Nehru - Benjamin Zachariah

(Axel Boer) #1
Jawaharlal later noted that there had been a good deal of anti-Semitism
at Harrow. He made no mention of anti-Indian sentiment; he seems to
have taken its existence for granted. A few years later, his letters home
from Cambridge provided plenty of examples of discriminatory practices
against Indians, but they were so commonplace as not to invite particular
comment.
Jawaharlal was a dutiful son, writing home to his parents regularly


  • in elegant and increasingly self-confident English to his father, in
    Hindi to his mother, exchanging news on politics (with his father), public
    school – and later, university – life, and on the progress of his two younger
    sisters – the older, Vijayalakshmi, or Nan, about five years old when Joe
    started at Harrow, and a second sister, Krishna Kumari, born in 1907,
    called Betty by one of her first English governesses. Motilal seemed to take
    a strong vicarious pleasure in Jawaharlal’s experiences of English public
    school and university life, and managed to acquire a remarkable command
    of public school jargon.
    Motilal had made clear plans for his son: he was to finish school,
    proceed to Cambridge, complete his degree with a First, and then pass the
    examinations for the Indian Civil Service (ICS). The importance of the
    ICS was self-evident to the Indian middle classes. An elite administrative
    corps recruited mostly from among public school-educated Oxbridge
    men, and to which few Indians had been appointed by virtue of the
    inaccessibility to them of this desirable route of qualification, the ICS
    was nonetheless a possible route through which Indians could stake their
    claim to participation in the administration of their own country. The age
    limit for the examination was set particularly low, and few Indians had
    completed their education early enough to qualify even to appear for the
    examination, heavily weighted towards the public-school-and-Oxbridge
    experience. It was considered a great achievement for an Indian to qualify
    for the ICS, in large measure because of the difficulties it involved. But it
    also reflected the limited goals of nationalists at the time: greater partici-
    pation in government. There was a strong dichotomy between the urge for
    participation and the urge to dissent: did one participate in the running
    of the imperialist system, or did one oppose it? The answer seems to have
    been that one did both. Every Indian entering the ICS struck a blow
    against the carefully-cultivated imperialist myth of the incompetence of
    Indians. Dissent was to a certain extent enabled by this participation; and
    if dissent was to be confined to a reasoned economic nationalism and


18 THE MAKING OF A COLONIAL INTELLECTUAL

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