Siraj ud-Daulah
Sins of East
India Company Exposed
·
Grave injustice to the character and private lives of the Indian
rulers
· Company squeezed as large fortune
as possible quickly out of country
Dr. Hari Desai
Siraj
ud-Daulah was one of the most famous and the last self-governing Nawab of
Bengal, Bihar and Odisha. Under his reign, which lasted from 9 April 1756 to 23
June 1757, Siraj ud-Daulah stood his
ground against the British ‘East India Company,’ which had begun capturing
parts of Bengal. Siraj ud-Daulah was one of those few Indian rulers who knew
the intention of the British right from the beginning, which prompted him to
act against British colonization in Bengal. Siraj ud-Daulah’s strong resistance
against the British led to the famous ‘Battle of Plassey,’ during which the
Nawab of Bengal was deceived by a group of his own men, headed by Mir Jafar. The Nawab met the English on the
battle of Plassey on 23 June 1757 but was so easily defeated in the
battlefield.
The English
gained the victory due to the conspiracy and the treason within
Siraj-ud-Daulah’s camp. Any army, of which the commander-in-chief had been won
over and took no part in the battlefield, can hardly offer spirited contest. On
his way to Patna the Nawab was caught by a follower of Mir Jaffar and killed by
an Iranian guard at the instance of Miran (son of Mir Jafar) on the night
preceding 3 July 1757. The company appointed Mir Jaffar as the new Nawab of
Bengal. The defeat of the Nawab marked the beginning of the English era in
Bengal and gradually the entire subcontinent surrendered its destiny to the
East India Company.
Pandit
Sunderlal, the celebrated historian and a confident of Mahatma Gandhi writes: “Siraj-ud-Daula
has been described in English history books as a licentious profligate and
drunkard of the worst type. Siraj-ud-Daula, in deference to the death-bed
advice of his maternal grandfather, Alivardi Khan, never touched liquor since
the day of his ascending the throne up to the last day of his life. (Scrafton’s
Reflections, as quoted in Banglar Itihas, Nawabi Amal by Kali Prasanna
Bandopadhyaya.) His private life was unblemished except possibly for such
weakness as were common to the lives of 99% of Indian or British rulers of that
day. Similarly, grave injustice has been done to the character and private
lives of Mir Kassim, Haider Ali, Tipu Sulatan, Nand Coomar, and other Indian
heroes and heroines.”
At least 90%
of the books on the history of India prescribed in the curriculums of Indian
schools and colleges, particularly till the end of the first half of the 20th
century had no greater factual value than ordinary fiction, records Sunderlal
in “How India Lost Her Freedom”. He adds, “Such works of history are extremely
harmful and have exerted and are exerting an extremely poisonous influence on
the developing mind of Indian youth.”
The history
books prepared during that period did mention that India had always been an
object of invasion by foreign people through its north-western frontiers. The
Muslim invaders of India are described as a barbarous and fanatical people who
had for a thousand years before the advent of the British, subjected India to
their tyrannical rule, had destroyed the ancient Hindu religion and culture and
forcibly converted to Islam crores of Indians. The Muslim rulers were branded
by nature only licentious and fanatical pillagers. Even the greatest and best
of the Moghul Emperors are painted as hypocritical and hostile to Hindus.
Hinduism and to Hindustan. The Indians are told that the Muslims did no good to
India and that the period of their rule had absolutely nothing to its credit!
Panditji
quotes the European historians and writers extensively to expose the sinister
designs of the East India Company whose only goal ‘was to squeeze as large as
possible a fortune out of the country as quickly as might be’.
Sins of East India Company Exposed
Reviewed by Dr.Hari Desai
on
June 14, 2019
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