Category Archives: Records, All

Hicky’s Bengal Gazette: The Untold Story of India’s First Newspaper review: Winds of freedom

In 1780, an Irishman took on the British in Calcutta with a tell-all weekly that covered everything from corruption to politics

It was 1780. Great events were shaping and shaking the world. Four years earlier, in 1776, Britain had lost its first colony; a new nation was born, namely, the United States of America. And nine years, later, in 1789, the French revolution ushered in a new era of freedom and hope in Europe.

At a time when the western world was changing rapidly a new spirit was also taking shape in one of Britain’s eastern colonies. Calcutta, then capital of British India, though the East India Company ruled only a small part of India at that time, was witnessing developments that were new not only in India, but in all of Asia. As free thought and freedom of expression swept across the world, an Irishman called James Augustus Hicky gave Calcutta and India its first printed newspaper in 1780.

Taking on power

Hicky’s Bengal Gazette, according to the young American scholar Andrew Otis, was a four-page weekly newspaper priced at ₹1. And it took on the rich and mighty of British Calcutta. What did Hicky publish in the pages of his newspaper? “He tried to cover everything that might be important to Calcutta, devoting many sections to politics, world news and events in India.” Topics that featured regularly were poor quality of sanitation and lack of road maintenance. Houses of poor Indians had thatched roofs, prone to catching fire. The outbreak of fires was frequently reported in Hicky’s paper. Through the letters he solicited and published, the editor gave voice to Calcutta’s poor.

He attacked corruption in the East India Company and in high echelons of society. The Bengal Gazette reported that the Governor of Madras, Sir Thomas Rumbold, had been recalled to England to answer charges of corruption in front of Parliament. “Hicky sarcastically wrote,” Otis tells us, “Rumbold was a great man for only amassing a fortune of about 600,000 pounds while in India, much of it from bribes and extortion.”

Hicky did not spare any institution. He exposed the problems of low pay for soldiers in the subaltern ranks of the Company’s army. Failed wars of the Company also came under its gaze. The Company’s army suffered a crushing defeat in the Battle of Pollilur at the hands of Hyder Ali, then ruler of Mysore. As the news of the disaster trickled in, Hicky questioned why the British were fighting in India. He accused the Company of squandering the lives of its soldiers. He even praised the noble actions of Hyder Ali in his treatment of the captured soldiers of the Company.

But as Hicky continued his fearless mission against corruption, the powers of the day did not sit idle. A rival newspaper was born in Calcutta. The India Gazette of Messink and Reed differed from Hicky in every possible way. The two papers represented two sides of the political spectrum.

Tough rival

Hicky emphasised independence while the India Gazette made no secret that they had the support of Governor Warren Hastings. So much so that Hastings had given the facility of free postage to India Gazette. There were hardly any opinion columns in it, a clear sign of their obeisance to Hastings’s authority. And they did so for a good cause, that was monetary rewards. India Gazette became the Company’s de facto mouthpiece; the Company’s departments placed advertisements and notices in that paper.

Press freedom

But Hicky took on the might of the establishment. He alleged through his pieces in the paper how one Simeon Droz had sought a bribe from him and wanted to get favours for him from Marian Hastings, wife of Warren Hastings, in lieu of the bribe. Hastings fumed that someone could show such imprudence. He passed an order that the Post Office would no longer extend its facility to the Bengal Gazette.

Hicky fought back. He hired 20 hircirrahs (courier men) to deliver his newspaper, and his newspaper’s popularity soared. He continued his fight against the most powerful man of the day and his entourage.

Hastings hit back and the Chief Justice Elijah Impey decreed that Hicky be imprisoned on charges of libel. A grand jury sat to decide the fate of Hicky.

After a fierce courtroom battle, the jury acquitted him. Hicky won, Hastings lost. As Otis tells us, “He had proven that it was possible to protect the Press against the most powerful people in British India.”

There were still three more trials to come that tried to muffle the voice of Hicky. What happened; did freedom of the press triumph? For that you must turn to Otis’s book, as he sketches a riveting tale of the struggle of India’s first newspaper editor.

Hicky’s Bengal Gazette: The Untold Story of India’s First Newspaper; Andrew Otis, Westland/ Tranquebar, ₹899.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Books> Reviews / by Sunandan Roy Chowdhury / July 14th, 2018

Paris pat for Siliguri tea firm

Athena Minami receives the award on behalf of Lochan Tea Limited in Paris

Siliguri:

A Siliguri tea firm has bagged an award in a Paris contest with its Darjeeling Tea picked the winner from an assortment of worldwide contenders.

Lochan Tea’s Giddapahar Spring Wonder drew rich pickings at the first edition of the “Teas of the World” International Contest, becoming the only Indian company among winners in various tea categories.

The contest was organised by Agence pour la Valoriasation des Produits Agricoles (Agency for the Valorisation of Agriculural Products orAVPA), and the awards were handed out in Paris on July 10.

“We were the sole Indian company that won an award in the contest. Some other varieties of Darjeeling teas were also put up at the event but those were by foreign importers,” said Rajeev Lochan of Lochan Tea.

Lochan had sent the samples from Giddapahar, a garden near Kurseong.

“It is called the Giddapahar Spring Wonder, one of the finest first flush muscatels. We have informed Sudhangshu Shaw, the garden owner, about the achievement,” Lochan said. The AVPA is a France NGO working in the field of agriculture.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> West Bengal / by Avijit Sinha / July 14th, 2018

Machines, made in school

The teenagers from Bijoygarh Higher Secondary School for Girls had never seen a remote-controlled car before. Neither had they heard of artificial intelligence. So they were extremely happy unravelling the wonders of science in the Atal Tinkering Laboratories (ATL) of Salt Lake School.

ATL is an initiative under Atal Innovative Mission, programmed by Niti Aayog, or the National Institution for Transforming India, a policy thinktank of the central government. Under the scheme, the government provides selected schools with grants to set up science laboratories. The idea is to encourage entrepreneurship through self-employment and to develop scientific interest in students. Over 2,000 schools in India have established laboratories under this initiative, including 68 in West Bengal. Salt Lake School is one of them.

The ATL lab in our school was inaugurated in December by the vice chancellor of Jadavpur University, Suranjan Das. Since then, and even before that, 20 students of our school have been working hand-in-hand to create products of scientific importance with utmost precision and dedication.

For many months, ATL had been an intra-school platform, enlightening students on the importance of robotics, cloud computing, programming, coding, artificial intelligence and more.

Finally we opened doors to students of other schools, in observance of ATL Community Day, to commemorate the birth anniversary of B.R. Ambedkar. Our school worked with Maya Foundation, a non-profit NGO that works to create awareness regarding menstrual health of adolescent girls and for the downtrodden sections of rural Bengal. They helped us welcome 12 girls from Bijoygarh. Some students of Salt Lake Point School also attended the exhibition.

As head boy of our school, I watched over my juniors working hard to make the event a success. “Innovation for all” was our motto and we gave it our best shot. My juniors demonstrated remote-controlled cars, which can be used for fire detection, and if fitted with small cameras, can help in investigation purposes. The remote was a mobile phone, and many of the girls from Bijoygarh tried operating it themselves.

The sight of their excited faces at the sight of the moving car was perhaps my moment of the day.

Aditya Mitra, a budding scientist from our school, demonstrated his hand-made laptop. He had built it with spare parts of other electronic gadgets. “Khub bhalo,” was the general reaction from guests, when I asked them to comment on the expo. They interacted with our students and enquired about making the gadgets and the principles working behind them.
The students from Salt Lake Point School were curious and eager too. “There are so many things we didn’t know earlier,” said one of them. “It has been a wonderful experience, getting to see and learn so much.”

Our students, too, were happy to showcase their hard work and explain the intricacies of their machines.

The exhibition was preceded by the inauguration ceremony, attended by scientist Chittaranjan Sinha. Speaking to the students, he emphasised on the importance of scientific innovation and new thinking to sustain our environment and asked us to help society on a wider scale. He encouraged students by telling stories from the lives of Acharya P.C. Roy and Acharya J.C. Bose. “India today is in the grip of grave disarray with superstitious beliefs reigning. Only scientific and rational thinking can save the nation,” he said.

MLA Sujit Bose spent time with us too and congratulated the students and the management for organising the event. Our principal, Sugata D’Souza delivered the vote of thanks and emphasised that this ATL laboratory shall be the nucleus for the development of a scientific temper in students of schools in our region.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Ananyo Chakraborty, Salt Lake School / July 13th, 2018

Bengal jobs for former KLO rebels

Mamata hands over a job letter to one of the former KLO rebels. (Passang Yolmo)

Siliguri:

Thirty-six former militants of the Kamtapur Liberation Organisation (KLO) were on Thursday hired as home guard volunteers in the Mamata Banerjee government’s first initiative to rehabilitate the ex-rebels who wanted a separate state.

Mamata handed over job letters to the group, including Mihir Das and Madhusudan Das, once prominent faces of the KLO. The 36 – 21 from Alipurduar and 15 from Jalpaiguri – will be engaged in their districts.

The former rebels – most were arrested during Operation Flushout in 2003-04 by the Royal Bhutan Army – have been disgruntled and long demanded rehabilitation. “They have been provided jobs and will work for the interest of the society. The initiative was taken by the chief minister,” said Amitabha Maiti, the Jalpaiguri police chief.

The decision to address the grievances of those who had resorted to armed struggle demanding a separate Kamtapur state – most were from the Rajbangshi community – follows another important decision the chief minister took during her ongoing trip of north Bengal.

On Tuesday, she had announced the elevation of Bangshibadan Burman as the chairman of the West Bengal Rajbangshi Development and Cultural Board. Burman, board vice-chairman till then, is a top leader of the Greater Cooch Behar Peoples’ Association, also formed to demand a separate state.

A section of the former militants had shunned Trinamul and supported the BJP in the May rural polls in some pockets of Alipurduar. “This had helped the BJP score well in some areas, particularly in the Kumargram block that borders (BJP-ruled) Assam,” an observer said.

The former rebels expressed satisfaction. “We have been raising the demand for 15 years. Some others like us who have been left out should also be provided similar jobs or some other assistance,” said Mihir Das, who hails from Kumargram.

Additional reporting by Anirban Choudhury in Alipurduar

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> West Bengal / by Avijit Sinha / July 13th, 2018

Tour of three hidden gems

Museums that encapsulate magic of Bengal and Calcutta

Michael Feiner, the German consul general, with members of Unique Legacies of Bengal (BAUL) at Gurusaday Museum in Joka on Sunday. Pictures by Gautam Bose

Calcutta:

A museum dedicated to the folk arts and crafts of Bengal, another housing a treasure trove of artefacts excavated till 2005 and a third that narrates the story of the ubiquitous tram. Three of Calcutta’s lesser-known attractions, all of them possible to visit in a day, were on Sunday part of a heritage tour taken by the German consul general Michael Feiner.

Metro tagged along to capture highlights of the visit to the Gurusaday Museum in Joka, the State Archaeological Museum in Behala and the tram museum in Esplanade.

Gurusaday Museum, Joka

This museum located near the Joka crossing on Diamond Harbour Road houses paintings, kantha embroidery and musical instruments, among others.

Colourful scroll paintings ( patachitra) that narrate tales like Gourangalila and Manasamangal adorn the walls . There are also square paintings that depict ordinary people living ordinary lives as well as gods and goddesses. One such painting shows a rural market scene with some people dressed in proper clothes while others are clad only in a dhoti, creating an image of social contrast.

Tribal musical instruments like dhamsa, madal, shinga and damru are also on display in the museum.

The majority of the pieces are from the collection of Gurusaday Dutt, an Indian Civil Service officer who gathered those during his stints as collector in various districts of undivided Bengal. Many others have made donations to the museum.

One of the more striking pieces is the Crowned Buddha. “We are used to seeing figures of a bare-headed Buddha. A figure of Buddha with a crown on his head and jewellery around his neck and arms is rare,” said Dipak Barapanda, the assistant curator of the museum.

Smaranika, the tram museum at the Esplanade tram depot

The stone sculpture dates back to the 10th Century.

The museum has been in the news, albeit for the wrong reason, since the Union ministry of textiles informed the authorities that it could not fund maintenance forever. In a letter last November, the ministry asked the museum to find a sustainable revenue model to keep the show going.

About 800 exhibits are currently on display and another 4000 are languishing in the storeroom for paucity of space.

State Archaeological Museum, Behala

Tucked away behind a pavement full of hawkers in Behala is the richness of a heritage often overlooked. Several galleries in this museum are dedicated to paintings and artefacts found during excavation of historical sites.

Very few seem to know that artefacts excavated in 2005 at Jagjivanpur, a site in Malda, are on display here. “This site was excavated between 1996 and 2005,” said Sumita Guha Roy, the assistant curator and an employee of the museum since 1992.

How Jagjivanpur was discovered is an interesting story in itself. “In 1987, a man digging his field found a bronze plate,” Guha Roy recounted. “Archaeologists later deciphered the text on the plate and found that it was a land grant made by King Mahendrapala to his senapati (commander) to build a Buddhist monastery there.”

This was the first clue to the treasure trove hidden underground. A plaque inside the gallery mentions that excavation began in 1992, but had to be stalled for some years to rehabilitate people living there.

In one gallery, a painting from the late 18th Century shows the intermingling of people from different stratas of society. This one came from Nashipur in Murshidabad.

“The painting shows a medieval king and a Vaishnava saint standing in front of Lord Krishna with folded hands,” said Sayak Ghosh, a member of the Bespoken Architectural and Unique Legacies of Bengal (BAUL), the group that had organised the Sunday tour with the German consul general.

Smaranika, the tram museum in Esplanade

The inside of a van that travels to the districts to make people aware of Bengal’s history, heritage and culture. Schools and individuals can contact that State Archaeological Museum to book a visit to their neighbourhood

A tram of 1938 vintage at the Esplanade depot has been turned into a museum-cum-cafeteria with 16 seats. The rear bogie of the tram is where the museum is. It contains replicas of a tramcar that was once used to water and clean roads, besides a trolley bus. Tram tickets used during various periods are also on display.

Trolley buses had wheels like buses, but they drew electricity from overhead electric cables meant for trams.

The visit took consul general Feiner back to Germany, where trams still run. “Around 50 cities of Germany like Berlin, Stuttgart and Munich have streetcars. In Germany, streetcars get priority over other traffic,” he said.

At the cafeteria, which is open from 1pm to 8pm, a montage of films shot inside trams between 1931 and 2012 runs on loop on a television screen.

Feiner, who has lived in Calcutta for 10 months, offered a suggestion to promote tourism within Calcutta. “I think there should be a website with comprehensive information on the museums and heritage of Calcutta. There are a lot of ways to promote tourism and this can be a start,” he said.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Subhajoy Roy / July 09th, 2018

Presi alumni top post

Calcutta:

Nabaneeta Dev Sen has become the first woman president of the Presidency Alumni Association since its inception in 1951.

Dev Sen was officially anointed at a meeting at the association’s office on the Presidency campus on Friday.

“We have had 20 presidents before her. She happens to be the first woman,” said secretary Bivas Chaudhuri.

Dev Sen had filed her nomination for membership in the association’s executive council and was inducted as one of the 29 members at the association’s annual general meeting on June 23. “The executive council unanimously named her the next president,” Chaudhuri said.

Presidents have a tenure of one year. The 30th member of the council is the ex-officio chief patron, who is the university’s vice-chancellor.

Asked what role she would like the alumni association to play, Dev Sen replied: ” These are tough times. Let us see what can be done.”

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by The Telegraph Special Correspondent / July 07th, 2018

How Cannabis Jumped from ‘Colonial Science’ to Western Medicine – in Calcutta

William Brooke O’Shaughnessy’s investigations at a Calcutta hospital into the potential of medical marijuana were the first in modern medicine.

A table from O’Shaughnessy’s 1841 report. Credit: Report on the investigation of cases of real and supposed poisoning

In 1833, a twenty-four-year-old Edinburgh graduate arrived in India, an Assistant Surgeon in the East India Company. He had failed to acquire a license under the London College of Physicians and Surgeons, but had already established himself as an exciting young medical researcher, authoring an important paper on cholera following an outbreak in Europe. This man was William Brooke O’Shaughnessy, an Irish physician who would – over the next few years working in India – make significant contributions to the history of research in electricity, telegraphy, pottery, and, his primary discipline, medicine

The colonial peripheries had no shortage of impressive polymaths, but what sets O’Shaughnessy apart is the manner in which, while conducting research in his many areas of interest, he not only tapped into elaborate local knowledge networks and structures but also rigorously documented them, thoroughly crediting his sources both bibliographic and human. O’Shaughnessy also stands out on account of what was, arguably, his most significant contribution to medicine: the claim that cannabis could be used as a medicinal drug.

As an intoxicant cannabis was fairly common in India, as O’Shaughnessy noted, but he demonstrated its potential use in a medical context, particularly as an anaesthetic. The papers on his experiments with the plant were published in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal in late 1839 — and were also read in front of the Medical and Physical Society of Calcutta in October of that year. In them, we find detailed records of his prescient experiments and a fine example of his unique style of research.

His first series of cannabis experiments were conducted on an unfortunate menagerie of animals (amongst others, fish, vultures, and storks) and also, perhaps not without controversy today, a few children — all subjected to various preparations and extracts of Cannabis Indica. The first experiment, for instance, involved administering “ten grains of Nipalese [sic] Churrus, dissolved in spirit” to a “middling sized dog”. O’Shaughnessy’s breathless notes read: “In about half an hour he became stupid and sleepy, dozing at intervals, starting up, wagging his tail as if extremely contented, he ate some food greedily, on being called to he staggered to and fro, and his face assumed a look of utter and helpless drunkenness.”

Illustration of W. B. O’Shaughnessy at work in the laboratory, artist and date unknown. Credit: US National Library of Medicine

O’Shaughnessy then proceeds to try variants of these initial treatments on a number of maladies. He describes the effect on four cases of patients suffering from rheumatism, a case of hydrophobia, on cholera and tetanus, before issuing a warning about the delirium that may be occasioned by inappropriate dosage. Some of the reports wouldn’t be out of place as descriptions of a merry stoner’s night in (minus the video games). One rheumatism sufferer, to whom “half a grain of Hemp resin was given in a little spirit … became talkative and musical, told several stories, and sang songs to a circle of highly delighted auditors, ate the dinner of two persons …, sought also for other luxuries I can scarcely venture to allude to, and finally fell soundly asleep, and so continued till the following morning”. Perhaps not unsurprisingly the next day the patient “begged hard for a repetition of the medicine”.

Elsewhere O’Shaughnessy describes a somewhat surreal episode in which a rheumatism patient administered with cannabis enters a state of “catalepsy”, whereupon his rigid limbs could be moved only with the help of medical staff, who could place them in “every imaginable attitude” where they would remain “no matter how contrary to the natural influence of gravity” — all the while the patient remaining completely “insensible”. The commotion of events ended up rousing a second patient, similarly dosed, who became “vastly amused at the statuelike attitudes” he witnessed, and then proceeded, after a sudden “loud peal of laughter” to exclaim that “four spirits were springing with his bed into the air”. After a subsequent “uncontrollable” fit of the giggles this second patient then took up the strange condition of the first, his arms and legs “remain[ing] in any desired position”. Despite the slightly chaotic scenes, within a day or so both patients were much relieved of their rheumatism, and in three days completely cured.

Interestingly, it is while recording a failed treatment of hydrophobia that O’Shaughnessy notes one of the fundamental arguments for this medicine: even if it failed at curing the actual root of the illness, “at least one advantage was gained from the use of the remedy — the awful malady was stripped of its horrors”. If the illness was terminal, at least cannabis could enable the physician to “strew the path to the tomb with flowers”.

The argument is not unfamiliar today, and indeed, in a prescient echo of more recent advocates of cannabis’ legalisation, O’Shaughnessy also downplays the drug’s supposed negative effects compared to other certain popular legal narcotics.

As to the evil sequelae so unanimously dwelt on by all writers, these did not appear to me so numerous, so immediate, or so formidable, as many which may be clearly traced to over-indulgence in other powerful stimulants or narcotics, viz. alcohol, opium, or tobacco.

The interest of O’Shaughnessy’s medical students was also clearly piqued. He reports that several ended up experimenting on themselves and describes in detail one particular auto-experiment by a “retiring lad of excellent habits” which, twenty minutes after ingestion, led to the “most amusing effects I ever witnessed”.

Photograph from 1878 of the Medical College Hospital, Calcutta, where O’Shaughnessy worked, although this picture shows a building completed in 1852, by which time he was working on the telegraph system. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

I found him enacting the part of a Raja giving orders to his courtiers; he could recognize none of his fellow students or acquaintances; all to his mind seemed as altered as his own condition; he spoke of many years having passed since his student’s days; described his teachers and friends with a piquancy which a dramatist would envy; detailed the adventures of an imaginary series of years, his travels, his attainment of wealth and power. He entered on discussions on religious, scientific, and political topics, with astonishing eloquence, and disclosed an extent of knowledge, reading, and a ready apposite wit, which those who knew him best were altogether unprepared for. For three hours and upwards he maintained the character he at first assumed, and with a degree of ease and dignity perfectly becoming his high situation. A scene more interesting it would be difficult to imagine. It terminated nearly as rapidly as it commenced, and no headache, sickness, or other unpleasant symptom followed the innocent excess.

In and amongst these colourful accounts, O’Shaughnessy’s paper is peppered with references to other instances in which his fellow medical men had employed the administration of cannabis to alleviate patients’ symptoms. The list includes his cousin Richard O’Shaughnessy, Dr Bain of the Police Hospital, Mr O’Brien of the Native Medical Hospital, and not least, James Esdaile (another Edinburgh student, best known for his experiments with mesmerism at the Hooghly Imambarah College, which he recorded in his 1851 book Mesmerism in India). The historian Shrimoy Roy Chaudhury feels that it was the “conquest of pain in surgery” that granted British medicine historical credibility in India. Hemp played a key role in this. And veterinary science got involved as well — among notable experimenters in this field being the firm Hughes and Templar, who claimed to have cured three out of “five cases of horses suffering from tetanus” with the hemp resin.

Before setting out the details of his experiments, O’Shaughnessy offers a background to the drug in four sections: its botanical character, popular uses, historical details, and medicinal properties. But he does all this with a little help from his friends: some regular and some, as that other great “generalist” Sherlock Holmes would call them, irregular. The network, as the following series of annotations to O’Shaughnessy’s article will demonstrate, is an incredibly wide and diverse one.

For the historical and statistical data he thanks the following: “the distinguished traveller the Syed Keramut Ali, Mootawulee [guardian] of the Hooghly Imambarrah”, “Hakim Mirza Abdul Razes of Teheran”, Pandit Madhusudan Gupta, “the celebrated Kamalakantha Vidyalanka [sic], the Pandit of the Asiatic Society”, and Mr DaCosta.

Portrait of Syed Keramut Ali, featured in Arthur Conolly’s Journey to the North of India (1838). Credit: Journey to the North of India

Syed Keramut Ali, former Great Game “Newswriter” under Arthur Conolly in Kandahar, helped O’Shaughnessy with Persian references and a few manuscripts. Additional translation help may have also come from “Mr Da Costa”, which is presumably Lewis Da Costa, a polyglot and a prolific translator serving as Assistant Persian Translator to the Government of India in the 1840s. O’Shaughnessy wished also to appeal to Hindu authorities and the most obvious names listed in this regard are Madhusudan Gupta – celebrated as the first Indian to dissect a cadaver (though recent histories have justifiably questioned this claim) – and Kamalakantha Vidyalanka, who was appointed teacher of Rhetoric at the Sanksrit College and became part of the British judicial system as a pundit.

Vidyalanka appears to have had no direct link with medicine but provides O’Shaughnessy with a number of obscure Sanskrit references to the use of hemp, including a prohibition for Brahmins in particular found in the texts of Manu.

While reaching out to his scholarly friends on the one hand, O’Shaughnessy also sought advice from the Deputy Superintendent of Police, Mr McCann, on official surveys regarding the consumption of “gunjah”. But if he wanted to know about the daily lives of his consumers, he needed someone “irregular”. For such purposes he tapped into the experience of one Ameer, “the proprietor of a celebrated place of resort for Hemp devotees in Calcutta, and who is considered the best artist in his profession.” For understandable reasons, that is all we ever learn regarding the identity of Ameer.

It is perhaps thanks to Ameer, that O’Shaughnessy’s report is so able to display an exceptionally close knowledge of the uses of the various extracts. While Sidhee, Subjee and Bang (“used with water as a drink”) is “chiefly used by the Mahomedans of the better classes”, Sidhee (“ground, mixed with black pepper, and a quart of cold water”) is the “favourite beverage of the Hindus who practice this vice”. Gunjah, on the other hand, is “used for smoking alone”, and one rupee weight mixed with dried tobacco, “suffices for three persons”, although you find “four or five persons usually join in the debauch”. The demography is curious, especially in the case of Majoon, (a hemp confection which is “a compound of sugar, butter, flour, milk, and Sidhee or Bang”) which is consumed by all classes, “including the lower Portuguese or ‘Kala Feringhees,’ and especially their females”.

Photograph of “a hemp drug shop” in Khandesh, with “bhang, ganja, & majum” for sale, featured as part of the Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission, 1893-1894. Credit: Medical History of British India, Disease Prevention and Public Health

For interested parties let it be known, O’Shaughnessy has provided ample details to try out your own nineteenth-century recipes. He distinguishes between each type of extract and offers specific descriptions of how they are prepared, although the one which he recommends in greatest detail is meant for medicinal use only. Inadvertently he also maps availability of the finest quality of each kind — sourcing his churrus as he did from Nepal, thanks to Dr. A. Campbell of the Bengal Medical Service, a man with the dubious distinction of changing the course of Darjeeling’s history when as Superintendent he oversaw a huge population rise between 1839 and 1849. The first part of the article also offers a rare glimpse into the contemporary consumption habits — an account that differs in tone and content from the usual official surveys.

If we discard the binary model often used to understand the exchange of knowledge (scientific, legal, or otherwise) between the colonial centres and peripheries, and turn to the idea of networks (as the historian Kapil Raj, for instance, has done), we realize that the networks that produce knowledge are much more complex than they appear at first glance. In W. B. O’Shaughnessy we have someone who is rigorous in noting down all the different sources of information that he taps into, and we realize that, upon closer inspection, even the nodes of a network give way to many other interconnected webs.

In the thirty-one-page Report on the Investigation of Cases of Real and Supposed Poisoning (1841), found in the National Library of India (Kolkata), we see our doctor sitting in the centre of another web of intrigue. After a call out, people sent O’Shaughnessy items ranging from “the remains of a chapattee, which is said to have been the cause of death of Dasi Bania” to “a stomach…and the small intestines with the contents thereof, all stated to have been removed from the body of a man” found dead in the Native Hospital.

O’Shaughnessy, who was Chemical Examiner to the Government, received mails from persons in different posts in the British government from all over Bengal. He would send back his reports with details of his chemical analysis, opining whether there may have been foul play. He often struggled with forms of poison (often with the common bish which is available at any Calcutta market) that were not yet recognized by Western medicine.

Table from O’Shaughnessy’s Report On The Investigation Of Cases Of Real And Supposed Poisoning (1841). Credit: Report on the investigation of cases of real and supposed poisoning.

O’Shaughnessy’s language seems to anticipate at times the medico-forensic phrasings of Conan Doyle’s Dr. Watson. He begins Case 12 thus:

These are by far the most interesting cases which I have ever met with. The respectability of the individuals implicated; the extraordinary period which elapsed during which the bodies were exposed, without coffins, to the destroying influences of the heat and rains of Bengal; the curious changes which the poison underwent…constitute an array of circumstances scarcely surpassed in medico-legal interest by any but those of the celebrated Laffarge trial.

This was not his first encounter with the science of criminal activity. In 1830, a young O’Shaughnessy arrived in London, struggling to find permanent employment. Soon after, urged by the editor of The Lancet, he published an article on “Poisoned Confectionary”, the result of an extensive study. Along with a Dr. Green, he purchased “at several shops, different specimens of coloured confectionary, and of colourless articles wrapped in stained paper.” Each colour was analyzed rigorously. The yellow, for instance, was understood to be a result of adulterating the candies with either “gamboges, massicot, Naples yellow, the chromate of lead, or vegetable lakes.” A report on the study was published in an 1831 issue of The Medico-chirurgical Review and Journal of Practical Medicine, in which the writer remarks: “Dr. O’Shaughnessy is evidently a clever chemist, and his industry appears equal to his talent in the department of human knowledge”.

The Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal published in the span of a few months two other experiments performed by O’Shaughnessy. In 1839 he reports on his use of the Galvanic battery for the “successful destruction of the wreck of the Equitable at Fultah Reach”, where the Sydney-bound ship “leaden with wheat, rice, rum, &c.,” had touched on the sand below and turned over “in six to seven fathoms of water”. The first one, however, anticipates his later work on telegraphy — a form of communication that would be taken seriously only after 1847, with Lord Dalhousie’s appointment as governor general.

At the Botanical Gardens in Shibpur (he already had cordial relations with the persons in charge, such as Nathaniel Wallich), he experimented with the first telegraph circuit. After laying the cables, the two ends starting and ending where he positioned himself, he used to a pair of modified watches “of the cheapest kind”. (This is before his visit to England where he learnt of the Morse.) “Round the second hand was placed a card dial laid off with three concentric circles divided each into twenty parts.” He omitted “vowels and superfluous letters” (reminiscent of today’s SMS truncations), and using this he successfully sent across messages. Each signal took about three minutes to transmit, and both watches were “then allowed to run to No. 1 or zero, and stopped”.

Diagram of the telegraph system, featured in O’Shaughnessy’s “Memoranda relative to experiments on the communication of Telegraphic Signals by induced electricity”. Credit: Journal Of The Asiatic Society Of Bengal (1839).
Map of the botanical garden showing the route of the telegraph, featured in O’Shaughnessy’s “Memoranda relative to experiments on the communication of Telegraphic Signals by induced electricity”. Credit: Journal Of The Asiatic Society Of Bengal (1839)

It is in his work on the telegraph system – and particularly his role in rebuilding it after it was largely destroyed in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 – that we can see more clearly the dubious nexus between such scientific projects and the endeavours of colonialism, a connection made more explicit at moments of political crisis. As far as O’Shaughnessy’s contribution to medicine is concerned, its correlation with colonial power is perhaps not as obvious. Yet it does contribute, even if unintentionally to the larger discourse of knowledge/power, relating to what Shiv Visvanathan and Ashis Nandy call the “industrial grid”.

Western medicine, through sheer claim of objectivity, marginalised, traditional, and subsequently, “folk medicine”, while at the same time deriving its legitimacy on foreign soil from references to indigenous texts and social practices, through Sanskrit and Perso-Arabic scholars and local practitioners. In this regard O’Shaughnessy was no exception. Rather than thinking only of centres (individual or institutional) of knowledge production in the colonies, we’d do better than to focus more on the complexity of networks and exchanges – the go-betweens, as Kapil Raj calls them – who played such a key role in the production of the colonial sciences. It is here, in light of such an approach, that the detailed notes left behind by William Brooke O’Shaughnessy prove so invaluable, offering a rare and honest glimpse into how such networks functioned.

Sujaan Mukherjee is a Sylff PhD researcher at the Department of English, Jadavpur University. For his PhD he is looking at the role of urban memory in the formation of Kolkata, although his academic interests include physical cultures, Modernism and feminisms. Between 2015 and 2016 Sujaan was an archival fellow with the India Foundation for the Arts, researching visual representations of Calcutta particularly in tourism documents.

This article was originally published in The Public Domain Review and has been republished under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.

source: http://www.thewire.in / The Wire / Home> History> The Sciences / by Sujaan Mukherjee / June 26th, 2018

Students innovate wheelchair that climbs stairs, med box with alert

Kolkata :

A wheelchair that can climb stairs, a medicine dispenser that sends out reminders to users, and a walking stick that helps people with visual impairment mavigate with the help of audio messages. These were among 30 innovations that students at 24 institutions in eastern India demonstrated at a CII meet on innovation and startups in the city.

Conscious of the difficulty that the elderly and infirm experience in climbing stairs, students at JIS College of Engineering presented a wheelchair designed to climb stairs, with the help of three sets of wheels that work in tandem. Another innovation was Urja, a multi-purpose electric source, presented by Anish Kumar Sarangi from Silicon Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar. The device can be used as a portable power source, a high-frequency mosquito repellent, a passive water filter, an LED light and a USB port, from which mobiles can be charged or USB fans can be operated. “Nearly two out of every 10 people in Asia and almost 300 million people in India do not have access to electricity. The challenge is to bring power to them.” Sarangi said.

“CII has formed innovation clubs at different colleges. Commercially viable projects are selected by the jury. Those projects, along with their prototypes, are displayed and some of them adapted in industries. We focus on four main fields: agriculture, education, finance and health,” said Dipankar Chakrabarti, co-chairman, CII Eastern Region Startup & Innovation Taskforce.

Students at Sudhir Chandra Sur Degree Engineering College have created an automatic medicine dispenser for which an app has been developed. Once the medicine schedules are fed into the dispenser the machine can deliver tablets or syrup at the correct time.

Among the other innovations was a solar AC proposed by Narula Institute of Technology. Its students have also proposed smart gloves that can translate gestures into speech to facilitate easier communication by people with speech impairment.

Jadavpur University students have proposed a light, portable, durable and fire-proof cabin that can be used by armed forces at the border.

MCKV Institute of Engineering presented a walking stick and a safety app that gets triggered when a ring worn by the user comes in contact with the mobile. The stick is fitted with GPS and guides the user —a visually impaired person—with audio directions.

Software Technology Parks of India additional director and officer in-charge Manjit Nayak felt most proposals had the potential to be developed into products. “A Class XII student from Bihar came up with a wireless device with which one can remotely control a tractor,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> City News> Kolkata News> Schools & Colleges / TNN / July 03rd, 2018

Calcutta through Chinese eyes

Victoria Memorial:

If there was no Chinese community in Calcutta, there would have been no rickshaw, no Darjeeling tea and no noodles for us.

But the Chinese – missionaries, migrants, journalists and government emissaries – also left their written impressions of the city.

“The Chinese formed the largest migrant group from outside South Asia in the city. There were those who came to look for jobs and those who got smuggled in,” Tansen Sen said.

“It was the site of opium export and of financial transactions in the late 19th and early 20th century. The Mahabodhi Society here was a transit point between Sri Lanka and Thailand, China and Tibet. Many walked from Kalimpong to Lhasa, carrying necessary commodities. All this shows how important Calcutta was to the Chinese.” The professor of history and director, Center for Global Asia of New York University, Shanghai, was speaking on Chinese encounters with colonial and post-colonial Calcutta at Victoria Memorial on Thursday.

Governor General Warren Hastings initiated exchanges with China in the Qing dynasty. He sent a diplomatic mission to Tibet in 1774-75 and granted land near Budge Budge to Tong Atchew, the first Chinese trader to Calcutta, to set up a sugar mill in exchange of tea. British records show how Chinese labourers, especially carpenters, began to grow in popularity.

If Atchew did not document his impressions, Huang Maocai, sent by the governor of Sichuan in 1879, did. “His job was to check if the British planned to attack China and he created maps of the entire region from Sichuan to Bengal. He was fascinated with the railways and the telegraph as well as streetlights and tap water.”

But Kang Youwei, who visited Calcutta twice in the first decade of the 20th centure and stayed at the Grand Hotel, found the streets “filthy like those in Beijing”.

By the time Kang comes, there were three Chinese settlements in Calcutta – Bowbazar, Tangra and Budge Budge. Sen stressed that it would be wrong to lump the community together. “Bowbazar, housing the Cantonese, was a relatively open community. Tangra, housing the Hakkas, was gated. They did not like each other.”

The next major visitor, Tan Yunshan, the founder-director of Cheena Bhavana, Visva-Bharati, described China Town as an unhygienic place of criminal activities, opium dens and “where Chinese women showcase their small feet”, an euphemism for prostitution.

“But those who lived here regarded the place differently, like Kwai-Yun Li. Daughter of Hakka parents who migrated here in the 1920s and owned three shoe stores, she grew up in Chhatawala Gali and then Tangra, and was friendly with Bengali and other communities.”

But the political changes in 1949, when the Kuomintang lost the civil war in China and India recognised the People’s Republic of China (PRC) government, impacted the local Chinese populace.

The rise of communism or the “godless regime” impacted David and Mary Lamb, Chinese Christian missionaries who not only had to quit Shanghai but were also precariously placed in Calcutta as the Bengal government was supportive of PRC. The Lambs founded the Ling Liang Chinese Church and Grace Ling Liang English School in Tangra.

But worse was to come in 1962 with the war. As Kwai-Yun Li, who migrated to Canada and wrote of her Chinatown experience, told this correspondent during her Calcutta visit in 2008: “Fear was in the air…fear of being deported or put into Deoli.”

Deoli, in Rajasthan, is where a British detention camp for World War II Japanese prisoners had been reopened “to lodge Chinese-Indians”. Sen says those who had opted for PRC passports in 1949 were the first to be targeted. Many who were deported to China were settled in villages in Guanxi, Guangdong and Yunnan. “They still maintain Indian traditions like wearing sari and celebrating Diwali.”

The Chinese writings, Sen pointed out, present a perspective different from British writings and deserve to be read to understand the cosmopolitan nature of Calcutta.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Sudeshna Banerjee / July 01st, 2018

The dead poet’s society

Swachchhasila Basu visits Michael Madhusudan Dutt’s Bengali debut stage on the poet-playwright’s 145th death anniversary

DUTT ADDRESS: Belgachia Rajbari

A two-storey structure off north Calcutta’s Belgachia Road nudges curiosity. The portico cuts though the building like a tunnel. Trees grow on the walls, their aerial roots weaving a veil over it. The pink ground floor walls are peeling like scabs, the upper floor is unpainted. The bricks that seal the arched spaces to the right of the portico talk of secrets buried. The red doors to the left are not welcoming either. And yet, once, the doors of this very house had been thrown open to Bengal’s cultural elite.

The Belgachia Rajbari hosted, among other things, the first performance of Michael Madhusudan Dutt’s Sarmistha, the first original play in Bengali.

According to the Mahabharata, Sarmistha is the second consort of prince Yayati. Says 83-year-old Nityapriya Ghosh, “It was 1859. While translating Ramnarayan Tarakanath’s Sanskrit play Ratnavali into English, Dutt realised there were no original plays in Bengali. Encouraged by friends and patrons, among them the rajas of Paikpara and Jyotindramohan Tagore, he wrote this five-act play.”

This was supposed to be the most productive phase of Dutt’s literary life. In a letter from 1859, written to a friend whom he refers to “as one of the best dogs in creation” he writes, ” Sermista [the English translation by Dutt himself is spelt thus] has turned out to be a most delightful girl… Jyotindra says it is the best drama in the language.”

Ghosh, who used to live in Belgachia Villa – a government housing that came up in a portion of the Rajbari estate – says that around 1836, Prince Dwarkanath, entrepreneur and grandfather of Rabindranath Tagore, bought the estate and a single-storey house and converted it into this palace. In Bonedi Kolkatar Gharbari, Debasish Bandyopadhyay writes that Dwar-kanath had spent over Rs 2 lakh on the estate makeover.

“The who’s who of society would look forward to an invitation to the innumerable parties he threw here,” says 88-year-old Deboprosad Majumdar, who has done much research on the region.

Later, Dwarkanath’s son, Debendranath, auctioned the property. Its new owners, the Singhas of Kandi in Murshidabad, who were the rajas of Paikpara, got it for Rs 54,000.

Paikpara is adjacent to Belgachia.

In Calcutta – The Living City, writer Tapati Guha Thakurta talks about the drawing room of the palace being full of European style furniture, art and sculptures.

Ghosh’s daughter, Sahana, recalls playing with her friends in the palace gardens till the early 1970s, while attending mothers would sit around on marble chairs fixed to the ground, around a marble table, chatting, knitting and soaking up the winter sun.

At that time, the then owners lived in a second house further down, across a large water body known as the Motijheel. Sahana says, “It extended quite a bit across the estate even in the 1970s. An uncle used to take us bird-watching there.” The jheel has vanished in places today and what remains of it are unrelated ponds and garbage dumps.

Theatre artiste Ditipriya Bandopadhyay, who got a chance to enter the palace building recently – she was shooting for a TV serial – says, “I saw some black-and-white photographs. They were captioned but the writing was so blurred that there was no telling what was what.”

Sarmistha opens in the Himalayas. Dutt writes in yet another letter: “Everyone says it is superior to that [Ratnavali] book; as for the Bengali original, the only fault found with it is that the language is a little too high… This I need scarcely tell you, is nothing; for if the book is destined to occupy a permanent place in the literature of the country, it will not be condemned on this head.”

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Swachchhasila Basu / July 01st, 2018