Growse, Bulandshahr
Transcription
Growse, Bulandshahr
F.S. Growse, C.I.E. Bulandshahr: or Sketches of an Indian District; Social, Historical and Architectural Benares, Medical Hall Press, 1884. _____________________________________________________________________ A local official’s report on civic development may not sound like a gripping read, but F.S. Growse’s study of his work in Bulandshahr is an absolutely compelling work of social observation. Its remoteness in time adds a valuable historical dimension that makes it a perfect window on colonial India. Sir Frederick Salmon Growse (1837-93) was not only a devoted civil servant but also a knowledgeable and gifted scholar of India and her languages. His translation of the Rāmcaritmānas of Tulsidas is a landmark work, and his sympathetic (if critical) engagement with Indian tradition is evident in everything he wrote. The title page of his Bulandshahr book has a telling epigraph from [J.R.] Seeley, set in small capitals: “OUR WESTERN CIVILIZATION IS PERHAPS NOT ABSOLUTELY THE GLORIOUS THING WE LIKE TO IMAGINE IT”. Growse served as District Magistrate and Collector of Mathura District for some six years in the 1880s, during which time he founded the Mathura Museum, which to this day remains one of the richest collections — especially of Buddhist material — in northern India; while there he wrote Mathurá: a District Memoir, which served as the primary gazetteer on Braj culture and sectarian history until the publication, more than a century later, of Alan Entwistle’s brilliant Braj: Centre of Krishna Pilgrimage in 1987. Bulandshah[a]r is a town lying a little way beyond today’s Greater Noida to the southeast of Delhi, in the Doab. Growse was transferred there from Mathura in or before 1884, and threw his energetic enthusiasm into developing the amenities and architecture of his new hometown. He reasoned, passionately, that a repeat of the massive upheavals of 1857 (still much in mind after just three short decades) could only be avoided by a sympathetic process of well-informed local government, and almost every page of his work complains bitterly of the folly and intransigence of centralized power; as a second epigraph (from [H.] Taine) has it, “NOTHING IS MORE DESTRUCTIVE THAN THE UNRESTRICTED INTERMEDDLING OF THE STATE, EVEN WHEN WISE AND PATERNAL”. Growse uses Bulandshahr to voice his strongly-held opinions about what ails the governance of India. On the other side of the coin, he is also strongly critical of local Indian mores, and is motivated by an enlightened paternalism in his wish to improve the lot of the populace. Recognising that the poor conditions of local life and culture are not necessarily caused by poverty as such, he says (p. ii): His efforts to improve conditions combined a vision of the needs of hygiene (well-aired houses, well-drained streets) with an aesthetic vision that involved encouraging local craftsmen in the construction of effective engineered and aesthetically pleasing architecture. His reflections on public health derive directly from his own observations (p. 6): As I write this note I am tempted to quote passage after passage, but fortunately I don’t need to because the whole text is available online through Google Books. But Growse’s observations on language are worth noting here (p. 17): Such opinions would find little favour today, and Growse was very much a child of his time, reflecting colonial attitudes and suppositions at every turn; political correctness was not even a glimmer in anyone’s eye in the 1880s, and colonial paternalism can be painful to read. And yet Growse’s insistence on promoting local arts and crafts, and guiding the wealthy aristocracy in the development of public works, while always staving off the dead hand of government, is truly heart-warming to read. Bulandshahr is both typical of benevolent colonialism as a whole, and also uniquely characterised by Growse’s passionate vision of what can be achieved by enlightened government in concert with public philanthropy. Reading this book in the 1970s led me towards new understandings: frustrated by historical surveys that seemed to privilege data over attitudes, I found Sir Frederic to be the ideal guide in a direct encounter with colonial India of the late nineteenthcentury. Rupert Snell — HINDIDOX