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'The Rising: The Ballad of Mangal Pandey'
Daily Mail, August 27, 2005
A Lottery-funded film on the Indian
Mutiny shows the rebels as heroes - and (surprise, surprise) the British
as sadists. In fact, the mutineers were ruthless butchers who massacred
women, children and even their own countrymen with savage zeal
TO THE steady beat of drums, the captured mutineers were
first stripped of their uniforms and then tied to cannons, their bellies
pushed
hard against the gaping mouths of the big guns. The order to fire was
given.
With an enormous roar, all the cannons burst into life at once,
generating
a
cloud of black smoke that snaked into the summer sky.
When the smoke cleared, there was nothing left of the mutineers'
bodies
except their arms, still tied to the cannons, and their blackened
heads,
which landed with a soft thud on the baking parade ground.
It was a terrible way to die and a terrible sight to witness, but the
minds
of the British soldiers and loyal Indian troops who solemnly attended
these
executions were still scorched by the even greater horrors they'd
encountered
in the suppression of the Mutiny that had raged since the previous summer.
Horrors like the old well at Cawnpore in north-eastern India,
filled
with
the remains of 200 white women and children who had been hacked to
pieces
in
a tiny single-storey house known as the Bibigarh.
It had taken five men, some of them professional butchers,
an hour to
finish
this grisly work on the order of rebel leader Nana Sahib.
Later, when the British recaptured Cawnpore and discovered
the well,
they
forced the mutineers they'd captured to lick the dried blood off the
floors
and walls of the Bibigarh.
Then they hanged them - a manner of execution that was considered
much
more degrading than the old Mughal method of being blown apart by a
cannon.
Whether it is the women and children dismembered at Cawnpore,
or the
mutineers executed in the bloody and often discriminate reprisals theat
followed the uprising, the imagery of the Indian Mutiny of 1857 (in
which
between 100,000 and 150,000 people died) is still extraordinarily lurid
in
its bloody horror. Jan Morris, the great popular historian of the
British
Empire, rightly called it 'this most horrible of imperial wars'.
The savage mass murder of Europeans by the native soldiers
of the
Bengal
Army was matched by the fury of the British and their Sikh and Ghurka
allies
after the rebellion was put down.
Their vengeance became known as the Devils' Wind. Whole
villages were
burned
and their inhabitants hanged.
And when it was all over, relations between the Britons
of the Raj and
the
people of India would never be the same, and the East India Company,
the
private trading corporation that had governed two-thirds of India for
a
hundred years, would finally transfer all its powers to the British
Crown.
Now a new film made in India, and currently on release in
Britain, has
ignited controversy once more with its depiction of the Mutiny's
beginnings.
The Rising: The Ballad Of Mangal Pandey, which stars British
actor
Toby
Stephens and Bollywood leading man Aamir Khan, purports to tell the
story
of
Pandey, an Indian soldier in the army of the British Raj, who was one
of
the
first mutineers and whom the film depicts as a heroic socialist
revolutionary leader in the mould of Che Guevara.
Nationalist myths are blatantly presented as historical
truth,
grotesquely
misrepresenting the way the East India Company ruled India and the real
causes of the Indian Mutiny.
And what makes the anti-British propaganda all the more
galling is
that
the
film was partially funded by the UK Film Council with £150,000 from
Lottery
funds.
The Indian Mutiny started in May 1857 in the town of Meerut,
after 85
Indian
soldiers or Sepoys in the Bengal Army - one of the East India Company's
three
private armies which were under the command of British officers - were
arrested for refusing to use the new rifle cartridges they'd been
provided
with.
They believed the cartridges had been greased with pig or
cow fat, and
that
it was therefore against their religion to touch them.
The Sepoys were sentenced to ten years' hard labour but
were freed
from
jail
by their comrades.
Open revolt followed with the massacre of the Europeans
in the town
before
the mutineers headed to Delhi, where they appealed to Bahadur Shah,
heir to
the old Mughal Empire and King of Delhi, to become their leader.
The Sepoy garrison in Delhi joined the Mutiny, slaying their
European
officers and any Christian civilians they could find.
Fifty British, Indian Christian and mixed-race prisoners, mostly women
and
children, were taken to a dungeon in the famous palace known as the Red
Fort
and cut to pieces in front of Bahadur Shah.
Following the fall of Delhi, most of the Indian regiments
of the
Bengal
Army
joined the revolt.
It didn't help that the myth of British military invincibility
had
been
progressively tarnished in the preceding years, first by the retreat
from
Kabul in 1842 and then by the news of British disasters in the Crimean
War.
The mutiny spread to the garrison towns of Cawnpore and
Lucknow, where
British soldiers and civilians were besieged by Sepoys.
In Cawnpore, they surrendered after three weeks, only to
be massacred.
The city was recaptured three weeks later and the butchery of the
town's
European women and children in the well uncovered.
In Lucknow, the Europeans took refuge in the official residence
and
managed
to hold out until a relief force arrived in August, which was then
itself
besieged.
Lord Colin Campbell eventually recaptured the city with
a largely
Ghurka
force in March 1858.
Delhi was retaken by the legendary cavalryman John Nicholson, leading
a
force of fierce Sikhs and Pathan troops from the newly- conquered
Punjab,
some of whom worshipped him as the demigod 'Nikal Seyn'.
After the relief of Lucknow, the British slowly retook all
the areas
of
central India they had lost.
To their relief, the Mutiny never spread to the south or
to any of the
country's great cities - Madras, Bombay and Calcutta.
Indeed, the great majority of Indians either stood neutral
or actively
helped the British.
The immediate cause of the Mutiny had been a rumour. This
rumour, so
powerful and persistent that it may have been deliberately spread, was
that
the East India Company was forcing Sepoys to use rifle cartridges
greased
with pig and cow fat.
If this were true, it would have meant that both Muslims
and Hindus
would
be
defiled by the ammunition, because to load the new rifles the soldiers
had
to
bite off the tops of the paper cartridges and then pour powder down the
gun
barrel.
Pork is considered impure by Muslims, while Hindus venerate
cows and
will
not touch beef.
But the rumour wasn't true.
The Company was well aware of Muslim and Hindu sensitivities
after
commanding Indian soldiers for more than a century and a half, and it
made
sure that only European troops were issued with cartridges greased in
animal
fat. The Sepoys were given ones greased with beeswax.
However, the rumour was unstoppable, partly because it reinforced
the
existing fear that the British were plotting to impose Christianity on
India,
a fear deepened by the growing number of missionaries arriving there.
But in the new film, the old lie about the cartridges is
resuscitated
and
treated as historical truth.
Indeed, it shows British commanders deliberately forcing
thousands of
Sepoys
to use the cartridges.
It's a twisting of history akin to depicting a French victory
at
Trafalgar.
And that's just one of the grotesque distortions in this
crudely
nationalistic epic, crammed with anachronisms - and, incidentally, the
most
expensive movie ever made in India.
Juvenile anti-British caricatures are par for the course
in Indian
films
and
books that deal with the Raj, and many Indians know their own history
only
in
terms of the nationalist myths fabricated by the independence movement
of
the
1940s.
But The Rising goes further. In its casual rewriting of
history, the
film
belongs to the more reprehensible category of historical reconstruction
-
similar to Mel Gibson's movie Patriot in 2000, which had British
redcoats
behaving like the German SS, herding civilians into a church and
setting it
on fire.
You would never guess from The Rising that the Mutiny left
two thirds
of
the
subcontinent untouched, that two of the East India Company's three huge
armies remained loyal, and that the Mutiny was much closer to an Indian
civil
war than to a revolution.
Certainly, there is no hint in it that the Sepoys committed
terrible
atrocities, or that their motives for mutiny were often distinctly
unromantic
and far from progressive.
For one thing, being high caste Brahmins, many of the Bengal
Army
Sepoys
resented the new British policy of recruiting Sikhs and Pathans from
the
Punjab.
At the same time, strict British rules governing promotion
on grounds
of
seniority also made it hard for talented Indian officers to rise in the
service.
They also feared that their days of (relatively) high wages
bolstered
by
plunder were coming to an end now that almost all the subcontinent was
united
under British rule.
In the film, Pandey and his comrades are outraged when evil
British
officers
buy Indian slave girls for army brothels and destroy villages for
trying to
break a British monopoly on opium production.
In truth, slavery had been banned by the British in India.
Where it
did
exist, it was practised only by Indians. As for villages destroyed for
the
sake of
the East India Company's opium profits, there is no record of such a
thing
ever taking place.
It was the new large-scale cultivation of tea, not opium,
that made
fortunes
for the Company.
However, a moronic Marxism pervades the script. There's
much talk
about
the
way the Indian peasants are oppressed by the East India Company's
monopolies
('They call it a free market,' one of the characters says
sarcastically).
But the East India Company had actually lost its monopoly
on trade
from
India 25 years before the mutiny.
In fact, one of the underlying reasons for the Mutiny was
the way that
British reformers had undermined traditionally powerful groups such as
Brahmin landowners and zamindar moneylenders in favour of the poor
peasants. The high caste Sepoys resented this.
Also - and the film does admit this, in one of its rare
moments of
honesty
-
the British had angered conservative Hindu opinion by banning suttee
(the
practice of forcing widows to die in the funeral fires of their
husbands)
and
female infanticide, and by encouraging widespread Western-style
education.
At times, the film's distortions are almost comical. The
Sepoys are
portrayed as being appalled at the thought of firing on their fellow
countrymen.
In fact, fighting other Indians was all Indian soldiers
had done for
centuries.
And not only did the British retain the loyalty of the vast majority
of
their Indian armies during 1857-8, they could not have put down the
Mutiny
without the assistance of thousands of Indian troops.
After all, there were only about 45,000 British soldiers in India even
after
reinforcements arrived in 1858.
As for Mangal Pandey himself, in the film he is shown killing
several
British officers and leading an armed rebellion.
He never, in fact, killed anyone.
Nor did he lead a revolt. He was responsible for a one-man mutiny on
March
29, 1857, when he shot at his European sergeant major and wounded an
English
officer before trying and failing to commit suicide.
After a court martial by his fellow Indian troops - not by British
officers
as shown in the film - he was hanged, and his regiment, the 34th Native
Infantry, disbanded.
'Pandey' became British Army slang first for mutineers and
later for
Indian
soldiers in general Although The Rising claims the Indian Mutiny was
the
'bloodiest rebellion in human history', this is historical illiteracy.
At
the
very worst, 150,000 people may have died, while the Taiping Rebellion
in
China in the same period killed almost 20 million.
Some measure of the size of the conflict can be gained from
the fact
that
2,757 British troops were killed in battle, while 8,000 died from
sunstroke
and diseases. And this was one war in which British troops did not have
superior weapons or tactics to those of their enemy.
The film's contention that the Mutiny inspired Gandhi's
independence
movement is also nonsense: he saw it as violent and reactionary, and
was
inspired by the peaceful reformers of the period.
[Perhaps the creepiest sequence in the film comes at its climax. After
Indian peasants enraged at Pandey's hanging hurl themselves on his
executioners, you see them set a Christian church on fire. The whole
scene
is an invention. And given the recent spate of murders of Christian
missionaries and priests by Hindu fanatics in India, and by Muslim
fanatics
in Pakistan, there's something troubling and repellent about the
filmmakers' evident approval of the destruction of a Christian house of
worship. ' ]
For the most part 'The Rising' is history as Leftwing Indian
nationalists
wish it to
have been, not as it really was.
As Saul David, the acclaimed author of The Indian Mutiny
has pointed
out,
the film invents a ruthless fantasy-Raj, against which patriotic
Indians of
all religions, ethnicities and castes unite to fight for freedom,
thanks to
Mangal Pandey's supposed vision of a free, democratic India.
The truth is very different, and it is sad that even as
India rises to
become a modern world power, its filmmakers remain stuck in a post-
colonial
time warp, depicting their country's fascinating past in such a crude,
dishonest and
simplistic way.
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