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Did the British Really Divide India to Rule?



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*Major General Mrinal Suman, AVSM, VSM, PhD*

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***(Veteran, Bombay Sappers, settled at Pune.)

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(Published in Nov 08)

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While studying Indian history in school days, one was repeatedly told that
the British resorted to ‘divide and rule’ policy to gain control over India
. The tone and tenor of such a description painted the British as
unscrupulous schemers who exploited the simple, trusting and gullible
Indians. As a young student one accepted the above statement at its face
value without any questions and grew up in the belief that we Indians are a
highly united lot and our subjugation was due to devious tricks and policies
of the British.



At a later stage, one started wondering why Indians let themselves be
divided by outsiders and why they could not foresee the result of their
disunity. Sadly, the truth is that our approach, attitude and practices have
always been directed towards remaining disunited. Caste system divided the
society in distinct segments. Presence of multiple religions, sects and
sub-sects in the sub-continent prevented social cohesion.  The much touted *
Swayamwar* (selection of spouse by a princess in an open forum) is
indicative of this deficiency and our total disregard for forging unity.
Whereas matrimony amongst the royals in the Europe has always been an
instrument of forging strategic alliances, *Swayamwar* invariably created
more enemies than friends. All rejected princes and kings felt insulted,
nursed a grudge and waited for an opportunity to take revenge to redeem
their self-esteem. History bears testimony to the fact that every *Swayamwar
* was followed by acrimony and internecine wars.



Reverting back to the role of the British, they never divided us to rule.
They did not need to do so. We have always been and continue to be a divided
lot. Formation of states on linguistic basis was never attempted by the
British. Mandal Commission was not constituted or implemented by them. Nor
was the Babri Masjid demolished by the British. The current agitation in
Maharashtra has not been initiated by the East India Company. Caste based
reservations and quota system, the prime splitter of the Indian body
politic, were not invented by the erstwhile rulers. Nor are they preventing
us from enacting a uniform civil code. The list is endless. We have a knack
and penchant for generating innovative issues to divide ourselves. We are
doing our best to ensure that we remain embroiled in petty bickering and
internal dissentions. To us, our region, religion, caste and sub-caste are
more important. Worse, we flaunt this narrow identity and give it precedence
over nationalism. If after 60 years of independence, Kashmir and the North
East are still not emotionally integrated with the country, the failure is
ours.



Undoubtedly, the politicians are the fountainhead of all fissiparous
tendencies. One does not have to be a visionary to predict the danger of
abetting illegal migration from Bangladesh for garnering votes. North
Indians in Mumbai are not welcome but illegal Bangladeshis can stay. If
political leaders can imperil national security for the sake of power, they
can stoop to any level. Sadly, they cannot be expected to change as they
believe in the ends and not the means employed. To them, vote bank politics
preclude letting countrymen stay united. Additionally, spineless and
politicized bureaucracy simply follows their dictates and cannot be expected
to deliver either.



Immense damage is also being inflicted on the unity of the country by the
media through its irresponsible and thoughtless reporting. For the sake of
cheap sensational news, petty vandals are given the coverage befitting a
mass leader. Every news item is reported with a religious, caste or creed
slant – ‘*a dalit girl molested in a Delhi bus*’ (as if other women are not
molested in Delhi buses) or ‘*church guard killed*’ (in reality an argument
between two security guards had turned violent) or ‘*muslim driver runs over
a boy*’ (his being a muslim is of no relevance). It is obnoxious to see
articles spelling out proportions of different castes in a constituency and
predicting victory of the candidate from the majority caste, thus promoting
caste based politics.



*The Way Ahead*



If India continues to exist as a nation, credit will be due to three
institutions – the armed forces, the higher judiciary and the Election
Commission. They are also the only hope.



As regards the armed forces, the nation owes its security, both external and
internal, to its apolitical nature and nationalism. It is a symbol of
national integration and a repository of best human values. It is an island
of discipline and orderly behaviour in a sea of chaos and anarchy. A foreign
observer wondered whether India deserved such a fine organisation.
Unfortunately, concerted efforts are being made to demean and demoralize
this shield between cohesion and disintegration.



If an Indian citizen still respects law and believes in its fairness, the
credit is entirely due to the independence and pro-activity displayed by the
higher judiciary. Having been let down by the Parliament and the executive,
people look up to the judiciary as their sole hope. Therefore, it must step
forward to shoulder additional responsibility, opinion of conservative
constitutional experts not withstanding. First, anyone promoting hatred
between communities or undertaking divisive actions should be punished for
anti-national activities or even treason/sedition, as internal dissentions
are the start point of all civil strife. Secondly, cost of all damages
caused to public and private property must be recovered from the leaders of
the vandalizing mobs with deterrent imprisonments. In case of fatalities,
they should be charged with murder. Thirdly, any government found abetting
disorder, both through overt support or tacit inaction, should not be
allowed to stay in power. Fourthly, a blanket ban should be put on all
religious processions and use of loudspeakers in religious places. In a
secular country where religion is a highly emotive issue, it is best to
shift all religious activities from public domain to private domain.



The Election Commission can play an extremely important role with its
constitutional powers. Any party that does not swear by the integrity of the
country and equality of all citizens should be banned. Similarly, any party
that promotes hatred amongst various segments of Indian society on any
grounds whatsoever must be proscribed. Even religion-based parties which
disallow followers of other religions as its members should have no place in
a secular country. It is the duty of the Election Commission to ensure that
political parties are not allowed to play vote bank politics at the cost of
national cohesion. All defaulting parties and their leaders must be handed
out exemplary punishment, debarred from standing in elections and their
political careers sealed.



The British controlled the whole of Indian peninsula with a maximum of 60000
troops. Today every state has a police force of more than that strength and
yet divisive forces are rampant. If India has to survive and prosper as a
united nation, it is time corrective action is taken. Let us not force the
next generation to rewrite the history books to say that India can remain
united only when subjugated by a foreign power or that an independent India
is always a divided India .

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