Darjeeling was transferred to the East India Company in 1835. The
book under review seeks to understand the history of Darjeeling from the
time of its transfer to its existential crisis in the post-colonial
period through the prisms of history, politics and environment. The
editors wish to avoid the stereotype of Darjeeling as a ‘hill station’
to present a more ‘grounded understanding’ of the town as a
geo-political space by connecting history with the present through
ethnographic and political analysis.
Challenging the ‘discovery
narrative’ of the British, Townsend Middleton questions the description
of ‘uninhabited Darjeeling’. He discusses investment of capital, the
movement of labour to Darjeeling and locates its ‘exceptionality’ in
terms of the colonial administration assigning it a special status. In
delineating the early history, he has failed to do justice to the
complex process of the emergence of a Nepali/ Gorkha identity in
Darjeeling. Middleton also misses the larger geo-political context in
the eastern Himalayan region at the turn of the 19th century, when the
unification of Nepal and the strategical and commercial interests of the
Company’s government played a major part in shaping the history of
Darjeeling. The net result of the Company’s actions in the eastern
Himalayas was to leave anxious people in the region.
Joyeeta
Sharma’s essay stands out for giving ‘agency to the labouring subjects’
and recover their ‘voices, names, visages’. She focuses on the Lepchas,
found to be reliable by colonial officials. The intimate knowledge of
the Lepchas about nature was utilised by explorers like J.D. Hooker who
sent more than 1,50,000 botanical specimens to Kew Gardens.
She
talks of mobility of labour as some were able to move up in a
generation. Education was a social capital, used by men like Ganga
Prasad Pradhan, who was ordinated as the first pastor from a Hills
community. He founded the Gorkha Press and started the first newspaper,
the Gorkha Khabar Kagat, thus pioneering a Nepali print
culture. Sharma brilliantly establishes the role of these labouring men
in constituting Darjeeling.
Gorkhaland movement
The
section on politics predictably focuses on the Gorkhaland movement from
the 1980s. Bethany Lacina studies the elections to indicate that a
viable multi-party system and democratic norms prevailed in Darjeeling.
The rise of the political parvenu, Subhash Ghising of the Gorkha
National Liberation Front, in the 1980s erased this political culture.
She attributes the absence of democracy to ‘low political competition’
and the curious submission of the elite to the leader in charge at a
given moment. The killing of Madan Tamang shows the price of consistent
opposition. Miriam Wenner differentiates between a ‘virtuous movement’
(the demand for Gorkhaland) and ‘dirty politics’ (serving the self). She
shows how what she calls ‘the art of camouflage’ helped people to use
coercion and violence to practise dirty politics while ostensibly
seeking the virtuous goal.
Mona Chettri, in analysing the
domination of ‘rowdies’ in the political arena at the present, asserts
that this is a ‘subaltern political phenomenon and a part of the
distinct political culture’, following from underdevelopment and
criminalisation of politics.
While her use of the rowdies’
phenomenon is unexceptionable as a general statement, it is difficult to
accept that this phenomenon is unique to Darjeeling. In effect, the
essays here take a cynical, if also realistic, view of the low level of
opportunistic politics that now characterises political culture in
Darjeeling.
Ethnic diversity
Nilamber
Chhetri’s excellent essay explores the history of ethnic associations in
Darjeeling. Given this history of diverse ethnic groups, there was ‘a
conflation of jati (ethnic) and jat (caste) identities’. Recently formed
associations transformed a socio-cultural quest into a political act.
Chhetri sees here a renegotiation of identity dependent on ‘varying
claims of authentic heritage, culture and religion’.
This
‘interface... represents the changing contours of ethnopolitics in the
hills’. The establishment of a plethora of development boards might in
the future lead to a fragmentation of the Nepali/ Gorkha identity,
perhaps resulting in an entirely different kind of ethno-politics.
The class question
Swatahsiddha
Sarkar and Babika Khawas pay tribute to Kumar Pradhan, an intellectual
from Darjeeling, by exploring his work to locate the class question in
the development of the Nepali identity in Darjeeling. Pradhan perhaps
did not address the class question consciously, but sought to understand
the complex processes of the formation of a Nepali identity among
dispossessed migrants. As a consequence, Nepali emerged as the lingua
franca of the area and tribal exclusiveness was gradually shed to
produce an inclusive Nepali/ Gorkha identity.
In the final section
on environments and labour, Sarah Besky studies the brief career of the
Darjeeling Tea Management Training Centre which was set to ‘reconcile
the tension between an aspiration of economic development and an
aspiration of ethnic recognition’, but failed. Debarati Sen studies
women producing organic tea on a small scale with the help of NGOs by
forming cooperatives, and shows how they ‘navigate inequities’.
The
book comprises 11 well-researched essays. The early history of
Darjeeling has been presented well, though the quest of the people of
the hills for autonomy in the last century has not been properly
analysed. A particular absence is the silence on the language movements.
These quibbles apart, the book is a welcome addition to the small
corpus of academic books on Darjeeling.
Darjeeling Reconsidered: Histories, Politics, Environments; Edited by Townsend Middleton and Sara Shneiderman, Oxford University Press, ₹950
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