World’s Tastiest Vegetarian Dish….

Misal Pav, the delicious Maharashtrian snack served at Mumbai’s Aaswad restaurant won the prize at the global Foodie Hub Awards in London. 

The humble misal pav served at Dadar’s Aaswad restaurant has been named the world’s tastiest vegetarian dish at the Foodie Hub Awards in London.

Misal is a spicy curry made of moth beans or dried peas and served with boiled potatoes and garnished with raw chopped onions and farsan.

Often served with curds and pav (or bread), misal is a breakfast snack that is also eaten at lunchtime.

With its roots in the Kolhapur region of Maharashtra, the dish has several variations across the state.

Some variations get their names from the ingredients that go into it: Dahi Misal is misal served with curds and Shev Misal is, well, served with sev.

But most variations simply take the name from the region they are served in:

Puneri misal: Pune.

Khandheshi misal has its roots in Khandesh, the region in northwestern Maharashtra.

Nagpuri misal: Nagpur.

In Pune the spices are toned down but Mumbaikars prefer it spicy, says Kalyan Karmarkar who is the Foodie Hub Expert for Mumbai and who nominated Aaswad’s misal for the awards.

Kolhapur, largely believed to be the home of the misal, serves the spiciest variation of it and is called the Kolhapuri misal.

Located in the heart of Dadar in central Mumbai, just a hop-skip-and-jump from the headquarters of the Maharashtrian right wing political party, Shiv Sena, Aaswad was inaugurated by the late Bal Thackeray in 1986.

Today, Aaswad serves some 400 plates of misal pav every day.

Suryakant Sarjoshi, Aaswad’s owner who seems rather chuffed with this honour, tells us that it earns the restaurant about Rs 19,000 daily.

Then there is Vilas Taral who gives us a crash course in making the misal:

First moth beans, garlic and onions are boiled in water along with curry leaves.

Add grated coconut and misal masala and continue to boil.

Separately heat two tablespoons of oil and add mustard seeds, asafoetida, cumin seeds and garlic and add to the curry.

The final flourish comes in the form of farsan, sev, onions and tamarind chutney.

The dish is typically served with bread and butter.

Among several patrons of the restaurant is Vilas Gurav (62), a former police officer who was enjoying the dish when we arrived.

“I travelled all the way from south Mumbai just to have this misal. The quality is outstanding,” he says.

It is a sentiment that Kalyan Karmarkar echoes.

“Aaswad’s misal is always fresh, the amount of spices added is perfect and the quality of the farsan is very good. It doesn’t make you feel heavy because they don’t use inferior oil,” he says.

Besides misal, Aaswad is also famous for several other Maharashtrian dishes such as the thalipith, kothambir wadi, piyush and aam panna.

Aaswad
Shivaji Park, Dadar (W)
Mumbai
Tel: 022-2445-1871/2445-1876

As with all Indian dishes, misal is made differently across the state.

Every home has its unique misal recipe.

Source……www.rediff.com

natarajan

Message for the Day…” Start Practising Some Spiritual Discipline to realise HIM …”

These days, people are content to visualise and experience evanescent worldly joys. People have no rest. Spending the nights in sleep and days in eating and drinking, they grow and grow, until, in old age, death pursues them. Then, they can’t decide where to go or what to do; all senses have weakened. No one and nothing can rescue them, so they end as obedient meat in the jaws of death! How sad it is that this human life, precious as an invaluable diamond that can’t be priced at all, has been cheapened to the standard of a worn-out worthless coin! There is no use repenting later without meditating on God or practising some spiritual discipline to realise Him now. It is the right of the aspirant (sadhaka) to have the vision of God and not the sight of death (Yama-darshan)!

Sathya Sai Baba

Things You Probably do not Know about Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s Family Roots in India…

While history buffs may already be aware of this; for those who are not, Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s roots are currently set in the affluent business family of the Wadias.

Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the leader of All-India Muslim League and the founding father of Pakistan, married his second wife Maryam Jinnah (Rattanbai “Ruttie” Petit Jinnah) in the year 1918, who gave birth to their only child Dina Jinnah in the year 1919, in London. It is through Dina that we know of Jinnah’s roots today.

But what is to be noted in this father and daughter relationship is the low point that hit them both, before the partition phase. The low point? It was Dina’s decision of marrying a non-Muslim that drove her father against his own daughter and, became the triggering cause of disputes revolving around South Court (Jinnah House) located in Malabar Hills, Mumbai.

Read on to find more about the same and other important events that followed in the life of Jinnah’s daughter, now known as Dina Wadia.

Dina’s marriage to an Indian Parsi was the spark that lit the fire

DJW_1

From left to right- Fatima Jinnah (Jinnah’s sister), Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Dina Jinnah

Jinnah tried to dissuade his daughter, but she remained headstrong about

her decision to marry Neville Ness Wadia. Jinnah’s assistant at that time, M C Chagla, recalls that Dina even tried to counter her father saying “Father, there were millions of Muslim girls in India. Why did you not marry one of them?” And owing to the fact that her mother Maryam was coincidentally also a Parsi before marrying Jinnah, Jinnah replied, “She became a Muslim”. In fact, in the autobiography of M C Chagla, “Roses in December”, it is allegedly mentioned thatJinnah disowned his daughter for her this decision.

Apparently, he worried that if Dina married a Parsi, it would be she who will have to change her religion.

Her relationship with her father became extremely formal. Dina lived in Mumbai with her husband and gave birth to a boy and a girl. After her marriage, she did not visit Pakistan until September of 1948, when she had to be there to attend her father’s funeral.

The Jinnah Mansion Dispute

DJW_3

When Jinnah returned to India from London to take charge of the Muslim league, he got himself made a palatial mansion called South Court (Jinnah’s house) by a British architect, in 1936. Pakistan’s then President Parvez Musharraf expressed his interest to the then Indian Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee over acquiring the property and converting it into consulate. When Dina, who lived in NY then, got to know of this, she wrote to the PM saying that the mansion on the Malabar Hills should be handed to her and not to Pakistan.

Pakistani laws state that a person can be disinherited for violating Islamic rules and since Dina broke the Islamic law by marrying a Parsi, she can not claim her father’s property. However, to this, she countered through her counsel saying that Muslim law does not apply for her father who was a Khoja Shia (people from South Asia who converted to Islam) but instead, it is Hindu customary law that should technically be applied.

Dina’s second and final (till date) visit to Pakistan was in 2004

Dina with her son Nusli Wadia and grandsons Ness and Jehangir visited Lahore, Pakistan, in the year 2004 to watch Indo-PAK cricket match. Her this visit to Pakistan was straight after her first visit in 1948 and garnered a lot of public scrutiny. Dramatic talks of an old lady visiting as a foreigner, to a country founded by her own father, started going rampant. Although she and her son chose not to express their feelings to the public, they did visit the mausoleum of Jinnah, the museum located within the premises of the mausoleum, the tomb of her aunt Fatima, Flagstaff house Pakistan and her father’s house Wazir Mansion.

The Wadias as we know today

DJW_5

From left to right- Neville Ness Wadia (husband), Maureen Wadia (daughter-in-law), Jehangir (grandson), Nusli (son), Ness (grandson)

Dina’s husband Neville Ness Wadia, with whom she tied the knot defying her father and the religion’s laws, passed away in the year 1996. Neville was born in an already well established business family and succeeded his father as the chairman of Bombay Dyeing in 1952.

Nusli Wadia, Neville and Dina’s son, took over the company after his father’s retirement in 1977.

Ness and Jehangir are Nusli’s two sons. Now while we know Ness as the managing director of Bombay Dyeing and co-owner of IPL team Kings XI Punjab, Jehangir heads the budget airlines company Go Air.

 

Dina Wadia is the living legendary example of a strong woman who fought for what she believed in, even though it required her to go against the strict society norms of the early 90s.

Source.. Ananta Sharma in .www.storypick.com

Natarajan

” China’s First Aircraft carrier….Truth or Fiction …” ? …An Answer Here…

A forwarded email is getting circulated now  with images that says China has built its first aircraft carrier. The new ship is multi-hulled, a superstructure on two pontoons, and has two helipad below the stern.

The Truth:

China has introduced its first aircraft carrier but, according to a June 8, 2011 BBC News article, the vessel is nothing close to what is described in this eRumor.

The article said that the carrier is actually a refit of a Soviet carrier, named the Varyag, which was built in 1985 but was never completed.   The rusting hull was purchased from Russia in 1989 for $20,000,000U.S. and the semi-completed vessel now sits tied to a berth in the Chinese port of Dalian undergoing the finishing touches before her first cruise, which is anticipated in the next few months.   A life-sized model of the carrier was constructed on land several miles away so that the Chinese navy could train her crew while work was being completed on the new carrier.

 

The BBC also said that China does plan to build 6 more carriers in the next 10 to 20 years but no designs have been released to the public at this time.   Currently, the U.S. has 11 aircraft carriers in operation and Italy has 2.   The United Kingdom, France, Thailand, Brazil, Spain, Russia and India each have one carrier.

A real example of the eRumor as it has appeared on the Internet:

China’s new aircraft carrier! Wow!

These aircraft carriers look formidable and of ultra modern design. There are reports the 1st Chinese aircraft carrier is under construction and could enter service around 2015 or earlier. It won’t be long before we see the real thing. Defense analysts are waiting; watching anxiously.

“THIS IS QUANTUM LEAP ABOVE ANYTHING WE HAVE ON THE DRAWING BOARD. THEY HAVE THOUGHT ” OUTSIDE THE BOX ” ON THIS ONE. BETTER SPEED, LARGER CAPACITY, MUCH MORE STABLE, ETC. DEFINITELY A ” BLUE-WATER ” LONG REACH VESSEL.

PLUS THEY CAN SERVICE THEIR NUKE SUB FLEET IN-BETWEEN THE TWIN HULLS ( SIGHT UNSEEN ) OR EVEN LAUNCH AMPHIBIOUS OPPS FROM SAME. IT WILL BE LAUNCHED IN HALF THE TIME IT TAKES THE USA AT JUST ONE-THIRD THE COST. ADD THE NEW CHINESE STEALTH FIGHTER BOMBER ( NAVAL VERSION ALREADY FLIGHT TESTING ) IN THE MIX AND YOU HAVE THE MAKINGS OF A FORMIDABLE WEAPONS SYSTEM INDEED..

ALSO LOOK AT THAT EXTRA ”PARKING AND READINESS” STATION BETWEEN BOTH HULL STRUCTURES.. AND OF COURSE THE LAUNCHING AND LANDING CAPABILITIES FROM THE UTILISATION OF TWIN FLIGHT DECKS AT ONCE

P.S. SOME THOUGHT SHOULD BE GIVEN TO ADVISING YOUR GRANDCHILDREN TO LEARN TO SPEAK MANDARIN ( FORGET SPANISH ) MY ” VERY, VERY BRIGHT ” 15-YEAR OLD 3rd COUSIN HAS ALREADY BEEN ADVISED TO DO SO BY PEOPLE WHO KNOW ABOUT SUCH THINGS.

P.P.S SIX OF THESE VESSELS ( TWO PACIFIC, TWO ATLANTIC, ONE INDIAN OCEAN AND ONE MED SEA ) WOULD BE A PRETTY GOOD DIPLOMATIC ” BIG STICK “. NOTE : THE CHINESE ARE ALREADY DRILLING FOR OIL OFF CUBA . BRAZIL AND VENEZUELA . CAN THEY BUILD A FLEET OF THESE THINGS ???

A FEW FACTS: THE CHINESE HAVE COMPLETED THE WORLD’S BIGGEST DAM ( THREE GORGES ),
THE WORLD’S LONGEST OVER-WATER BRIDGE ( 65 TIMES AS MUCH STEEL AS IN THE EIFFEL TOWER ).
CONSTRUCTED A 15.000 ‘ HIGH RAILROAD INTO TIBET (ALL CONSIDERED MAJOR ENGINEERING FEATS).

THEY ARE THE ONLY NATION OTHER THAN RUSSIA THAT CAN LAUNCH MEN INTO OUTER SPACE ( OUR CAPABILITY ENDS WITH THE LAST SPACE SHUTTLE LAUNCH THIS MONTH ).
THEY HAVE ALSO SHOT DOWN A SURVEILLANCE SATELLITE ( ONE OF THEIR OWN ) FROM THE GROUND. PLUS THEY ” OWN OUR ASS ” IN THE INTERNATIONAL DEBT GAME.

CHINA’S NEW A/C CARRIER COULD BE TWICE AS FAST AS ANYTHING WE HAVE, PLUS THE STABILITY OF A CATAMARAN TYPE HULL WILL GREATLY REDUCE THE PITCHING, YAWING AND SWAYING COMMON TO OUR PRESENT DESIGNS.”

source….www.truthorfiction.com

natarajan

A Water Colour Painting Depicting Kanchi Maha Swamigal….

As we are all set to celebrate Sri Maha Periva’s Jayanthi , 2nd June, we are pleased to share this beautiful water-colour painting which is the creation of none other than our respected moderator and artist Sri Narayanan Bala (anusham163). On behalf of all members of our Forum, we thank him for this remarkable painting which in his own words depicts 1) Sri Maha Periva 2) His Divine feet, amidst 3)Sri Dhakshinamurthy, 4) Sri Kamakshi and 5) Sri AdhiSankarar

Source…………www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” What is ‘ Turiya ‘Stage in one’s Life …? “

They are, according to the Veda, four stages – the waking, dream, deep sleep, and the liberated stage (turiya). In the first stage, one is awake to the objective world and is oriented outward. Since one identifies with the gross body complex at this stage, the experiences are also gross. In the dream the self is in-faced. Reactions, responses, and experiences are all self-contained. They do not belong to the area outside of oneself. Next comes deep sleep (sushupti). This stage is free from even dreams. There is no feeling of either separation or identity, the particular or the universal, experiencer or experience. There is only the Atma, in which one has temporarily merged. In the fourth step (Turiya), the individual is no more so. It has attained the basic truth of life and of creation. Those who have reached this step no longer have concern with the individual self. These are four states one experiences, but they are also stages one has to go through in search of Self-Knowledge.

Sathya Sai Baba

படித்து ரசித்தது ….” வாழ்க்கைப் பயணம் …”

 

 

வாழ்க்கைப் பயணம்

அமெரிக்க தொழிலதிபரான ராக்ஃபெல்லர், முதுமையிலும் கடுமையாக உழைத்தவர். ஒருமுறை, விமானத்தில் பயணித்தார். அப்போதும் ஏதோ வேலையாக இருந்தவரைக் கண்டு அருகில் இருந்த இளைஞர் வியப்புற்றார். அவர், ”ஐயா, இந்த வயதிலும் இப்படிக் கடுமையாக உழைக்கத்தான் வேண்டுமா? ஏகப்பட்ட சொத்து சேர்த்து விட்டீர்கள்… நிம்மதியாக சாப்பிட்டு, ஓய்வெடுக்கலாமே?!” என்று ராக்ஃபெல்லரிடம் கேட்டார்.

உடனே ராக்ஃபெல்லர், ”விமானி இந்த விமானத்தை இப்போது நல்ல உயரத்தில் பறக்க வைத்து விட்டார். விமானமும் சுலபமாகப் பறக்கிறது. அதற்காக… இப்போது எஞ்ஜினை அணைத்துவிட முடியுமா? எஞ்ஜினை அணைத்துவிட்டால் என்னவாகும் தெரியுமா?” என்று கேட்டார்.

”பெரும் விபத்து நேருமே!”- பதற்றத்துடன் பதிலளித்தான் இளைஞன்.

இதைக் கேட்டுப் புன்னகைத்த ராக்ஃபெல்லர், ”வாழ்க்கைப் பயணமும் இப்படித்தான். கடுமையாக உழைத்து உயரத்துக்கு வர வேண்டியுள்ளது. வந்த பிறகு, ‘உயரத்தைத் தொட்டு விட்டோமே…’ என்று உழைப்பதை நிறுத்தி விட்டால், தொழிலில் விபத்து ஏற்பட்டு விடும். உழைப்பு என்பது வருமானத்துக்காக மட்டுமல்ல, உடல் ஆரோக்கியம் மற்றும் மன நிம்மதிக்காகவும்தான்!” என்று விளக்கம் அளித்தார்.

Source………………unknown…. input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

” Untold Story of Indians Served in World war 1….”

Over one million people served in various battlefronts during World War I. And yet, even today, we know so very little about them.’

‘It is absolutely essential to acknowledge this part of India’s colonial history,’ Santanu Das tells Vaihayasi Pande Daniel/Rediff.com  

Indian soldiers training with bayonets.

Image: Indian soldiers training with bayonets.
Photograph courtesy: Imperial War Museums

A little over 10 years ago Santanu Das, who teaches English at King’s College, London, and whose fascination with World War I began with its poetry, started, on a whim, researching the Indian involvement in that war.

The sheer breadth of the statistics that confronted him was startling. And the attendant historical poignancy, of the duty India discharged for Britain, fascinating!

Das was hooked.

His examination of the Great War veered from poetry and became increasingly historical as he delved further and further into the lives of the brave, sturdy Indian soldiers who left Indian shores for distant and strange parts of the world to fight a war they had little understanding of.

They discharged their duty diligently and mostly with distinction, thousands of them dying far from home.

The result of Das’s research is his most recent work, 1914-1918: Indian Troops In Europe(external link), a visual history based on rare archival photographs from Europe and India.

It was published in India by Mapin, January 2015, and will hit bookstores in the US and Europe September 25, to mark the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Battle of Loos, the major last battle fought by the Indian infantry on the Western Front before they were transferred to Mesopotamia.

Das was educated in Kolkata and Cambridge and is the author of Touch And Intimacy In First World War Literature(Cambridge, 2006) which was awarded the Philip Leverhulme Prize and is the editor of Race, Empire And First World War Writing (Cambridge, 2011) and theCambridge Companion To The Poetry Of The First World War (2013).

He is currently completing for Cambridge University Press a monograph titled India, Empire And The First World War: Words, Images, Objects And Music which formed the basis of a two-part series he presented for BBC Radio 4 titled Soldiers Of The Empire (external link).

Some of his archival material is showcased in a film titled From Bombay To The Western Front: Indian Soldiers Of The First World War (external link).

In an e-mail interview with Vaihayasi Pande Daniel/Rediff.com, Das describes, with a wealth of bittersweet details, the outstanding historical debt Britain owes the lowly but heroic Indian Sepoy:

How did you come to be interested in the history of Indian soldiers in World War I?

I was introduced to First World War poetry during my time at Presidency College, Kolkata.

It was while doing my first book, Touch And Intimacy In First World War Literature, that I became fully aware — and increasingly disturbed — by the enormity of the Indian involvement in the war and their erasure from ‘Great War and modern memory’. That was in 2004.

I then researched and found out that four million non-white men were drafted for the war in the European and American armies; over a million of them were Indians. And yet, even today, we know so very little about them. I became increasingly absorbed.

It was about this time — almost 10 years ago now — that I visited the French Institute at Chandernagore in West Bengal and discovered the broken and bloodstained glasses of ‘Jon’ Sen, the only non-white member of Leeds Pals Battalion, who was killed May 22, 1916. It was a revelation; there was no going back.

What particular challenges do we face in trying to recover the Indian experience of the First World War?

The majority of the Indian soldiers were semi-literate or non-literate and did not leave behind the abundance of diaries, memoirs, poems or novels that form the cornerstone of European memory of the First World War.

Indian soldiers, wounded during World War I, convalesce in England

Indian soldiers, wounded during World War I, convalesce in England. Photograph courtesy: British Library

Of course, we have the censored letters of the Indian soldiers: they were dictated by the sepoys to the scribes or occasionally written by the sepoys themselves, then translated and extracted by the colonial censors in order to judge the morale of the troops, and these extracts have survived today.

They are important documents, but are also problematic sources because of the process of mediation. Some of these letters are collected in a very helpful anthology by David Omissi (Indian Voices Of The Great War, 1914-1918).

In addition to these, we have hundreds of photographs of the Indian troops — in trenches, fields, farms, billets, markets, towns, cities, railway stations, hospitals, prisoners-of-war camps. Though framed by the European gaze, they are some of the most eloquent testimonies and capture most vividly the daily texture of their lives. In the absence of substantial written documents, these photographs break the silence around them.

Indeed, this is what prompted me to compile these photographs from various archives in India and Europe (France, Belgium, Britain and Germany) for my visual history 1914-1918 Indians Troops In Europe. A selection of pictures from this book can be found at here(external link).

Why are the Indian soldiers forgotten?

After the devastation of the war, Europe naturally turned its attention to its own dead, wounded and bereaved; the colonial contribution, visible and acknowledged during the war years, became increasingly sidelined in the post-war years in the ‘Great War and (European) memory’.

On the other hand, in India, the country’s involvement in the First World War was immediately followed — and gradually eclipsed — by a general sense of betrayal and disillusionment with British rule, the anti-Rowlatt act demonstrations and the massacre at Amritsar (Jallianwala Bagh) in 1919 and the gradual rise of the anti-colonial nationalist movement under the leadership of Gandhi.

In post-Independence years, the nationalist narrative understandably supplanted and almost erased the country’s participation in an imperial war. So the Indian contribution to the First World War gets written out of both the European and Indian narratives.

Yet, we are talking about the experience of over one million people who served in the various battlefronts during the First World War; it is absolutely essential to acknowledge their experience and this part of India’s colonial history.

In 1914-1918: Indian Troops In Europe (Mapin, 2015), I focussed on the most visible group — the ones who fought on the Western Front — through rare photographs from various archives across India and Europe.

In India And The First World War: Objects, Images, Words And Music, to be published by Cambridge next year, I seek to weave together the first socio-cultural history on the subject.

India’s involvement in the First World War cannot be confined to a narrow ‘military history,’ but has to be integrated into a much broader framework of cultural, social and political history.

However, to recover the Indian war experience does not, and in my view should not, involve any attempt to ‘glorify’ an imperial — or for that matter any — war or ‘celebrate’ the achievements of these soldiers. We are talking about traumatic events.

Moreover, these sepoys were the sentinels of the empire, let that be clearly acknowledged at the outset. Yet it is important to understand and analyse their involvement in the war without trying in any way to whitewash the ills of colonialism or falling prey to post-imperial nostalgia in any way.

Indeed we should try to understand the imperial war effort and the nationalist struggle in an expanded frame of reference that bears witness to the country’s complex and contradictory histories.

Indian bicycle troops at Somme, France, during World War I.

Image: Indian bicycle troops in Somme, France, during World War I.
Photograph courtesy: Wikimedia Commons

What are some of the most interesting nuggets of history that you might have uncovered about the Indian soldier in WWI during your research?

I have been researching this subject for nearly 10 years now.

In the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, I came once across a page in the diary of an Australian private where an Indian soldier had signed his name ‘Pakkar Singh’ in Urdu, Gurmukhi and English.

The most moving artefact I found was a pair of broken, bloodstained glasses belonging to ‘Jon’ Sen the only non-white member of the famous Leeds Pals Battalion — who was killed May 22, 1916. The discovery of the glasses led to a lot of media interest both in the UK and in India and to a short BBC documentary (external link).

A search through my extended family and friends in my hometown, Kolkata, revealed the war mementos of Captain Dr Manindranath Das: his uniform, whistle, brandy bottle and tiffin box, as well as the Military Cross he was awarded for tending to his men under perilous circumstances. Das was one among several distinguished doctors from the Indian Medical Services who served in Mesopotamia.

Over the years, I have had many such finds. I found this particular archival part of the research immensely moving: these objects are the mute witnesses to the war experiences of these men, the repository of what in my first book I call ‘touch and intimacy’.

Approximately how many Indians fought in World War I?

Although I provide more detailed figures in my book 1914-1918: Indian Troops In Europe, here are some rough statistics.

Between August 1914 and December 1919, India recruited, for purposes of war, 877,068 combatants and 563,369 non-combatants, making a total of 1,440,437 recruits; of them, over a million, including 621,224 combatants and 474,789 non-combatants, served overseas during this timeframe.

These included the infantry, artillery and cavalry units as well as sappers, miners and signallers, Labour and Porter Corps, Supply and Transport Corps, Indian Medical Service and Remount and Veterinary Services.

Where did they serve? Which battlefields?

During the war years, undivided India (which would today comprise India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Burma) sent overseas seven expeditionary forces: the Indian Expeditionary Force A to Europe, IEFs B and C to East Africa, IEF D to Mesopotamia, IEFs E and F to Egypt and IEF G to Gallipoli.

In the course of the war, they served in almost all parts of the world — from the mud-clogged trenches of the Western Front and the vast tracts of Mesopotamia to the tetse-fly infested savannah of East Africa and the shores of Gallipoli; they also served in East and West Persia, Palestine, Egypt, Salonika, Aden, Tsingtao and Trans-Caspia.

Indeed, to follow the routes of the Indian sepoy during the First World War is to trace its global course.

Parisians cheer Indian soldiers after the Bastille Day Parade.

Image: The cover of Das’s latest book shows Parisians cheering Indian soldiers after the Bastille Day Parade.
Photograph courtesy: Santanu Das

What parts of India did they hail from? And what strata of society?

In 1914, India had the largest voluntary army in the world.

But the men were recruited from a very narrow strata of its huge population, comprising largely the peasant-warrior classes spread across northern and central India, the North-West Frontier Province, as well as the kingdom of Nepal, in accordance with the prevalent colonial theory of ‘martial races’.

A combination of shrewd political calculation, indigenous notions of caste and imported social Darwinism, it formed the backbone of British army recruitment in India.

It deemed that certain ethnic groups — such as Pathans, Dogras, Jats, Garwahlis, Gurkhas — were ‘naturally’ more war-like than others. These communities had often low literacy rates, were traditionally loyal and thus least likely to challenge the British Raj — very different from the politically active and articulate Bengalis who were cast as ‘effeminate’ and barred from joining the army.

Of its 600,000 combatants, more than half came from the Punjab (now spread across India and Pakistan) which saw some of the most intense recruitment campaigns.

How many casualties were there and what happened to their remains? 

Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the World War I Memorial in Neuve-Chapelle, France, April 11, 2015. Photograph: Press Information Bureau

Image: Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the World War I Memorial in Neuve-Chapelle, France, April 11, 2015. Photograph: Press Information Bureau  

It is difficult to provide a precise figure for the number of Indians killed and wounded in the First World War. Between 60,000 and 70,000 of these men were killed.

If one visits the battlefields of the Western Front, one comes across gravestones with their names and inscriptions etched in the appropriate language and carefully maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission — not to mention the names of the Indians killed etched on the Menin Gate itself at Ypres.

One of the most moving places in the Western Front is the beautiful Indian memorial at Neuve Chapelle dedicated to the memory of the 4,700 Indian soldiers and labourers who have no known graves.

In the war cemetery in Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania (then German East Africa), I have seen huge memorial tablets with the names of Indian combatants and non-combatants, but not a single gravestone. However I don’t know whether these men were cremated or the remains of these men were not found or it was decided as a matter of colonial (discriminatory) policy to commemorate them only on memorial tablet rather than bury them with individual gravestones (as with the white soldiers buried and honoured in the same cemetery in Dar-es-Salaam).

I understand that while the Indian soldiers, killed in Europe, were commemorated with individual gravestones, those — particularly the privates — killed in Mesopotamia and East Africa were denied such honour.

On the other hand, in Britain, where some of the wounded soldiers died, they were either buried in the Woking Cemetery or cremated at Patcham in the Sussex Downs, with appropriate religious rites.

In Iraq, the names of the Indian fallen are etched on the Basra Memorial. So the practice varied widely and it is difficult to pinpoint the exact impulses at work — sometimes it was race, sometimes religion, sometimes it was where they died, and sometimes a matter of contingency and the whim of the local authority.

In 2011, I edited a book, Race, Empire And First World War Writing. (Noted social theorist and an expert on the cultural and social history of World War I) Michele Barrett explores some of these issues in the ‘afterword’ to the book.

And what happened to the families left behind in India?

Devastation presumably, as with hundreds of thousands of families around the world, but we do not know the precise details. Many of the families these soldiers came from villages dotted around northern and north-west India and the North-West Frontier province. They were non-literate and hence have not left memoirs or diaries or letters.

There’s the extraordinary and immensely moving local tradition of songs of mourning sung by the village women which give us some insight into the grief and devastation the war caused across parts of North India, particularly in the province of Punjab.

The Punjabi poet Amarjit Chandan collected some of these songs. One of the songs goes (originally in Punjabi, here in Chandan’s translation):

War destroys towns and ports, it destroys huts
I shed tears, come and speak to me
All birds, all smiles have vanished
And the boats sunk
Graves devour our flesh and blood.

A few years ago, I interviewed Punjabi novelist Mohan Kahlon in Kolkata. He mentioned how his two uncles — peasant-warriors from Punjab — perished in Mesopotamia, and how his grandmother became deranged with grief. In the village, their house came to be branded aspagal khana (the mad house).

If you have any Indian First World War anecdote, papers or objects, please feel free to contact Santanu Das at santanu.das@kings.ac.uk

1914-1918: Indian Troops in Europe, by Santanu Das will be published (external link) in the US and Europe on September 25, 2015, to mark the 100th anniversary of the beginning of The Battle of Loos, by Mapin Publishing in hardback.

Vaihayasi Pande Daniel / Rediff.com

source….www.rediff.com
natarajan

Message For the Day….” Who can Merge in ‘SIVA’….”

Yama (Lord of Death) is as omnipresent as Siva! Yama is associated with the body (deha); He cannot affect the individual soul (jiva). The body is the essential vehicle for the individual soul to understand its real nature. Still, who knows when it may become the target for the attention of Yama, the master of the body? Who knows when this body will get entrapped in the coils of Yama’s ropes? The individual soul, burdened with this easily destructible body, must pay attention to this fact and be all-eager to merge in Siva! People usually procrastinate tasks – yesterday’s tasks are delayed to today and today’s tasks to tomorrow. But the tasks of spiritual discipline are not of such a nature. The minute that just elapsed is beyond your grasp; so too, the approaching minute is not yours! Only that individual soul which has this understanding engraved in its heart can merge in Siva.

Sathya Sai Baba