How the English allowed 1 million Indians to die of famine in 1865

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Viewpoint: How British let one million Indians die in famine
By Dinyar PatelHistorian
  • 11 June 2016
  • From the sectionIndia
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Image copyrightALAMY
Image captionAntique print of Indian famine victims, 1885
It has been a difficult summer for India.

Drought and a searing heat wave have affected an astonishing 330 million people across the country.

But this summer also marks the 150th anniversary of a far more terrible and catastrophic climatic event: the Orissa famine of 1866.

Hardly anyone today knows about this famine. It elicits little mention in even the densest tomes on Indian history.

There will be few, if any, solemn commemorations. Yet the Orissa famine killed over a million people in eastern India.

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Image copyrightALAMY
Image captionFamine in India, 1900
In modern-day Orissa state, the worst hit region, one out of every three people perished, a mortality rate far more staggering than that caused by the Irish Potato Famine.

The Orissa famine also became an important turning point in India's political development, stimulating nationalist discussions on Indian poverty. Faint echoes of these debates still resonate today amid drought-relief efforts.

'No relief was the best relief'
Famine, while no stranger to the subcontinent, increased in frequency and deadliness with the advent of British colonial rule.

The East India Company helped kill off India's once-robust textile industries, pushing more and more people into agriculture. This, in turn, made the Indian economy much more dependent on the whims of seasonal monsoons.

One hundred and fifty years ago, as is the case with today's drought, a weak monsoon appeared as the first ill omen.

"It can, we fear, no longer be concealed that we are on the eve of a period of general scarcity," announced the Englishman, a Calcutta newspaper, in late 1865.

The Indian and British press carried reports of rising prices, dwindling grain reserves, and the desperation of peasants no longer able to afford rice.

All of this did little to stir the colonial administration into action. In the mid-19th Century, it was common economic wisdom that government intervention in famines was unnecessary and even harmful. The market would restore a proper balance. Any excess deaths, according to Malthusian principles, were nature's way of responding to overpopulation.

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Image copyrightALAMY
Image captionPhotograph of the 1900 famine in India
This logic had been used with devastating effect two decades beforehand in Ireland, where the government in Britain had, for the most part, decided that no relief was the best relief.

On a flying visit to Orissa in February 1866, Cecil Beadon, the colonial governor of Bengal (which then included Orissa), staked out a similar position. "Such visitations of providence as these no government can do much either to prevent or alleviate," he pronounced.

'Too late, too rotten'
Regulating the skyrocketing grain prices would risk tampering with the natural laws of economics. "If I were to attempt to do this," the governor said, "I should consider myself no better than a dacoit or thief." With that, Mr Beadon deserted his emaciated subjects in Orissa and returned to Kolkata (Calcutta) and busied himself with quashing privately funded relief efforts.

In May 1866, it was no longer easy to ignore the mounting catastrophe in Orissa. British administrators in Cuttack found their troops and police officers starving. The remaining inhabitants of Puri were carving out trenches in which to pile the dead. "For miles round you heard their yell for food," commented one observer.

As more chilling accounts trickled into Calcutta and London, Mr Beadon made a belated attempt to import rice into Orissa. It was, with cruel irony, hindered by an overabundant monsoon and flooding. Relief was too little, too late, too rotten. Orissans paid with their lives for bureaucratic foot-dragging.

For years, a rising generation of western-educated Indians had alleged that British rule was grossly impoverishing India. The Orissa famine served as eye-popping proof of this thesis. It prompted one early nationalist, Dadabhai Naoroji, to begin his lifelong investigations into Indian poverty.

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Image copyrightALAMY
Image captionUndated picture of Indian famine victims
As the famine abated in early 1867, Mr Naoroji sketched out the earliest version of his "drain theory"—the idea that Britain was enriching itself by literally sucking the lifeblood out of India.

"Security of life and property we have better in these times, no doubt," he conceded. "But the destruction of a million and a half lives in one famine is a strange illustration of the worth of the life and property thus secured."

Indifferent response
His point was simple. India had enough food supplies to feed the starving - why had the government instead let them die? While Orissans perished in droves in 1866, Mr Naoroji noted that India had actually exported over 200m pounds of rice to Britain. He discovered a similar pattern of mass exportation during other famine years. "Good God," Mr Naoroji declared, "when will this end?"

It did not end anytime soon. Famines recurred in 1869 and 1874. Between 1876 and 1878, during the Madras famine, anywhere from four to five million people perished after the viceroy, Lord Lytton, adopted a hands-off approach similar to that employed in Ireland and Orissa.

By 1901, Romesh Chunder Dutt, another leading nationalist, enumerated 10 mass famines since the 1860s, setting the total death toll at a whopping 15 million. Indians were now so poor - and the government so indifferent in its response - that, he stated, "every year of drought was a year of famine."

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Image copyrightALAMY
Image captionUndated picture of an Indian village in a famine-affected district
A wealthier, less agriculturally dependent India is now able to ensure that this does not happen. Significant problems remain: the Indian Supreme Court recently upbraided some state governments for their "ostrich-like attitude" towards the current drought.

For such reasons, it is all the more important to remember the Orissa Famine today. This humanitarian disaster, and the others that followed, galvanized Indians into fighting against British colonial rule.

Framing and implementing a robust national drought policy, as the Supreme Court has ordered, will be a fitting way to commemorate the million Indians who perished 150 years ago.


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you ever been to India ?

how many people from India do you know personally ?

I'd say more black folks running to marry white ass than people from India
As a matter of fact I have been to India and I live and work in Northern VA. There's a huge Indian population here and I work with many, many people from there. They are very proud of their assimilation into white society here and are standoffish from the black people in my office. Also if you've ever been to London you will see Indians trying to be British everywhere! That's not to say black folks don't have their own assimilation problems, but the higher you go in Indian culture the more they seek to emulate their white conquerors. Kinda like a lot of successful black people.
 
I once worked with the Blackest Indian so black the man was blue
He told us he was not Black but white and called us N------

They can have another drought and 150 million could die yesterday and I would not be concerned
 
Capitalism for you....they had the resources to resolve it but it was against the "law of economics" as if it is a force of nature. if it doesn't benefit them economically you are as good as dead. india, china, somalia, and countless other countries
 
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man that was class warfare as well,

the so called upper class indian, whom I truly believe

are fucked up in the head...

had just as much to do with the deaths as the british..

and they treat the really dark skin indians in southern india

worse that cancerous shit..

if you hear the real life stories of what goes on their today, if you had a half of heart it would being a tear to your eye....

I do think the younger generation is changing a bit...

but that older generation is fuckin psychotic especially the ones they let migrate over here....

I couldnt stand to be around them for more than a millisecond....

but I must admit I did meet some cool young ones from canada...

who vowed never to be like their parents and raise their children they way they were raised..
 
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Sad, one has to wonder what deal Europeans made with the evil forces of the universe to have forced so much destruction on so many different people across the planet.

And then have the oppressed want to chase their women, imitate their mannerism, destroy their melanin ...just diabolical.
 
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Sad, one has to wonder what deal Europeans made with the evil forces of the universe to have forced so much destruction on so many different people across the planet.

And then have the oppressed want to chase their women, imitate their mannerism, destroy their melanin ...just diabolical.

White people have a sociopathic culture. We have no moral compass and are raised to see people outside of our race and class as animals at best and objects at worst. One our other traits is a glib superficial charm that draws others in.
 
I once worked with the Blackest Indian so black the man was blue
He told us he was not Black but white and called us N------

They can have another drought and 150 million could die yesterday and I would not be concerned
Lol damn. These Indian niggas are in denial because they've been duped by the demonic presence of cacs on earth.

I will say peace to those who suffered because no matter their state of mind, these niggas are all pawns to the game the satanic mortals play.

Starvation is a tragic way to go out shiiit.
 
Capitalism for you....they had the resources to resolve it but it was against the "law of economics" as if it is a force of nature. if it doesn't benefit them economically you are as good as dead. india, china, somalia, and countless other countries
Right. Cac niggas created shit so they couldn't interfere with real things happening in the world. They disassociated themselves via a corporation. Crazy mofos
 
Basically cac on cac violence. Dark skin does't make people black. Indians realize that shit, so why worry about them? Chinese and Europeans are pale and don't claim each other.
 
As a matter of fact I have been to India and I live and work in Northern VA. There's a huge Indian population here and I work with many, many people from there. They are very proud of their assimilation into white society here and are standoffish from the black people in my office. Also if you've ever been to London you will see Indians trying to be British everywhere! That's not to say black folks don't have their own assimilation problems, but the higher you go in Indian culture the more they seek to emulate their white conquerors. Kinda like a lot of successful black people.



ballscout just talking shit


indians love white people as in wanting to be them

just check out bollywood and their obsession with white skin
 
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