Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Churchill’s Dark Side: Six Questions for Madhusree Mukerjee—By Scott Horton (Harper's Magazine)

Churchill’s Dark Side: Six Questions for Madhusree Mukerjee—By Scott Horton (Harper's Magazine)

Churchill’s Dark Side: Six Questions for Madhusree Mukerjee

By Scott Horton

Madhusree Mukerjee, a former editor at Scientific American and the recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship, has published a bombshell book about Churchill’s attitudes toward India and the steps that he took during World War II that contributed to a horrific famine in Bengal in 1943. I put six questions to her about her book and some of the pushback it has drawn from Churchill’s defenders:

1. You write that Hitler never fully embraced the Indian nationalist cause because he expected Britain to reach some accommodation with Germany that allowed it to retain most of its empire, and specifically India. What is it about Churchill and Britain that Hitler misunderstood in this regard?

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Madhusree Mukerjee (photo by Dave Freda)

Hitler believed that the so-called Nordic race, which in his view included Germans and Britons, was destined to rule the world. He sought to emulate, not supplant, the British Empire: the German empire would comprise the Slavic countries to the east. As he saw it, the United Kingdom would retain its colonies but assume the role of Germany’s junior partner in world domination.

Hitler underestimated the depth of Churchill’s reverence for England’s imperial traditions. To Churchill, the British would be second to none. Moreover, Churchill’s reading of history told him that Britain had always maintained the balance of power in Europe: whenever France or Germany had marched, England had marched—against. This time would be no different. Churchill also believed that it was his destiny to lead his country in war against a vile enemy.

Hitler may have evoked particular repugnance because, in addition to persecuting Jews, he was seeking to enslave Europeans. Churchill had condoned the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, explaining that the aggressor was “an ancient State, with the highest sense of national honour and patriotism and with a teeming population and a remarkable energy.” And he had advised against intervention when Italy attacked Abyssinia, on the grounds that the victim was not “a fit, worthy, and equal member” of the League of Nations. Hitler trusted that British leaders would likewise comprehend his desire to induct Slavs, whom he saw simply as slaves, into the Third Reich.

2. Yet you do write that Churchill harbored a deep racism or at least ethnocentrism when it came to the Indians and that he toyed with the idea of building a British alliance with Untouchables, Sikhs, and Muslims to hold India and keep Hindu nationalists at bay. Did this reflect a reasonable appreciation of the forces then at work in India?

Perhaps at no other period during the war than in the summer and fall of 1943 did the number of ships at hand so greatly exceed those already committed to Allied operations… [in May] alone the president had transferred to British control fifteen to twenty cargo vessels for the duration of the war. By the summer of 1943, the British shipping crisis had given way to what historian Kevin Smith calls a “shipping glut” and the S branch would refer to as “[w]indfall shipping.”… So many vessels would present at North American ports that autumn to be loaded with supplies to add to the United Kingdom’s stockpile that not enough cargo could be found to fill them. If ever during the war a window had opened for saving lives in Bengal—at no discernible cost to the war effort—this was it.
—From Churchill’s Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II
Reprinted by permission of the publisher, Basic Books—Copyright © 2010 Madhusree Mukerjee

Churchill’s divide-and-rule policies found fertile ground among India’s Muslims. For decades, British conservatives had sought to deepen India’s inherent fissures in order to weaken the nascent independence movement. For instance, in 1905 Viceroy Curzon planned to partition Bengal province along religious lines, so as to enhance rivalries between Muslim landowners in its east and Hindu nationalists in its west. He also encouraged the formation of the Muslim League as a counterweight to the dominant nationalist party, the Indian National Congress.

A prolonged agitation led to Bengal being partitioned instead along linguistic lines. But then the colonial government introduced separate electorates for Muslims—that is, every Muslim in British India was required to vote for a Muslim. The measure favored separatists, who could get elected by appealing to narrow sectarian sentiments. The British subsequently introduced separate electorates for other groups as well, but the effort was partially repulsed.

So although Churchill was interested in exploiting diverse social fault lines, he concentrated on widening the Hindu-Muslim rift—which he regarded as “the bulwark of British rule in India.” When Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the leader of the Muslim League, called for a separate nation of Pakistan, Churchill hailed “the awakening of a new spirit of self-reliance and self-assertiveness” among India’s minorities. During the war, the British government encouraged the demand for Pakistan and propagandized along Islamist lines against Hindus.

3. At several points you suggest that Churchill was inspired by the remembrance of the 1857 uprising to take steps that disregarded the value of civilian lives in India. But, as you note, in 1920, following the Amritsar massacre, Churchill denounced precisely that logic when it was used by Brigadier Reginald Dyer and his supporters to justify the tragedy that had occurred. Churchill decried what happened as “frightfulness” and called for accountability for Dyer. Doesn’t this suggest a different attitude towards the Indians?

In 1920 Churchill was not hostile to Indians. The independence movement had yet to develop to its full strength; and the Indian Army, which was largely loyal to the British, had just sacrificed 60,000 lives in World War I. The British Empire was threatened mainly by actions such as Dyer’s. By killing more than a thousand Sikh civilians—at least by the Indian account—Dyer had undermined the loyalty of Sikh soldiers in the Indian Army. The army had accordingly dismissed Dyer; and, as secretary of state for war, Churchill was called upon to defend the army’s action. Hence his speech denouncing “frightfulness,” or terror tactics.

Incidentally, in these years Churchill was calling for gas attacks on rebellious Iraqis, in order to “spread a lively terror.”

By the 1940s, the Indian situation had changed dramatically. The freedom movement, led by Gandhi, posed a potent challenge to the Empire and caused Churchill’s animosity toward Indians to escalate. And the Indian Army had acquired many native officers, whose loyalty could not be taken for granted. So Churchill ensured that if rebellion broke out in India, the colony’s best-equipped and -trained battalions would be fighting the Axis—on another continent.

India was bereft of defenses, so that when Japanese forces reached the colony’s borders, the War Cabinet ordered scorched-earth measures to deter their advance. The resulting destruction of rice and boats contributed to famine.

4. The central thesis in your book is that Churchill and the War Cabinet took a series of decisions which led inexorably to the starvation of between 1.5 and 3 million persons in 1943. You do not, however, charge that it was their conscious intention to starve these people to death—unlike what the Nazis did in east central Europe about this same time, when starvation was a conscious policy objective. But do you believe that they knew or should have known that this catastrophe would follow from their decisions?

The War Cabinet received repeated warnings that famine could result from its exhaustive use of Indian resources for the war effort—and ignored them.

The Japanese occupation of Burma in March 1942 cut off rice imports, of between one and two million tons per year, to India. Instead of protecting the Indian public from the resultant food shortage, the War Cabinet insisted that India absorb this loss and, further, export rice to countries that could no longer get it from South East Asia. As a result, after war arrived at India’s borders, the colony exported 260,000 tons of rice in the fiscal year 1942-43.

Meanwhile India’s war expenditures increased ten fold, and the government printed paper money to pay for them. In August 1942 a representative of India’s viceroy told the War Cabinet that runaway inflation could lead to “famines and riots.”

In December 1942, Viceroy Linlithgow warned that India’s grain supply was seriously short and he urgently needed 600,000 tons of wheat to feed soldiers and the most essential industrial workers. The War Cabinet stated that ships were not available. In January 1943, Churchill moved most of the merchant ships operating in the Indian Ocean over to the Atlantic, in order to build up the United Kingdom’s stockpile of food and raw materials. The Ministry of War Transport cautioned him that the shift would result in “violent changes and perhaps cataclysms” in trade around the Indian Ocean. (In addition to India, the colonies of Kenya, Tanganyika, and British Somaliland all suffered famine in 1943.) Although refusing to meet India’s need for wheat, Churchill insisted that India continue to export rice.

With famine raging, in July 1943 Viceroy Linlithgow halted rice exports and again asked the War Cabinet for wheat imports, this time of 500,000 tons. That was the minimum required to feed the army and otherwise maintain the war effort. The news of impending shipments would indirectly ease the famine, he noted: any hoarders would anticipate a fall in prices and release grain, causing prices to fall in reality. But at a meeting on August 4, the War Cabinet failed to schedule even a single shipment of wheat for India. Instead, it ordered the buildup of a stockpile of wheat for feeding European civilians after they had been liberated. So 170,000 tons of Australian wheat bypassed starving India—destined not for consumption but for storage.

Meanwhile, the United Kingdom’s stockpile of food and raw materials, intended for shoring up the postwar British economy, reached 18.5 million tons, the highest ever. Sugar and oilseeds overflowed warehouses and had to be stored outdoors, under tarpaulins.

Of course Churchill knew that his priorities would result in mass death. In one of his tirades against Indians, he said they were “breeding like rabbits” anyway. On behalf of Indians, the War Cabinet ignored an offer of 100,000 tons of Burmese rice from freedom fighter Subhas Chandra Bose (who was allied with the Japanese), discouraged a gift of wheat from Canada, and turned down rice and wheat volunteered by the United States.

The War Cabinet eventually ordered for India 80,000 tons of wheat and 130,000 tons of barley. (Barley was useless for famine relief because it had no impact on prices.) The first of these meager shipments reached India in November. All the while, the Indian Army consumed local rice and wheat that might otherwise have fed the starving. The famine came to an end in December 1943, when Bengal harvested its own rice crop—at which point Churchill and his friend Cherwell renewed their demand for rice exports.

5. Another figure who comes in for a shellacking in your book is Frederick Alexander Lindemann, later Lord Cherwell, an Anglo-German known as “the Prof,” who exercised a powerful influence over Churchill. You describe Cherwell as an impressive scientist but also someone who harbored some rather sinister Malthusian ideas with a latent racist component. What were these ideas and how did they contribute to the famine?

All the evidence points to the prime minister and his closest adviser having believed that Indians were ordained to reside at the bottom of the social pyramid, such that their financial ascendancy as creditors during the war became a source of frustration and fury. Long after India had obtained independence, the Prof would describe the “abdication of the white man” as the worst calamity of the twentieth century—more deplorable than two world wars and the Holocaust.
—From Churchill’s Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II
Reprinted by permission of the publisher, Basic Books—Copyright © 2010 Madhusree Mukerjee

Judging by a lecture that Cherwell gave in the 1930s, he regarded colonial subjects as “helots,” or slaves, whose only reason for existence was the service of racial superiors. In drafts of this talk, he outlined how science could help entrench the hegemony of the higher races. By means of hormones, drugs, mind control, and surgery, one could remove from slaves the ability to suffer or to feel ambition—yielding humans with “the mental make-up of the worker bee.” Such a lobotomized race would have no thought of rebellion or votes, so that one would end up with a perfectly peaceable and permanent society, “led by supermen and served by helots.”

In November 1943, Cherwell urged Churchill to hold firm against demands for famine relief. Else, he warned, “so long as the war lasts [India’s] high birthrate may impose a heavy strain on this country which does not view with Asiatic detachment the pressure of a growing population on limited supplies of food.” That is, he blamed the famine on the irresponsible fecundity of natives—and ignored the devastation of the Indian economy by the war effort. He also elided the fact that the War Cabinet was preventing India from using its ample sterling balance or even its own ships to import sufficient wheat.

By Cherwell’s Malthusian argument, England should have been the first to starve. It was being kept alive by massive imports. In 1943 the United Kingdom imported 4 million tons of wheat, 1.6 million tons of meat, 1.4 million tons of sugar, 409,000 heads of live cattle, 325,000 tons of fish, 131,000 tons of rice, 206,000 tons of tea, 172,000 tons of cocoa, and 1.1 million gallons of wine for its 47.7 million people—a population an eighth that of India.

To Cherwell and also to Churchill, colonial subjects were worth saving only if they made a direct contribution to the war effort. According to Field Marshal Wavell, Churchill wanted to feed only those Indians who were “actually fighting or making munitions or working some particular railways.” The rest were dispensable.

6. Arthur Herman argues that you rely too heavily on Leo Amery’s diaries, recording Churchill’s intemperate outbursts, and pass by the fact that Churchill took decisive steps to ameliorate the famine. “Without Churchill,” he says, “the famine would have been worse.” How do you respond to this?

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My indictment is based on what Churchill did, not on what he said. The Ministry of War Transport papers, the Cherwell Papers, and the official histories of British wartime food supply, shipping, and economy are my key sources. They show, for instance, that the War Cabinet scheduled eighteen ships to load with Australian wheat in September and October, 1943. Not one of these ships was destined for famine-stricken India.

Had anyone else been prime minister, he would have striven to relieve India’s plight instead of consigning wheat to stockpiles.

Churchill’s diatribes, as recorded in Amery’s and others’ diaries, are, however, useful in understanding why he acted as he did. Famine had failed to temper his hostility toward Indians. Churchill would tell his secretary that Hindus were a foul race protected by their rapid breeding from “the doom that is their due.” He wished Arthur Harris, the head of British bomber command, could “send some of his surplus bombers to destroy them.”

Saturday, July 19, 2008

rediff.com: The real India shining story

rediff.com: The real India shining story: "The real India shining story
July 18, 2008

Text: Monika Joshi | Photographs: Paresh Gandhi
Usha Chaumar stands in the lobby of the Millennium UN Plaza Hotel that overlooks the green-tinted glass tower that is home to the United Nations in New York.
Chaumar and 19 of her co-workers, who arrived in New York the previous day from Alwar, Rajasthan, move in unison in their uniform saris, creating a sea of blue. They have just got their United Nations passes, pinned to their shoulders. Over the next two days, they are scheduled to make two appearances at the UN, including walking the ramp with fashion models at a reception.
Prompted by our photographer, they crowd the hotel's revolving door to pose for pictures outside with the UN as the backdrop. Many urge him to click a solo image as well. Then, the women come back in and wait for the elevator to go upstairs.

'Normally, you won't see me like this,' Chaumar says. 'I keep my face half covered with a dupatta or an end of my sari. And I don't wear my sari this way -- with the pallu pinned to the left shoulder. I wear it the traditional way, with one end falling to the right -- like hers'; she points to a co-worker.
Till about four years ago, Chaumar cleaned toilets, scrapping human waste into metal baskets, a practice that continues in India today despite several states banning manual scavenging. While at work, she met Bindeshwar Pathak, who brought her to Nai Disha, a vocational training centre where former scavengers are trained to stitch clothes, embroider, prepare pickles and papad, and work as beauticians.
Image: Members of Sulabh International at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
Also see: The naked face of casteism"

Yourfamily.com - finding ancestors and lost relatives

rediff.com: Varsha Bhosle on the naked face of casteism

rediff.com: Varsha Bhosle on the naked face of casteism

Varsha Bhosle
The naked face of casteism
In all my years of writing, I've never received as much email for a single column as I did over the last two weeks. Since I was more interested than I've ever been to know readers' views, I not only read every single message as it arrived, but also categorised it by sender and content, besides noting down pertinent points. However, I answered only those which inspired unprintable invective; as for the rest, please understand, I couldn't have conducted my personal "survey" and responded to everybody, too. Thank you all for writing in and giving me glimpses of your caste-related thoughts and experiences --- I intend addressing those issues soon.
The variety of opinions was instructive, but I anticipated that from a people who widely differ on the nature of their religion itself. Nevertheless, what I did NOT expect were thoughts such as reader Poduri's: "There is nothing wrong with doing the kinds of jobs that are performed by the Shudras. The work in itself should carry no stigma --- it is work that is needed by the society, and someone needs to do it."

I wish it were the only mail of its kind...

Not! For, another reader forwarded me a link to the open forum at Sulekha, with comments on my article by one Satish Tiwary. I'm glad they weren't directly addressed to me --- my reply would've been rendered incoherent by my rage. I quote:

cleaning and hauling excreta --- this has no basis in Indian culture... It started in India when the new fashioned cities started with what we call 'kamau' toilets... That, alongwith the freezing of the caste boundaries that happened during the colonial period, created a new caste of 'bhangis.' Now, with the advent of modern sanitation, this thing has vanished, and carrying human refuge [sic] as a job has been made illegal throughout India. It is a social rather than 'hindu' problem.
burn corpses --- ditto. It is a job like any other job and I have not seen anyone forced to do it. I think it is a respectable job, and go try to insult Domraj at Manikarnika Ghat, Kashi, if you dont believe it. The whole received wisdom of hierarchy doesn't work there.
Tend morgues --- ditto. In addition, I know plenty of so called 'upper caste' people who tend morgues in different hospitals.
Skin dead animals --- ditto. People in leather industry have to skin dead animals. They don't auto-skin.
None of these jobs are insulting, other than carrying human refuge [sic], which has been made illegal. As far as I know, no one is forced to do these things, and I should know as I come from a poor village in north-western Bihar. Most of the young people from the 'castes' who were supposed to do these jobs dont do it anymore as they dont pay enough. They work in the mills and factories in Delhi or Bombay, or work as agricultural laborers in Punjab.
Maybe, just maybe, I would've let this garbage pass --- if not for the congratulatory chorus from Sulekha's "secularists", "rationalists" and "chaddis" alike: "Good views, Satish, esp the one regarding so called 'low' jobs!" "Things are changing and it is labour for living and dignity of labour gaining ground slowly but surely", "Satish, Very succintly [sic] and elegantly put and I concur", "ur comments were very good".
THIS is the naked face of casteism. There can't be a more revealing example of how the "upper castes" endeavour to limit Dalits to sub-human jobs --- in the guise of "respecting" labour. The closed casteist camaraderie is evident as they pat each other for "telling it like it is". Which, according to Tiwary: "It is economy, stupid! Rest of the noise is just harmful bullshit."

It's easy to live abroad --- I guess, Tiwary & Co are NRIs --- and talk about "knowing" non-Dalits who tend morgues in Mumbai, burn corpses in Kolkata and shift human refuse in Ranchi. Hundreds of readers happen by, absorb the pile of garbage as facts, with no one to ask the dork to put up or shut up; with online anonymity, there's no question of credibility, integrity or culpability, anyway. Rarely have I felt as violent as I feel towards these poisonous thugs. And so, I will skin Tiwary's postulates as I would his posterior.

The Government of India's All India Institute of Hygiene and Public Health states that "only about 200 cities and towns in India out of a total of more than 4,000 have sewage systems and that too partial. Only very few of these have sewerage treatment plants, most of which are ill maintained and go out of operation more often than not. As of today, less than 50% of the urban population are having sanitary excreta disposal system. There are still 4 lakh scavengers and 72.1 lakh dry latrines in 2,587 towns. In rural areas, open defecation in the field continues to remain the only form of sanitation for majority of the population... less than 10% of the rural population have sanitary facilities. Facilities of drainage and sewerage disposal are almost non-existent."

"This thing has vanished"...? Whether the Chuhras of Punjab, Dumras of Rajasthan, Mehtars of Bihar, Bhuimalia of Bengal, Bhangis of Gujarat, Pakhis of Andhra Pradesh, or Sikkaliars and Thotis of Tamil Nadu, Dalit scavengers exist under different caste names throughout the country --- and have since pre-colonial times. Or did you think that the Chitpavans of Punyanagri, or the Saraswats of Karnataka, or the Rajputs of Rajasthan went to the woods, or cleaned out their own night soil before the advent of the British...?

The Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines (Prohibition) Act, 1993, punishes the employment of scavengers or the construction of non-flush (dry) latrines with imprisonment for up to one year and/or a fine up to Rs 2,000. That's right --- this Act was passed less than a decade ago. And all that's changed is that the scavengers are now called "safai karamcharis" and have a panel to oversee their welfare. Using no more than a broom, metal plates and baskets, Dalits are made to clear excreta from latrines and carry it to dumping grounds --- even today.

According to the National Commission for Safai Karamcharis, it's the Bhangis who engage in scavenging. At all levels, whether in villages or in municipalities, this class constitutes the workers who clean up after the "upper castes". In a 1997 report, the commission stated that the manual scavengers are "totally cut off from the mainstream of progress" and are "still subjected to the worst kind of oppression and indignities. What is more pathetic is the fact that manual scavenging is still largely a hereditary occupation. Safai karamcharis are no doubt the most oppressed and disadvantaged section of the population."

A survey conducted by Safai Karmachari Andolan found over 1,650 scavengers in ten districts in Andhra Pradesh; most were also engaged in underground sewage work. It revealed that 98% of manual scavengers in the state were Dalits, the rest being Shudra. Such workers are employed by urban municipalities for about Rs 2,000 a month --- but paid only once every four to six months. Why don't the "dignity"-dorks get out their Japanese calculators and figure out what American janitors receive per month for less taxing jobs...? Hint: In August, Boston's "cleaning contractors" agitated for an increase in their $11.30 per hour pay scale.

I'd like to know the "dignity" in manually cleaning out --- without gloves, masks, overshoes, protective overalls --- hundreds of dry latrines daily. Even other scheduled-caste people do not touch the scavengers, who, in canteens, are made to wash and handle their own dishes so that those meant for caste Hindus are not "polluted". Not a Hindu problem...?

In cities, scavengers are lowered by ropes into filthy gutters to unclog them, without any protective gear whatsoever. In Mumbai, I've seen boys emerge from manholes completely covered in shit and scum. In cities, many have died from carbon monoxide poisoning. Would Tiwary allow his son to partake in this "dignity"...?

To The Week of August 15, 1999, Madhuben Parmar of Limbdi village related her day: "I start my work at 6 am. With a broom or a tin plate, I collect human excreta in a metal drum and dump it at a fixed place for the municipality tractor-trolley to collect. Earlier, I had to carry it on my head to the river a kilometre away about 10 times a day. In the afternoon, I clean the gutters. I carry it to the dumping yard nearby. In the evening, I again collect human excreta. Sometimes I have to dispose of dead animals. So late in the evening, I do the rounds of various upper caste houses to collect valu [leftover food]. But when I return home I can hardly eat because of nausea. The men are lucky, they can drown it all in liquor." Dignified enough for Tiwary...?

The Navsarjan Trust, an NGO working for abolition of manual scavenging, challenged the Gujarat government to conduct house-to-house surveys and disprove its finding that over 7,000 manual scavengers work either for municipalities or privately in Ahmedabad, Surendranagar and Kheda districts alone. Said Martin Macwan, "Manual scavenging cannot be looked at in isolation as an occupation. It is built in the caste system and is getting worse. Fifty years ago there was no technology but today we have it. But things still remain the same. Technology again is caste-based. If you are on the wrong side of the fence, you hardly get exposed to it." Yes, technology enables dorks to spew garbage online.

Dry latrines are no more than a small room in which a hole in the ground opens into a compartment below. The scavenger has to crawl into the compartment and empty out the receptacle, with filth falling all over his body. According to Preetiben Vaghela, a social activist working among scavengers, because of these conditions, almost all Bhangis suffer from respiratory infections, gastrointestinal disorders and trachoma --- a form of contagious bacterial conjunctivitis resulting in blindness --- along with complaints of fever, headache, fatigue and dizziness.

Also, each and every scavenger is an alcoholic --- right from the tender years when his slight form was a "boon" to crawl into narrow shit-filled pits. So lofty is this "dignity of labour" that it can only be enjoyed when one is drunk-oblivious of the surroundings. Tiwary should try it: he'd become one with the environment.

"Burn corpses --- ditto. It is a job like any other job." Right, just like techies punch on keyboards and cabbies steer the wheel, the Doms --- ie, the untouchables of Varanasi --- punch up the cremation fires with long poles, hoist half of a skeleton and the skull into the air, then slam it down and beat it with the pole, breaking it up so that it would burn better. So like any other job, no?

Since corpses can't auto-ignite, nor can electric crematoriums deliver orthodox Hindus to where they are bound (not swarg, surely), how do the "upper castes" manipulate an entire stratum of people to do their hideous jobs for them? Well, the leader of the Doms is given the title of 'Raja' while his kin are sanctioned to sell the wood, collect money and tend the ever-burning "sacred" fire from which all pyres are lit --- which fire has been kept lit by the Doms and passed from father to son for generations!

This is a classic Brahmin ploy --- create an illusion of grandeur and self-importance within a group of "Untouchables" and then make them haul and split corpses, while Brahmin Jr cavorts in the US of A inventing theories on "dignity of labour".

Apropos the West, I accept that people take such jobs because they want to, or because they didn't study further, or because the pay is good, etc. In India, whether or not some escape their forced, caste-based existence, the fact remains that those who are in these demeaning jobs are only Dalits --- locked in there by the "upper castes".

As for those who escape as "agricultural laborers", any Bihari should know this statistic: An estimated 40 million people, of which 15 million are children, are bonded labourers --- the majority being Dalits. Actually, that calls for a separate article --- which, anyway, will be throwing more pearls before casteist swine.

Varsha Bhosle

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