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Subject: History

  • Person in news: Manilal Doctor

    An associate of Mahatma Gandhi, Manilal Doctor is known for his efforts towards helping abolish the indentured labour system that Indian immigrants in many parts of the British Empire were subjected to. He fought for the rights of Indian-origin people in Mauritius and Fiji.

    The indentured labour system

    • In 1833, the British Parliament banned slavery, and the practice became illegal throughout the Empire. However, to maintain the supply of labour in their territories, colonial authorities effectively replaced slavery with the indentured labour system.
    • The ‘indenture’ (meaning contract) system required Indians to sign a legal agreement stating their consent to move abroad for a minimum of five years to work mainly on sugar estates.
    • Many were lured to distant lands, such as the Caribbean, South Africa, Réunion, Mauritius, Malaysia, and Fiji, where they ended up living in miserable conditions.
    • In the mid 19th century, over 35 lakh Indians were transported to British, French, and Dutch colonies around the world. The system was officially banned in 1917.

    Manilal Doctor

    • Born in 1881 in Vadodara, Doctor studied law in Bombay before travelling to Britain in 1905 for further studies.
    • He became a member of the Indian Home Rule Society in London, and wrote in the monthly ‘Indian Sociologist’.
    • In 1906, Doctor met Gandhi, who at the time was in London to meet imperial authorities on behalf of South Africa’s Indian origin people.
    • During the meeting, Gandhi asked Doctor to move to Mauritius to assist the Indian community there in their struggle for equal rights. Doctor arrived in Mauritius the following year.

    In Mauritius (1907-1911)

    • Doctor organised the Indian community in the island colony, which consisted of indentured and non-indentured workers, and advocated for the abolition of discriminatory laws.
    • He practised law at the Supreme Court in St Louis, and provided free legal service to bonded workers in need.
    • Doctor visited plantations across the island and met indentured labourers, making them aware of their rights and encouraged them to agitate.
    • He founded ‘The Hindustani’ newspaper in Mauritius, which had the motto “Liberty of Individuals! Fraternity of Men!!! Equality of Race!!!”
    • Doctor also helped establish the Arya Samaj in Mauritius. He returned to India in 1911.

    Next, Fiji (1912-1920)

    • In 1912, Gandhi deputed Doctor to the Fiji Colony with the same objective. Like in Mauritius, Doctor emerged as the leader of the Indian community in Fiji in the coming years.
    • In Fiji, Doctor started ‘The Indian Settler’ newspaper, and helped set up the Indian Imperial Association. Here too, he helped establish the Arya Samaj.
    • In 1920, Doctor organised a major strike, which rattled colonial authorities.
    • The imperial administration had Doctor deported to New Zealand, where he remained under surveillance and was barred from practising.
    • In 1922, Doctor was able to move to Gaya in Bihar, where he could practise law. He later practised for many years in Aden, also then a British colony, and died in Bombay in 1956.
  • Person in news: Revolutionary Ashfaqullah Khan

    The Uttar Pradesh cabinet has approved a proposal for a zoological garden spread across 121 acres in Gorakhpur, to be named after the freedom fighter and revolutionary Ashfaqullah Khan.

    Ashfaqullah Khan

    • Khan was a freedom fighter who, along with Ram Prasad Bismil, was sentenced to death for the Kakori train robbery, commonly referred to as the Kakori conspiracy of 1925.
    • He was born on October 22, 1900, in Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh.
    • He grew up at a time when Mahatma Gandhi had launched the non-cooperation movement and urged Indians not to pay taxes to the government or co-operate with the British.

    Moved by NCM withdrawal

    • Within about 1.5 years of the movement’s launch, in February 1922, the Chauri Chaura incident took place in Gorakhpur — a large number of non-cooperation protestors clashed with the police and set the police station on fire, killing roughly 22 policemen.
    • Opposed to violence, Gandhi called off the movement.
    • The youth of the country were greatly disappointed and disillusioned with this. Khan was one among these youths.
    • Subsequently, he joined the revolutionaries and became acquainted with Bismil.

    Ashfaqullah Khan and the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association

    • In the mid-1920s, Khan and Bismil went on to found the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA), with the aim of winning freedom for the country through an armed revolution.
    • HSRA published its manifesto titled “The Revolutionary” in 1925.
    • It held that the immediate object of the revolutionary party in the domain of politics is to establish a federal Republic of United State of India by an organized and armed revolution.
    • The final constitution of this Republic shall be framed and declared at a time when the representatives of India shall have the power to carry out their decision.
    • But the basic principles of this Republic will be universal suffrage and abolition of all system which make the exploitation of man by man possible, e.g. the railways, the mines and other industries such as the manufacture of steel and ships all these shall be nationalised.

    The Kakori Conspiracy

    • In August 1925, an armed robbery took place on board the Kakori Express, going from Shahjahanpur to Lucknow, carrying money that had been collected at various railway stations and was to be deposited in Lucknow.
    • In this planned robbery, carried out to fund the activities of the HSRA, Bismil, Khan and over 10 other revolutionaries stopped the train and fled with the cash they found in it.
    • Within a month of the robbery, many members of the HSRA were arrested.
    • In September 1926, Bismil was arrested however Khan was on the run and was later arrested.
    • The trial for the case went on for about 1.5 years. It ended in April 1927, with Bismil, Khan, Rajendra Lahiri and Roshan Singh sentenced to death, and the others given life sentences.
  • Epiphany festival

    The Epiphany festival was celebrated in parts of India, such as Goa and Kerala. In Goa, the celebration is known by its Portuguese name ‘Festa dos Reis’, and in parts of Kerala by its Syriac name ‘Denha’.

    Epiphany or Three Kings’ Day

    • Epiphany is among the three oldest and major festival days in Christianity, the two others being Christmas and Easter.
    • It is celebrated on January 6 by a number of Christian sects, including Roman Catholics, and on January 19 by some Eastern Orthodox churches.
    • In the West, the duration between December 25 and January 6 is known as the Twelve Days of Christmas.
    • Epiphany is a feast day, or a day of commemoration, which in Christianity marks the visit of the Magi (meaning the Three Wise Men or Three Kings) to the Infant Jesus (Christ from his nativity until age 12).
    • According to Christian belief, the Magi — Balthasar, Melchior, and Gaspar (or Casper), the kings of Arabia, Persia, and India, respectively — followed a miraculous guiding star to Bethlehem to paid homage to the Infant Jesus.
    • The day also commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the Jordan River.

    Celebrations in India

    • In Goa, the Magi or Three Kings are called ‘Reis Magos’ in Portuguese.
    • The Reis Magos fort, and church, in Bardez, and the Three Kings Chapel in Cansaulim, get their name from the belief.
    • Communities in Bardez, Chandor, Cansaulim, Arossim, and Cuelim are known to celebrate Epiphany.
    • In Kerala, at the St. Mary’s Orthodox Syrian Cathedral in Piravom, ‘Denha’ is an important annual celebration, in which a big congregation takes part.
  • Places in news: Nankana Sahib

    Recently tension mounted in Pakistan after few goons vandalized the Nankana Sahib Gurdwara.

    Nankana Sahib

    • Nankana Sahib is a city of 80,000 in Pakistan’s Punjab province, where Gurdwara Janam Asthan (also called Nankana Sahib Gurdwara) is located.
    • The shrine is built over the site where Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism, was believed to be born in 1469.
    • It was constructed by Maharaja Ranjit Singh, after he visited Nankana Sahib in 1818-19 while returning from the Battle of Multan.
    • It is 75 kms to the west of Lahore, and is the capital of Nankana Sahib district.
    • The city was previously known as Talwandi, and was founded by Rai Bhoi, a wealthy landlord.
    • Rai Bhoi’s grandson, Rai Bular Bhatti, renamed the town ‘Nankana Sahib’ in honour of the Guru. ‘Sahib’ is an Arabic-origin epithet of respect.

    Historical significance

    • During British rule, the Gurdwara Janam Asthan was the site of a violent episode when in 1921, over 130 Akali Sikhs were killed after they were attacked by the Mahant of the shrine.
    • The incident is regarded as one of the key milestones in the Gurdwara Reform Movement, which led to the passing of the Sikh Gurdwara Act in 1925 that ended the Mahant control of Gurdwaras.
    • In 2014, Pakistan had a memorial for the massacre built.
  • Savitribai Phule’s impact on women’s education in India

    Yesterday, January 3rd was birth anniversary of one of India’s first modern feminists and a social reformer Savitribai Phule. She is especially remembered for being India’s first female teacher who worked for the upliftment of women and untouchables in the field of education and literacy.

    Who was Savitribai Phule?

    • Phule was born in Naigaon, Maharashtra in 1831 and married activist and social-reformer Jyotirao Phule when she was nine years old.
    • After marriage, with her husband’s support, Phule learned to read and write and both of them eventually went on to found India’s first school for girls called Bhide Wada in Pune in 1948.
    • Before this, she started a school with Jyotirao’s cousin Saganbai in Maharwada in 1847.
    • Since at that time the idea of teaching girls was considered to be a radical one, people would often throw dung and stones at her as she made her way to the school.
    • Significantly, it was not easy for the Phule’s to advocate for the education of women and the untouchables since in Maharashtra a nationalist discourse was playing out between 1881-1920 led by Bal Gangadhar Tilak.
    • These nationalists including Tilak opposed the setting up of schools for girls and non-Brahmins citing loss of nationality.

    Her work

    • Essentially, both Jyotirao and Savitribai recognised that education was one of the central planks through which women and the depressed classes could become empowered and hope to stand on an equal footing with the rest of the society.
    • The Phules started the Literacy Mission in India between 1854-55.
    • They started the Satyashodhak Samaj (Society for Truth-Seeking), through which they wanted to initiate the practice of Satyashodhak marriage, in which no dowry was taken.
    • Because of the role played in the field of women’s education, she is also considered to be one of the “crusaders of gender justice”.
    • Her books of poems “Kavya Phule” and “Bavan Kashi Subodh Ratnakar” were published in 1934 and 1982.
  • In news: Partition of Bengal

    West Bengal Governor drew widespread condemnation over his tweet referring to a table, apparently used by Lord Curzon to sign papers pertaining to the Partition of Bengal in 1905, as “iconic”.

    Who was Lord Curzon?

    • Curzon, India’s Viceroy between 1899 and 1905, was one of the most controversial and consequential holders of that post.
    • The partition of the undivided Bengal Presidency in 1905 was one of his most criticised moves, which triggered widespread opposition not only in Bengal but across India, and gave impetus to the freedom movement.
    • Curzon was deeply racist, and convinced of Britain’s “civilizing mission” in India.
    • In 1901, he described Indians as having “extraordinary inferiority in character, honesty and capacity”.
    • He was deeply intolerant of Indian political aspirations.

    The Partition of Bengal

    • In July 1905, Curzon announced the partition of the undivided Bengal Presidency.
    • The Presidency was the most populous province in India, with around 8 crore people, and comprised the present-day states of West Bengal, Bihar, parts of Chhattisgarh, Odisha, and Assam, as well as today’s Bangladesh.
    • A new province of East Bengal and Assam was announced, with a population of 3.1 crore, and a Muslim-Hindu ratio of 3:2. Bengal, the western province, was overwhelmingly Hindu.
    • While the move was ostensibly aimed at making the administration of the large region easier, Curzon’s real intentions were far less benign.

    Aftermath of the partition

    • The partition provoked great resentment and hostility in Bengal.
    • It was clear to the Bengal Congress and patriotic Indians in both Bengal and elsewhere that Curzon’s motive was to crush the increasingly loud political voices of the literate class in the province, and to provoke religious strife and opposition against them.
    • But the protests against the partition did not remain confined to this class alone.
    • A campaign to boycott British goods, especially textiles, and promote swadeshi began.
    • There were marches and demonstrations with the protesters singing Bande Mataram to underline their patriotism and challenge the colonialists.
    • Samitis emerged throughout Bengal, with several thousand volunteers.
    • Rabindranath Tagore led the marches at many places, and composed many patriotic songs, most famously ‘Amar Sonar Bangla’ (My Golden Bengal), which is now the national anthem of Bangladesh.
    • The message of patriotism and Bengali nationalism was showcased in Jatras, or popular theatre.

    Scrapping of the partition

    • Curzon left for Britain in 1905, but the agitation continued for many years.
    • Partition was finally reversed in 1911 by Lord Hardinge in the face of unrelenting opposition.
  • Explained: The two holidays scrapped in Jammu and Kashmir

    The Govt. in J&K has cancelled two existing public holidays and introduced a new one. This is seen by some as a move against their own assertion of their religious identity.

    The three holidays

    • The government order has cancelled public holidays on December 5 and July 13.
    • December 5 is commemorated as the birth anniversary of Sheikh Mohd Abdullah, National Conference founder, former J&K Prime Minister, and former Chief Minister.
    • July 13 is observed as Martyrs’ Day in Jammu and Kashmir. On that date in 1931, 22 Kashmiris were killed outside the Srinagar Central Jail, where they had assembled to protest against autocratic Dogra rulers.
    • The new holiday is on October 26, the date in 1947 when the former state of Jammu and Kashmir acceded to the Dominion of India.
    • A day later, Indian troops reached Srinagar to drive out tribal raiders. October 27 is observed as a Black Day in Kashmir, marked with a shutdown.

    History & significance

    • In 1846, under the Treaty of Amritsar, the British sold J&K state to the Dogra king Maharaja Gulab Singh.
    • The Dogras hailed from Jammu and their rule lasted for over a century.
    • In 1931, Muslims of Jammu and Kashmir rose against the autocracy of Dogra rule.
    • The uprising, which led to the killing of 22 Muslims, is seen as the first assertion of Muslim identity in Jammu and Kashmir.

    Implications of the move

    • The move is seen as a departure from the politics of Jammu and Kashmir since 1939.
    • Many people see this as an effort to erase the role of Sheikh Abdullah, and J&K’s Muslim assertion.
    • They see it also as a refusal to recognise Kashmir’s popular Muslim leaders who sided with India in 1947, and leaders who continue to identify with India.
    • It also raises a question mark over the revival of a political process in Jammu and Kashmir.
    • The move comes when normalcy is yet to return even five months after the abrogation.
  • What is heritage erosion and how can we manage it?

    Heritage erosion has been seen as the greatest problem that undermines the socio-environmental stability and sustainability of India. To what extent it is serious and what suggestions can be made for its management.

    Answer direction

    What is meant by heritage erosion – Heritage erosion refers to the degradation defacing and crumbling of sculptures, architectural pieces, stealth and duplication of paintings and art forms, defacing of monuments and their replacement by land use changes, and erosion of genetic wealth, smuggling of bio wealth, loss of geomorphic features and any other form of degradation that lessens the respect for language, skills,  or psyches very unique to a niche place.

    Extent & magnitude of the problem – Heritage erosion is visible in the form of breakage of columnar basalts in St Marys islands, pilferage of dinosaur eggs from Dahaud, Use of tors for granite mining etc.

    How does it affect socio environmental stability & sustainability – What is meant by social instability and how is it determined?

    1. Loss of iconography resulting in loss of symbol of identity
    2. Loss of identity
    3. Apathy induced disenchantment from the symbols of history
    4. Reflects loss of values, loss of morality and reflects apathy.
    5. Pilferage of icon and vandalism will accompany gloom
    6. Increasing immunity and apathy towards aesthetic losses
    7. Environmental stability dependent on
    8. Existence of Natural and pristine Wealth in its pure state
    9. Increasing Interrelationship increasing interdependence between culture heritage economy & environment
    10. Environmental awareness
    11. Preservation of local wisdom
    12. Inability to change mindset

    Suggestions

    1. Separation of heritage in Administrative form, Create a separate ministry.
    2. Curriculum modification – Identification and inclusion of heritage as an asset in school, Open departments of Heritage management on the lines of Ahmadabad University
    3. Introduction of a compulsory offline and online training for tourists willing to undertake ventures.
    4. Heritage promotion to include not only historical monuments and culture, but fossil parks topography parks, terrain, monsoon bursts and other theme pack
    5. Heritage depiction and promotion through immersive technology & augmented reality
    6. Change the promotion tags from tourism to heritage wherever applicable
    7. Restoring the historical sites in the form of festivals and inducing festivity link perceptions
    8. Re-Classify heritage and announce awards for people with exceptional heritage sense.