Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Independent India, period 1947 to 1975. First few years.


The India Today has brought out a special edition, "Remaking India - Fifty years of India Today" The period covered is from 1975 to 2025. It is very timely! Browsing through, it took me further  back in time! 

We appear to be at a cross-road. Perhaps we are there all the time and we need to take a look at ourselves as countrymen. 

I was nine years old when India got its independence, year 1947. The memory of its celebration has stayed with me! remember my father getting all excited about the coming independence day on the 15th of August. Especially keen to hear Pandit Nehru's midnight/early morning braodcast. Tryst with destiny of the new nation, on its 'first' day of Independence. He purchased a Radio, and when he tried it out, the reception wasn't that good. It was a small radio and the tuning was not precise. He rushed back to the shop, exchanged it for a better model.

I did not hear Pandit Nehru speak. I and my sister Srilatha were in Madras on that day. Our neighbors Vasudeva Rao and Lalithamma took us along with them to Madras. Very nice of them, considering I was nine and Srilatha was six years old! We stayed with my father's cousin.

Everything was new for us. I do remember the illumination on the ships docked on the port celebrating the day.  We played on the smooth sands of Marina beach. But the sight of small fish struggling in a basket was disrurbing!

Our uncle was friendly! However, we did not enjoy being teased by his son, my cousin! We were about the same age. He constantly made fun of our Kannada mixed Tamil. Srilatha, spoke up when uncle Vasudeva Rao dropped in after a couple of days. A courtsey call! She went to him immediately and said, 'I want to stay with you!' Vasudeva Rao then spoke to my uncle softly in fluent Tamil. After a while, we were  told to pick up our small bags and we went along with him to his relatives home. We had a good time at their place. 

It does prove 'Language' can and does become an issue! 

Back in Bangalore, I walked around our area with a friend. He had heard and we did see that many Muslim homes were empty in our area. Curious we peeped into the closeby Mosque. An elderly person came out asked us in kannada ' why are you here'. When we said we just wanted to see, he said very gently it was not the right time and better if we didn't visit! Another older friend explained that many had opted to go to Pakistan. He added, it was created by the British before they left India! I do not remember any mention of violence! 

We had just visited Sundarbans and had seen a village close to Bangladesh border. I wondered  how it was for them on that momentous day. I did not ask, but googled to check!

Yes, immense violence occurred on the day of Indian independence due to the concurrent Partition of India.
While the broader movement utilized largely non-violent resistance and civil disobedience, the actual transition of power on August 15, 1947, triggered catastrophic communal riots.It was shocking that people who had lived in the same place together attacked and killed those who were suddenly declared as a minority. Doesn't speak much about our human values.
Possibly leaders just let it go believing other options would make it worse.  A system was set up to deal with the  refugee influx. It appears most just blanked it out from their memories and tried to cope with the immediate challenges they faced.  The communal problems were there and still persists! We have seen it can be stoked up whenever it gets into someone's head and the person has the influence! So 'Tryst' with our destiny continues. 
The British had thoughtfully left their dwellings as it is, which our leaders occupied. The Armed forces, though divided was still intact. The well trained beaureaucrats were there too. The transition could have been  smooth. But, alas it was not to be.
The Brits gave us their language, taught us whatever they felt could be useful to them. It is claimed they even taught us corruption! They stole a lot from us, obviously! However they gifted us an 'excuse'! We could always blame them for anything that went wrong!
 It is no brainer that the idea of 'non-cooperation' was the best gift. We bestowed ourselves with it! We can take recourse to it, whenever we are unable to debate  reasonably! 
While we became free, the country was poor! Not all our countrymen were poor! 
Anyway I had my own challenges, I was in middle school, studying in Kannada medium. In High school I would be studying in an English medium. The British were gone, but English remained. Nothing wrong with it! 
We were not sensible, anyway it was complicated! Just imagine, the barristers and others who knew English,  chosen to steer the country, took some arbitratary decisions! If they could learn English from the British, and even draft a constitution. Where was the need for a common Indian language, based on Majority?? 
We could have taught all Indians to read English! Our literacy was 18.3 just percent at the time of independence.  
Even after our idedpendence, the well healed learnt English and others were left behind. It is debatable, I wish the debate had taken place in the early years! So we have language problem. Think how smartly Singapore solved it. 
We have indeed taken the right steps ! Need to find how many actually use the facility in Parliament and Assembly !

  • Scheduled Languages: Parliament allows members to speak in any of the 22 languages listed in the Eighth Schedule 
  • prescribed the regional languages, Hindi, and English as the languages to be generally used in the State Legislature. 
We have other issues too!

9 comments:

  1. Anonymous4:37 AM

    Truly Nidhi rambler. I was 10 years old (nearly to the date!) and in the Capital city closer to the events. The excitement and euphoria are still in my memory.
    Your observation on common language is flawed as that was the language of the colonisers. With 22languages belonging to different roots it has survived and adapted to the country. Much as we desire to get rid of it we cannot do so.
    A good blog
    Raghunath

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  2. Anonymous5:01 AM

    I like your observation that our Trust with our destiny continues as it suits our politicians.Earlier the Britishers were blamed for whatever went wrong, now it is Nehru ji. Divide and rule has been polisher and used by the elected politicians who serve noone but themselves. A sad commentary

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  3. Anonymous5:12 AM

    Nice Blog Nidhi. I am impressed that at the age of nine you remember events on independence day in 1947. I was ten years old then but have no recollection of that historical day. I was studying in a Kannada medium school in Sheshadripuram then .After Lower Secondary I joined 4th form ( 8th standard today) in english medium school.I can read, write & speak in Kannada but not as fluently as in English. A lot is being debated today today about best medium of instruction.I leave it to experts to arrive at the best solution.I feel English has come to stay as it has practically become an international language. With AI making waves our bright grand kids have exciting times ahead.

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  4. Anonymous11:40 AM

    Very interesting.English was introduced by the British and extensively promoted by christian missionaries. We all were encouraged to learn that language, a tool used to govern us later for 200 years.. Even our own bureaucrat brothers encouraged us to learn English.in that process we lost our identity with our language.

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  5. N N Sachitanand7:26 PM

    We were in Patan in Western Gujarat at that time. News of the Partition riots had already trickled in. Fearing that Western Gujarat may go to Pakistan , my parents made a hasty exit by train to Jaipur. I was 6 then.
    In Jaipur I still recall the Hindu refugees from Sindh who were given accomodation in a camp put up by the Maharaja's government. The fear on their faces was palpable.
    The Jaipur maharaja, Man Singh, did an excellent job of getting the state forces to parade the city and quell any incipient riots.

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  6. Prasanna Appegowda7:29 PM

    Nice recall true story. British did this to lot of countries. Israel is still fighting to exist.

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  7. Hari Gopalan7:32 PM

    Hi Nidhi:

    There is deep emotional history tied to India with the British. In today’s World it’s probably a Love & Hate relationship nevertheless in my opinion it best serves India to keep the History in the back ground and move forward to tackle the challenges of the 21St Century and prepare to step onto the World Stage which is not easy by any means. With that being said India needs to address 1) Sanitation, 2)Poverty, 3) Corruption 4) Civility —— etc not necessarily in this order. I sincerely hope India can achieve it a be once again a bright shining Country embracing our old values. For what it’s worth my 2 Cents.

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  8. Lakshmi Priya Srikanth7:36 PM

    Wow! Uncle hats off to you!

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  9. Indira Rao.. Bina7:38 PM

    Interesting to read.. daddy was mentioning that Thatha being in government service had an option to migrate to Pakistan after independence.
    So glad he decided to stay back in India!!

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