Thursday, February 28, 2019

Impact of British Rule on India During 1857-1867

In Politics as in physical science, when star body impinges upon another the topic of the wedge is determined not solo by its force merely if besides by its duration. The improbability becomes crackinger when we have regard to the exceedingly veritable and complex civilization with which the British came into contact. That civilization is an amalgam of two ele custodyts, one Hindu and one Muslim and at first sight the Islamic element might seem to offer the greater resistance to alfresco cultivate.The uncompromising character of Islam is obvious, and in consonance with it the Muslims in India for a wide age resisted the impact of horse opera education, took but little to science or industry, and hardly every(prenominal)owed their beliefs or their course of intent to be influenced by the impudentlycomers. Hinduism, on the other hand, has protected itself throughout the centuries by its flexibility and its absorptive capacity. In the British occlusive European pu rview has profoundly affected the Hindus, with their great sensitivity to new ideas and invigorateual influences.They have become steeped in the Western scientific spirit they have so absorbed European semi semipolitical ideals as to forget their foreign origin and they have allowed even their supposition and understanding of their decl are history and philosophy to be transformed by Western learning. Nevertheless, modern India is essentially a Hindu country and during the latter(prenominal) half of the British period Hinduism itself, after centuries of stagnation, has experienced a powerful resurgence. Thus it is that in drug-addicted India is today governed in the main, not by Westernized intellects, but by men who regard themselves first and fore to the highest degree as Hindus.Both the main elements in Indian life and thought ar in concomitant highly self-protective and it might therefore have been thought that the relatively instruct impact of British rule would leav e little permanent mark. Nevertheless, or so of the evident effects of that rule have at least the display of permanence. In the first place, a strong and ubiquitous Central government, administering a uniform system of law with a high degree of efficiency, relentlessly compel homogeneity unknown in Indian history.The Tamil, the Bengali, and the Gujarati for the first time obeyed the same law and observed the same forms in their dealings with permit and in the process they were insensibly drawn closer together. Secondly, the introduction of side of meat education brought the upper middle classes under the influence of Western thought at a time when nationalism was the most vital reckon in the life of Europe, whilst at the same time the English wrangle provided them with a common medium of communication.In the third place, the Press, which was called into being by British example and influence, furnished Indians with a means of voicing their political aspirations, and so deve loping a common consciousness and knowledge of their growing strength. In all these ways, British rule fostered the growth of national feeling and build up a political unity not wholly dependent on the cohesive force provided by a strong foreign rule.The process was clearly not complete by 1947 or segmentation would not have been necessary and it is an interesting speculation as to whether, if the locomote to self-government had been slower, a unitary government would have been possible. The process of marriage has not been wholly advantageous, for the development of a strong Central Government has undermined those village institutions in which the political genius of India was most truly displayed.The villages of past and mediaeval India were to a great extent self-governing and the forms of democracy which operated in them were perhaps more(prenominal) vital than those which have been so laboriously imposed on India in modern times. The community settled its affairs by commo n consent and looked for no interference from outside as extensive as the revenue due to the ruler was paid. Civic consciousness was strong, and the way of life in rural India was gracious.Despite the protests of the wisest administrators, the East India Company steadily washed-up the political importance of the villages, and few things in British rule are more pathetic than the attempts, during the last seventy years, to re-create village institutions. It is only necessary to study the working of a modern District or Union Board, for example in Bengal, to realize how much India has lost by the over-centralization of authority. This loss must in fairness be set against the gain, which has resulted from political unity.Although it is in the political sphere that the influence of British thought has been most spectacular, equally important has been the impact of Western science. India at an early pose made great contributions to scientific knowledge, but in the Middle Ages her inte llectual life became stagnant and few signs of a true spirit of doubtfulness appeared. Nor did she experience anything even remotely comparable to that great revolution in ideas, which was brought about in Europe by such men as Galileo, Newton and Descartes. Except to a limited extent in the surface area of astronomy, scientific learning was rare and the scientific spirit non-existent.Thanks partly to Macaulays own vehemence, English became the medium of instruction, and through that medium, by the end of the century, the scientific spirit had been rekindled. The change has not been wholly for the better, for it has given a materialistic wrick to Indian thought and has introduced a worship of wealth, which was not present in the India of the Vedas or the Epics. On the other hand, intellectual India has received a new dynamic impulse and has become once again creative. For good or for ill, Western scientific thought has conditioned the Indian approach to all the problems of life, whether practical or speculative.The degree of conditioning, however, has not been uniform in all directions, and one of our most difficult problems is to determine how far Western influence has affected religious sentiment and philosophy. It may be said at once that Islam has been singularly unaffected and our question thus need only be considered in relation to Hinduism. British influence has reacted on Hinduism by leading a small but important section of highly educated Indians to abandon their traditional Hindu thought and feeling and to squeeze a Western outlook on life and philosophy.A second effect of British influence was the growth of re-formed sects such as the Brahmo Samaj, which aimed at a synthesis of the best in Hinduism and Christianity. They were of considerable importance in the nineteenth century, but, like the thoroughgoing occidentalists, they faded into the background in the twentieth century. Thus, without in the least intending to do so, the British revivifie d Hinduism after its long period of stagnation and uncertainty. In the villages and smaller towns Hinduism remains strongly entrenched, but in the north of India there are, nevertheless, some signs of change.Here and there are groups of men who extinguish the old taboos on intercaste dining while the respect paid to men of higher caste is not so profound or so universal as of old. Villagers no longer gather so oftentimes round the feet of the village pundits to hear the recitation of the great epics in which their traditions are enshrined. These signs must be neither exaggerated nor ignored. They do not fence rapid or revolutionary change, but they do mean that life and thought in the villages is no longer static.Outside events and trends of thought press more closely upon the Indian villager today than ever before and they are unbelievable to leave his beliefs and customs unchanged. Until the direction of the change becomes clear, no real legal opinion of British influence on Hinduism will be possible, but in the meantime it must be recognized that the intrusion of the outside military personnel into the villages is the direct result of British rule. References Ainslie Thomas Embree , 1962. Charles Grant and British convention in India George Allen & Unwin London. Anindyo Roy, 2005. Civility and Empire Literature and Culture in British India, 1822-1922 Routledge.New York. Jeffrey M. Diamond, 2004. Imperial Fault Lines Christianity and Colonial Power in India, 1818-1940. The Journal of the American Oriental Society. Volume 124. Issue 2. Page Number 383+. Martin Deming Lewis (Ed. ), 1962. British in India Imperialism or Trusteeship? D. C. Heath. Boston. Reginald Coupland, 1945. India A Re-Statement Oxford University Press London New York. Robert Carr, 2005. assignment & Repression British Rule in India 1857-1919 Robert Carr Assesses the Nature of British Rule in India during a Key, Transitional Phase. History Review. Issue 52. Page Number 28+

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