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April 10, 2026
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"Letâs jump ahead a hundred years to a time when the whole of India had been brought under British control, and the East India Companyâs authority had been transferred to the Crown. In 1874, a drought in the northeastern Indian provinces of Bengal and Bihar ruined the harvest. Starvation loomed for millions of unlucky peasants, but the local official, Sir Richard Temple, leapt into action and set up a model welfare system to ease hunger. Importing a half-million tons of rice from Burma, he distributed it freely to the poor. Thanks to Templeâs prompt action, only twenty-three people starved to death in that famine. It has been called âthe only truly successful British relief effort in the nineteenth century.â Temple was severely reprimanded for his extravagance in feeding the hungry natives in his charge. The Economist scolded him for teaching the Indians that âit is the duty of the government to keep them alive.â He was scorned all across the governing class for spending public money and meddling in the natural order of things. Humbled by the criticism, Temple learned his lesson and wanted to make amends. The opportunity came quickly, in 1876, when the monsoon rains failed to arrive across a much larger area. The earth dried up and died. Crops shriveled; livestock wasted away. When Temple took the job of supervising the relief effort of this new famine, he was desperate to prove that he could stay within budget. âEverything must be subordinated,â he promised, âto the financial consideration of disbursing the smallest sum of money consistent with the preservation of human life.â"
"An 1878 government report on the famine absolved the government of all responsibility and blamed it entirely on the weather. The official estimate was that 5.5 million died in the British territory, not counting the native states, but various scholars later estimated that either 10.3, or 8.2, or 6.1 million died across India during the 1876 famine."
"..An English publisher tried to get his fellow journalists to investigate what was going on in India. âFor long weary years have we demanded the suspension of [the land tax] when famine comes and in vain. With no poor law in the land, and the old policy once more set up of letting people pull through or die, as they can . . . we and our contemporaries must speak without reserve or be partakers in the guilt of multitudinous murders committed by the men blinded to the real nature of what we are doing in the country.â"
"...Lord Salisbury, the secretary of state for India, waffled on the proper response to the hunger. On the one hand, he tried to distance himself from countrymen who âworshipped political economy as a sort of âfetishâ â and who considered âfamine as a salutary cure for over-population.â On the other hand, he congratulated Disraeli for not being fooled by âthe growing idea that England ought to pay tribute to India for having conquered her.âSalisbury denigrated the idea âthat a rich Britain should consent to penalize her trade for the sake of a poor Indiaâ as a âspecies of International Communism.â"
"Temple and Lytton imposed the Anti-Charitable Contributions Act of 1877 on all of the lands under their control, which outlawed any private relief donations that might undercut the price of grain set by the open market. The law was backed up by the threat of imprisonment. Meanwhile, as the people of India starved, over 300,000 tons of grain was exported from India to Europe.11"
"The ration that Richard Temple distributed to each inmate of these labor camps was only two-thirds of what he had given out during his successful relief in 1874â1,627 calories per day instead of 2,500. In fact, the new daily ration for the starving Indians of 1876 had 123 fewer calories than the ration for an inmate in the Nazi concentration camp at Buchenwald in 1944. The Temple ration of one pound of rice a dayâno meat, no vegetablesâwas half of what felons in Indian prisons received.10"
"...The guiding philosophy at the time was that relief should be difficult to obtain in order to discourage the poor from becoming dependent on government handouts.8 Recipients were expected to work hard for their supper, digging ditches and breaking stones. The camps accepted only the able-bodied and healthy into their public works projects, and they hired only workers from at least ten miles away, on the theory that a long walk would weed out the weaklings. Hundreds of thousands were turned away as too weak to be of any use. Most British authorities agreed that helping the poor only created a cycle of dependency. The finance minister declared, âEvery benevolent attempt made to mitigate the effects of famine and defective sanitation serves but to enhance the evils resulting from overpopulation.â Lytton argued that the Indian population âhas a tendency to increase more rapidly than the food it raises from the soil,â and that any relief would simply be absorbed in further unrestrained breeding.9 A later government report concluded, âIf the government spent more of its revenue on famine relief, an even larger proportion of the population would become penurious.â"
""Sein Denken formen"
"Revolution? Der Besitz wechselt die Taschen."
"Der Staat soll eine Hilfe fßr alle sein und nicht ein Geschäft fßr wenige."
""Der Marktschreier erobert die Menge"
"Ich empfand das BedĂźrfnis, fĂźr die Publikation seiner Werke und fĂźr ihn selbst etwas zu tun. Unter allen zeitgenĂśssischen Schriftstellern der Schweiz schien er mir die eigenartigste PersĂśnlichkeit zu sein."
"Rasche Abschiede sind unliebevoll, und lange sind unerträglich."
"Ich bin allerdings arm und an Erfolglosigkeit hat es mir bis heute nie gefehlt, aber das Leben kann auch ohne Erfolg hĂźbsch sein."
"Kunst [...] ist ein so ßberaus reines und selbstzufriedenes Wesen, dass es sie kränkt, wenn man sich um sie bemßht."
"Elf Freunde mĂźĂt Ihr sein, um Siege zu erringen"
"Wer so tut, als bringe er die Menschen zum Nachdenken, den lieben sie. Wer sie wirklich zum Nachdenken bringt, den hassen sie."
"Wenn ein Mann erzählt, er sei durch harte Arbeit reich geworden, dann frage ihn, durch wessen Arbeit."
""Die Ideen ziehen den Abzug"
"Stell dir vor, es ist Krieg und keiner geht hin."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.