Macauley's Children
By Subhash Kak
http://www.sulekha.com/cgi-bin/column.cgi?resource=ms_macaulay
By Subhash Kak
http://www.sulekha.com/cgi-bin/column.cgi?resource=ms_macaulay
Imprinting is the key that explains
many of our peculiarities. Imprinted birds and mammals act as if they were
human. Goslings, when reared by a person, become imprinted to the caregiver,
and they will ignore geese. Imprinted people live in their own world of
symbols, and their behavior to an outsider would appear strange.
Imprinting occurs during a
sensitive window of development. Imprinted animals will mate with their own
kind but will prefer the animal to which they have been imprinted. In extreme
cases they will refuse social contact with their own kind. Imprinting is fixed
for life; it occurs also in motor patterns, as in birdsong. Humans are also
imprinted--- to ideas and beliefs they are exposed to in their childhood.
All this has been known for a long
time. Herodotus tells us of how hostage children raised in court became loyal
to their captors. In the US, Canada, Australia, the children of the natives
were forcibly taken from their parents and put in foster homes for this reason.
The Ottoman Empire built a bizarre
but effective system based on this idea. It created the institution of the Kapi
Kullari ("Slave" or "Ruling Institution"), whose
members were legally slaves of the sultan: they were born Christians but were
converted to Islam primarily through the practice of devsirme, where
able-bodied young children were recruited as child-tribute and immersed in
Islamic culture.
The kullars were forbidden
to contract legal marriage, to have acknowledged children, and to own private
property. They served solely at the pleasure of the sultan, at whose will they
were promoted and executed. The slave status divested the kullars of any
personality outside the service of the master.
The kullars as Janissaries
were the best regiments of the Ottoman army; they also served in the palace
jobs and as provincial governors. The Grand Vizier was invariably a kullar.
They constituted a superlative bureaucracy: they were devoted to their duties,
were completely loyal and since they were isolated from the general population,
they were fair. Their non-hereditary status prevented the formation of a ruling
elite that might threaten the sultan.
With time, the kullars began
seeking reforms in their inhumane system. By the end of the Empire, they had
won the right to matrimony. But as their circumstances changed they became
venal; what was their strength as an isolated community now became a license to
do good only for themselves.
If the kullars constituted
the backbone of the Ottoman Empire, an institution, similar in spirit but
somewhat different in form (but more subtle and resilient), was formed to
safeguard the British Empire in India. This was the institution of the brown
sahib, the colonial apologist, formed under the directive of the famous
Minute of Macaulay (1835) who wished to create "a class who may be
interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons,
Indian in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals, and
in intellect.'' These Indian kullars may be properly called Macaulay's
children.
The central idea in the imprinting
of the Indian kullars was Macaulay's assertion that "a single shelf
of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of
India." The British, following Macaulay's ideas, dismantled the
traditional pathshala system of village education, which had provided
universal literacy to the people. William Adam, a Scottish missionary in Bengal
and Bihar during 1835-7, estimated that there were 100,000 pathshalas
which were popular with all classes of people, "irrespective of their
religion, caste, or social status," and the "curriculum was designed
towards meeting the practical demands of rural society."
The village school had great room
for improvement but it was very effective and was one of the institutions of
local power. When it was superseded by the new system, controlled by the
British bureaucracy using an alien language whose benefit ordinary people could
not see, children of the poorer classes simply pulled out. This led to the
illiteratization of the great masses of the Indian population.
The Macaulayite bureaucracy worked
against other traditional knowledge also. For example, it targeted the
millennia-old system of water tanks, which had been serviced by village
councils. In its place was instituted a system of canal irrigation. This was
done even where it was unsuitable, and the local councils were disbanded. Soon,
the tanks fell into disuse and the water table dropped; this had disastrous
effects for agriculture.
In the colonial state, the idea of
profit was replaced by that of service of the British empire. The new system of
education was instrumental for the socialization of this view. The idea of the
other-worldly Indian was promoted.
In 1947, there was hope that India
would create a progressive nation-state, but Macaulay's children quietly seized
power. Taught to hate India's past and lacking a defining center, they took the
fashions of the day--such as Socialism and Marxism--, and elevated these to
their religious ideology. The terms Socialism and Secularism--but with a
perverted meaning--were even written into the Indian Constitution during the
Emergency of the mid-1970s.
In awe of the British and insecure
of their positions, those of the Macaulay children who went into governance
were good administrators. But as the system of checks and balances eroded after
independence, they lost their reputation for incorruptibility.
Blind adherence to an ideology can stunt intellectual
and emotional growth. Such people are forever seeking approval from those whom
they idolize, and they are unable to grasp the incongruity of their behavior.
Emotionally stunted people are like imprinted children, who can be very cruel.
(The Khmer Rouge massacres of Cambodia, amongst the most horrific of the past
century, were carried out principally by teenagers imprinted to one brand of Marxism.)
Adults, with the minds of children, also brook no opposition, although their
ways may not be as drastic.
The Macaulayite establishment in
India is especially intolerant: it also knows a few tricks of Stalin. It
silences its opponents using censorship and a system of patronage. But
recently, independent minded American-style Internet magazines have provided a
means to side-step this censorship.
Take Arun Shourie's experience:
Although India's most famous and recognized journalist and author, winner of
the Magasaysay award, he was black-listed by mainstream publishers and the
media as soon he turned his attention to subjects considered taboo by the
establishment. During the last ten years he has been compelled to self-publish
his books and newspapers have banned him. But thanks to his Internet column he
remained hugely popular until he joined the Vajpayee administration as a
minister and stopped writing.
Having been black-listed once, his
books are still not reviewed, and his speeches as a minister are rarely
reported unless his words can be twisted to paint him as a monster. He is like
a non-person of the apartheid South Africa. The favorite abusive label to pin
on the opponent is to call him "communalist" or "fascist",
and Shourie has carried these labels frequently.
As another example consider Mark
Tully, the distinguished British journalist and author, who was for a long time
the bureau chief of BBC in Delhi. Just because one of his books was perceived
as somewhat critical of the Macaulayites, he was called names and declared a
sell-out. His books have also stopped receiving notices.
This is quite unlike the rivalry
between the liberals and the conservatives in the West, where the most partisan
writers concede that their opponents have the right to be heard through the
print and the TV media.
Some have suggested that the
current turmoil in India is just a struggle between the traditional and modern
approaches to governance. Nothing could be further from the truth. The
opponents of the Macaulayites and Marxists do not wish for a religious state.
They want to build a modern society somewhat like that of the United States:
forward-looking but yet connected to its culture.
Reading the reportage of the
culture wars of India by Western journalists in a hurry, one gets the feeling
that the only sane people in India are these Macaulay's children. The reformers
are labeled nationalists, swamis, traditionalists, or worse. These journalists
do not understand the real nature of the struggle.
It is funny. The West proclaimed a
certain imagined view on India, and now its pupils insist this is the real
thing, even though there is evidence to the contrary for everyone to see. Could
there be a better case of the tail wagging the dog?
Resources: For those who
wish to take part in meaningful debate on the nature of the Indian
civilization, consider joining the IndianCivilization
egroup. If you are interested in changing India's portrayal in the media
and in textbooks, participate in the programs of ECIT and the discussions of
the IndicTraditions
egroup
No comments:
Post a Comment