Read Gandhi & Churchill Online
Authors: Arthur Herman
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Jinnah of Pakistan.
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PHOTOGRAPH CREDITS
PHOTO INSERT I
Mohandas Gandhi with members of London’s Vegetarian Society in 1890 (V. Jhaveri/ Peter Rühe)
Gandhi and fellow members of the Indian Ambulance Corps during the Boer War (V. Jhaveri/Peter Rühe)
Gandhi as he appeared when he met Churchill in London in October 1906 (V. Jhaveri/ Peter Rühe)
Failure of the Gallipoli campaign in 1915 (Hulton/Getty Archives)
Gandhi meeting with Indian National Congress stalwarts in September 1921 (V. Jhaveri/ Peter Rühe)
Gandhi using his
charkha,
or spinning wheel, at Sabarmati Ashram, 1926 (V. Jhaveri/ Peter Rühe)
PHOTO INSERT II
Mohandas and Kasturbai Gandhi after arriving in India in January 1915 (V. Jhaveri/ Peter Rühe)
The beginning of Gandhi’s Salt March at Sabarmati, March 1930 (GandhiServe/Peter Rühe)
Gandhi making salt at Bhimpur (V. Jhaveri/Peter Rühe)
Salt satyagraha in Bombay (
Daily Herald
Archive/Peter Rühe)
PHOTO INSERT III
Winston Churchill and Viscount Halifax, 1940 (Getty Images)
Gandhi with his longtime secretary, Mahadev Desai (V. Jhaveri/Peter Rühe)
The HMS
Prince of Wales
sinking after being targeted Japanese planes (Imperial War Museum)
Quit India riot in Bombay, October 1942 (Kanu Gandhi/Peter Rühe)
Churchill with jubilant crowd on V-E Day, May 8, 1945 (Imperial War Museum)
General Archibald Wavell, viceroy of India 1943–1946 (Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Aftermath of massacres in Calcutta, 1946 (photo by Margaret Bourke White; Hulton/Getty Archives)
Gandhi’s funeral, January 31, 1948 (V. Jhaveri/Peter Rühe)
Churchill’s funeral, January 30, 1965 (Hulton/Getty Archives)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ARTHUR HERMAN is the bestselling author of
How the Scots Invented the Modern World,
which has sold over 350,000 copies worldwide, and
To Rule the Waves: How the British Navy Shaped the Modern World,
which was nominated for the prestigious Mountbatten Prize in 2005. He is a former professor of history at Georgetown University, Catholic University, George Mason University, and the Smithsonian’s Campus on the Mall.
ALSO BY ARTHUR HERMAN
How the Scots Invented the Modern World
To Rule the Waves: How the British Navy Shaped the Modern World
GANDHI & CHURCHILL
A Bantam Book / May 2008
Published by Bantam Dell
A Division of Random House, Inc.
New York, New York
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2008 by Arthur Herman
Maps by David Lindroth
Bantam Books is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc., and the colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Herman, Arthur, 1956–
Gandhi and Churchill: the epic rivalry that destroyed an empire and forged our age / Arthur Herman.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
eISBN: 978-0-553-90504-5
1. Great Britain—Foreign relations—India. 2. India—Foreign relations—Great Britain. 3. Churchill, Winston, Sir, 1874–1965. 4. Gandhi, Mahatma, 1869–1948. 5. Great Britain—Colonies—History—20th century. I. Title.
DA47.9.I4H47 2008
325.54094109041—dc22 2008000149
v1.0
FOOTNOTES
*1
Shortly afterward Shepherd volunteered to carry a message to the garrison at Lucknow. He was captured and held by Nana Sahib’s men until European troops freed him. However, his wife, his sister, and the rest of the family perished in the siege.
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*2
The four British women were eventually returned and perished with the rest. However, two of the Eurasian girls married their sepoy captors to escape further abuse. The first, Amelia Horne, eventually escaped. Miss Wheeler, however, became a Muslim and died a very old lady in Cawnpore after telling her extraordinary story to a Catholic priest on her deathbed.
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*3
British soldiers during the siege of Delhi discovered that the khaki cloth was not only lighter and cooler but also made them less conspicuous targets. It was a discovery that the rest of the British Army made during the Boer War, after losing too many men to enemy snipers, and led to its general adoption.
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*4
An ancient Indian solar disk and traditional sign of good luck that the Nazis later made into a symbol of Aryan racial purity.
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*5
It would be registering sooner than most realized. Ironically, Kipling’s triumphant poem was composed in 1882, after the exposure of an Irish plot to assassinate Queen Victoria, to reassure the British public. Winston Churchill’s earliest childhood memory was of wandering through Dublin’s Phoenix Park and seeing the spot where the British viceroy had been murdered only a couple of years earlier.
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†6
He would also be one of the first champions of Indian nationalism. When he died in 1891 and was buried in London’s Brookwood Cemetery, among the three thousand mourners who attended the funeral would be a young Mohandas Gandhi.
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*7
After the Liberals, Tories, and Irish Nationalists.
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*8
In 1815, as the Duke of Wellington, he would defeat Napoleon at Waterloo.
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*9
Orwell served in Burma from 1922 to 1927, at which date Burmese administration was still the responsibility of the Indian government.
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*10
The record ended in 1943, when Winston Churchill was prime minister.
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*11
A traditional dance performed by young women or Nautch girls, whom Ensign Winston Churchill would find as charming as his father had.
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*12
The queen asked Prime Minister Salisbury to learn Viceroy Dufferin’s opinion about appointing her son the Duke of Connaught as commander in chief for the Bombay Presidency. When Randolph found out, he exploded. By going over his head, she had directly challenged his authority to oversee all appointments, he raged; his authority had been “completely demolished.” He even hinted he might resign. Eventually, a compromise was reached and ruffled feathers smoothed. But privately Salisbury and others wondered at Randolph’s increasingly erratic behavior and mood swings—though none except his wife knew the real reason for them.
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