empire but he wouldn’t
say a word against the “deeply rooted prejudices” that caste breeds.
Mahatma Macaulay set the stage for ending not only those prejudices but the
British rule in India itself.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/british-rule-in-india-lord-thomas-babington-macaulay-lord-robert-clive-mahatma-macaulay-4904918/

Mahatma Macaulay
Robert Clive founded the British Raj, Lord Macaulay sowed the seeds of its
end

Written by Chandra Bhan Prasad |

Updated: October 25, 2017 7:53 am

Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay walked into India, as if pacing into a
palanquin. Clad in suits and gleaming shoes that appeared as though they
had just been procured. (Source – Wikimedia Commons)

Once in India, Lord Robert Clive, more often than not, would be in uniform
and battle ready. He would sport long moonboots, ride horses. Conjectural
of sorts, he would flash a gun in one hand, and a sword in the other.
Conjectural because, when both hands are armed, what body part held the
bridle?

The fact is, in 1757 at the battle of Plassey, Clive won India for England.
Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay walked into India, as if pacing into a
palanquin. Clad in suits and gleaming shoes that appeared as though they
had just been procured. Academic D. Shyam Babu describes Macaulay as a
Mahatma. With Lord Macaulay-like simplicity, he dislodges the Crown’s
greatest stamp of honour, “Lord”.

India thus turns home to three Mahatmas — Mahatma Macaulay, Mahatma Phule
and Mahatma Gandhi. Decades before Gandhiji returned to India in 1915,
Macaulay began scripting the path Gandhiji would enact. “Freedom”? Who
imagined that enterprise for British India? “It would be. far better for us
that the people of India were well governed and independent of us, than ill
governed and subject to us,” argued the would-be-Mahatma in his July 10,
1832 speech in the House of Commons.

His regard for India continues: “Are we to keep the people of India
ignorant in order that we may keep them submissive? Or do we think that we
can give them knowledge without awakening ambition? Or do we mean to awaken
ambition and to provide it with no legitimate vent? It may be that the
public mind of India may expand under our system till it has outgrown that
system; that by good government we may educate our subjects into a capacity
for better government; that, having become instructed in European
knowledge, they may, in some future age, demand European institutions.
Whether such a day will ever come I know not. But never will I attempt to
avert or to retard it. Whenever it comes, it will be the proudest day in
English history.” Once in India in 1835, seeding ideas of freedom was
Macaulay’s mission.

When the British parliament asked the East India Company to set aside one
lakh rupees for the education of Indians, the officials were divided: One
set insisting to continue with the existing Arabic and Sanskrit education,
and the other group, led by the Mahatma-in-making, argued for English
education that would be seeped in the sciences. In order to convince his
fellow officials who were obsessed with the Arabic/Sanskrit system,
Macaulay in his Minute on Education makes fun of 15th century England. “To
which I refer is the great revival of letters among the Western nations at
the close of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. At
that time, almost everything that was worth reading was contained in the
writings of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Had our ancestors… neglected the
language of Thucydides and Plato, and the language of Cicero and Tacitus.
Would England ever have been what she now is?”

Macaulay adds, “What the Greek and Latin were to the contemporaries of More
and Ascham, our tongue is to the people of India.” This Mahatma had won for
India not only the English language but the sciences as well. But what
about the account that paints Macaulay as a mind-slaver? The slave
theorists hate the Lord with the pen more than they hate the Lord with
swords.

In his 1832 speech, Macaulay spoke thus: “I fully believe that a mild penal
code is better than a severe penal code, the worst of all systems was
surely that of having a mild code for the Brahmins… while there was a
severe code for the Shudras. India has suffered enough already from the
distinction of castes, and from the deeply rooted prejudices which that
distinction has engendered.” Clive won England an empire but he wouldn’t
say a word against the “deeply rooted prejudices” that caste breeds.
Mahatma Macaulay set the stage for ending not only those prejudices but the
British rule in India itself.

The writer is a Dalit ideologue
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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