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Meerut scissors make the cut for GI tag

Barber scissors hand made in Meerut with scrap metal.

For the first time, a handmade tool from micro and small and medium enterprises in India has been registered for a geographical indicator (GI) tag, an official of a body promoting this sector said on Wednesday.

The tool is a pair of scissors made of metal scrap by a community in Meerut, which is “the only scissor cluster in India” and which has been making the product for more than three centuries, Karamjeet Singh Saluja, Deputy Director- Intellectual Property Rights, Federation of Indian Micro and Small and Medium Enterprises (FISME), IP Facilitation Centre, told reporters on the sidelines of an IPR awareness programme held here.

The programme focused on innovators, micro, small and medium enterprises and other industries. It was organised by the FISME, which promotes entrepreneurship and works to improve market access for these units. The IP Facilitation Centre, sponsored by the Development Commissioner, MSME, Union Ministry of MSME, facilitated the registering of the scissors for the GI tag. Sharif Ahmad, vice-president, Meerut Scissors Manufacturers Special Purpose Vehicle, and a seventh-generation craftsman, told The Hindu on the phone: “The GI tag will make a difference to us. No one else will be able to copy our scissors or misuse the made-in-Meerut tag our handmade scissors offer…”

The tag would enable the crafters to make scissors of standard sizes and of high quality, he said. At present, the size varies, from six inches to 14 inches, and the scissors are sold at a price ranging from Rs.20 to Rs.500.

Known for their sharpness, the scissors are used at home and by industrial garment manufacturers.

They can be repaired, unlike other scissors that are thrown out after use.

In the Uttar Pradesh Hindi, the phrase used to vouch for the quality of the scissors is Dada le, potaa barpe (a product bought by the grandfather, but which continues to be used by his grandson), Mr. Ahmad said, to underscore the scissors’ quality.

The Meerut scissors are made of carbon steel blades sourced from scrap metal found in cars, buses, trucks and railways. The handles are made of plastic, aluminium or alloys, which are sourced from old utensils. All the parts are pre-used. The first pair was made 360 years ago by Asli Akhun.

Meerut has 250 small-scale scissors-making units, employing 70,000 people directly and indirectly. Both the Central and Uttar Pradesh governments have helped the industry.

While men make scissors, women do the tasks that require handwork and pack the products.

They are sent only to the domestic markets, but the makers find it tough to meet the demand at home.

Mr. Saluja said the GI tag was given to products based on certain information submitted to the Geographical Indication Registry, Chennai: proof of origin, the GI map, the statement of case and the history of the product.

At present, the FISME, which is present in Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore, is working to get the GI tag for three more products.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Crafts / by Renuka Phadnis / Mangaluru – January 10th, 2018

Lucknow girl hoists tricolor at Everest’s base camp

Lucknow girl Purva Dhawan returned home recently after hoisting the tricolor at the base camp of Mount Everest which is 17,595 feets above the ground level.

Purva now aims to climb the Mount Everest (18,192 feet) in year 2019. (HT)

Lucknow girl Purva Dhawan returned home recently after hoisting the tricolor at the base camp of Mount Everest which is 17,595 feets above the ground level.

Purva Dhawan left for tracking for the base camp from Lacula in Nepal on December 23. She reached the base camp on December 31 when the temperature was -32 degree Celsius.

Purva now aims to climb the Mount Everest (18,192 feet) in year 2019. Before that, she has planned to conquer the Kanchanjanga peak which is the highest in India. She is also a trained Kathak dancer and is pursuing her degree in commerce from Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Avadh University, Faizabad.

A resident of Indira Nagar, Purva said she got training in mountaineering from Nehru Institute of Mountaineering in Uttar Kashi, Uttarakhand.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Lucknow / by Hindustan Times, Lucknow / January 10th, 2018

Allahabad University scientists find ‘fisetin’ slows down brain aging

The results of the AU study conclude that fisetin can protect the brain from damage induced by aging. (HT)

A team of scientists at the Allahabad University has established that a natural compound called fisetin, found in strawberry, apple, onion and cucumber, can restore brain functions which deteriorate during aging.

A team of scientists at the Allahabad University has established that a natural compound called fisetin, found in strawberry, apple, onion and cucumber, can restore brain functions which deteriorate during aging.

The findings of the team, led by Prof SI Rizvi from the department of biochemistry at AU, have been published in the latest issue of American research journal Life Sciences.

Scientists acknowledge that oxidative stress is a major factor responsible for age-related changes in living organisms. Oxidative stress is the condition when the damage, due to the toxic form of oxygen molecules, exceeds the capacity of the body to repair such damage.

“It is a paradox that oxygen, which is essential for life, becomes the cause of aging,” said Prof Rizvi.

“In human body, most of the oxygen is consumed by the brain. Therefore, it is the brain that becomes more vulnerable to oxidative stress. With increase in age, brain cells degenerate leading to diseases and loss of brain function,” he said.

Through experiments, the research team analysed a host of biomarkers of aging, including pro-oxidants, antioxidants, mitochondrial function, expression of genes, and apoptosis cell death.

The results of the AU study conclude that fisetin can protect the brain from damage induced by aging.

“The study was carried out on rats of different ages and also on those which were chemically induced to age faster,” said Prof Rizvi.

Fisetin was given to rats of old age and the effect was compared with the younger ones. Fisetin-treated old rats were protected from brain damage.

Among all anti-aging strategies being explored, caloric restriction is the most promising which, in common terms, can be defined as less food intake.

Caloric restriction has been effectively tested in small organisms like fruit fly and earthworms. The strategy becomes difficult to implement in humans where several ethical issues are involved.

Scientists have stumbled upon a class of compounds which mimic the effect of caloric restriction. With the use of these compounds, known as caloric restriction mimetics, the body feels like it is food restricted without the need of eating less.

According to Prof Rizvi, fisetin works as a caloric restriction mimetic in showing its anti-aging effect on rats. “Scientists are hopeful that compounds exhibiting caloric restriction mimetic effects will prove to be good anti-aging drugs,” he said.

Several experimental drugs are being tested in Prof Rizvi’s lab for possible anti-aging effects. “Although an increase in human lifespan may not be possible, it may increase the health span,” Prof Rizvi added.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Lucknow / by K. Sandeep Kumar , Hindustan Times, Allahabad / January 08th, 2018

Varanasi: Central Institute of Tibetan Higher Studies all set to welcome Dalai Lama

Varanasi :

The Central Institute of Tibetan Higher Studies (CIHTS), Sarnath is all set to give a grand welcome to Tibetan spiritual leader His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso, who is arriving on Friday.

Talking to reporters on Thursday, the CIHTS vice-chancellor Prof. Geshe Ngawang Samten said that the Dalai Lama is arriving here to take part in the golden jubilee of the institute on January 1, 2018. “It is a matter of great happiness for us that we will celebrate the golden jubilee in presence of His Holiness,” he said adding that the Dalai Lama is arriving here after a gap of four year. Earlier, he had visited the institution in January 2013.

According to him, before the golden jubilee celebration the Dalai Lama will also take part in the two-day international conference on ‘concept of mind in science and philosophy’ on December 30 and 31. Eminent scholars from various universities and institutions of the country and abroad will take part in the conference to express their views. About 150 Indian delegates and over 70 foreign delegates from different countries will attend the conference. After four-day stay at the CITHS the Dalai Lama will leave for Bodh Gaya on January 2, 2018.

Established in 1967 the CIHTS is celebrating its golden jubilee in presence of the Dalai Lama, who is instrumental in establishing this institution. After the mass exodus of the Tibetan emigrants in 1959 they took political asylum in India. It was the joint efforts of the Dalai Lama and India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru that the CIHTS came into existence in Varanasi in 1967 to educate the youth of Tibet and the students on the Indian border who had lost the opportunity of living in Tibet for advanced studies and religious discourses in Buddhism. The institution was established with objectives like preservation of Tibetan culture and traditions, restoration of ancient learning and implementation of multi-dimensional Tibetan studies, and revival of traditional education under modern university system.

The Dalai Lama has been visiting CIHTS quite. In the beginning it was established in the premises of the Sanskrit University and later it moved to its own premises in Sarnath and was granted autonomy under the department of culture. In 1988, the institute got status of `deemed to be a university’ with financial support from the Union ministry of human resource development.

Meanwhile, the students and staff of CITHS were busy in giving final touch to the preparations. The entire campus was being decorated with flowers and floral patterns on the roads. Buddhist monks and followers from different places also started tronging Sarnath in large numbers. They will greet the Dalai Lama on his arrival on Friday.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Varanasi News / by Binay Singh / TNN / December 28th, 2017

With ancient flora, UP plans to revive Govardhan Parvat

Govardhan Parvat as it is today.

HIGHLIGHTS

Yogi government is planning to promote UP’s religious sites for tourism in a big way.

He had formed the Brij Tirath Vikas Parishad just two months after Rampur assuming office.

Lucknow :

The UP government is planning to rejuvenate the almostbarren Govardhan Parvat, which has huge mythological significance for Hindus, by reviving flora of Dwapar Yug along its 21-km perambulation path. Indian Agriculture Research Institute has been roped in for the project in Mathura.

The Yogi Aditya Nath government is planning to promote the state’s religious sites for tourism in a big way. Yogi had formed the Brij Tirath Vikas Parishad just two months after Rampur assuming office.

The CM, who is also the chairman of the parishad, has tasked it to find five varieties of trees: kadamb, karoli, tamal, pakkad and tilkan and develop the vegetation around Govardhan Parvat to resemble what has been described in the sacred texts.

Myhtology has it that Lord Krishna picked up Govardhan hill, and held it above his head with his little finger for seven days to protect villagers from incessant rain, a result of the wrath of Indra.

“In Hindu mythology, kadamb was the favourite tree of Lord Krishna, who used to play the flute and play with his friends under its shade. We’ve sent our research team to find this tree in Rajasthan’s Karoli Dham area. The entire Govardhan project is being monitored by the CM,” said Brij Tirath Vikas Parishad CEO Nagendra Pratap.

In a recent report to the CM, the parishad said the hill’s green cover had shrunk over the years and it was necessary to preserve its sanctity as it was intrinsic to Hindu culture and mythology.

The government has sanctioned Rs 226 crore as the first instalment for the project. Forest officials blame brackish water of the Yamuna in Mathura for poor vegetation on the hill. The parishad now plans to use water harvested from neighbouring Bharatpur district in Rajasthan for irrigation around Govardhan Parvat, said Pratap.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / by Rohan Dua, TNN / January 04th, 2018

2018: Lucknow set to sizzle on the silver screen

2017 turned out to be a golden year for films shot in Lucknow and other Uttar Pradesh districts. In fact, the state bagged the “Best Film Friendly State” award at the prestigious 64th National Film Awards.

Movies like Bareilly Ki Barfi, Babumoshai Bandookbaaz and Shaadi Mein Zaroor Ana shot here ruled the box office while others like Lucknow Central got good reviews.

The year also saw some big banner films being shot here which will be released in 2018. These includes films shot by veterans like ‘No One Killed Jessica’-fame Raj Kumar Gupta, Anurag Kashyap, Ra.One fame Anubhav Sinha and 100 Days-fame Partho Ghosh.

HT City takes a look at the films that will hit screen this year:

Mukkabaaz

Anurag Kashyap’s next is the first film shot in Uttar Pradesh that will be released in 2018 on January 12. Starring Vineet Kumar Singh with Zoya Afroz, Jimmy Shergill and Ravi Kishan, the film is a story of a boxer. The love story is weaved around the sports drama which also brings out politics in sports and other barriers. Vineet transformed himself as a boxer after an intense training in Palitya.


Raid

Stretched over two months Ajay Devgn and Illena D’Cruz shot Raid in the state capital a thriller which is based on raids that happened in 1980s. Produced by Kumar Mangat and directed by Raj Kumar Gupta, the film is set to hit screens in the first part of 2018. “Raid too is inspired by real incidents that took place in 1980s but are relevant even today,” Gupta told HT.

DaasDev

Sudhir Mishra’s DaasDev that was shot around two years back will finally hit screens on February 16. A spin-off of Devdas, the ensemble cast features Rahul Bhatt, Richa Chadda, Aditi Rao Hydari, Vineet Kumar Singh and Saurabh Shukla. The director dubs it as a reverse journey of Dass to Dev with lot of politics mingled in the love story making it very contemporary.


Mulk

Ra.One director shot his first film in the home state with Rishi Kapoor, Taapsee Pannu and Prateek Babbar. After making love stories, glossy and larger than life films he shot his first “realistic” since he started making films, confessed the director. He is ready with more projects. “I have a script ready which I was to shoot first but I will probably shoot next. It will be shot in a smaller place probably in a tehsil. I also have another film that again can be shot in Lucknow,” he said.

Vinod Bachchan’s next

The Tanu Weds Manu producer delivered another hit with Raj Kumar Rao-starrer Shaadi

Mein Zaroor Ana. Directed by Ratna Sinha, the film besides earning well was recently screened at Rashtrapati Bhawan. Bachchan is now working out to make another installment of the film. “We are working on the script and it will be either a sequel or its prequel. But, before that, we are coming to Lucknow to shoot two more films. Bin Phere Hum Tere and Yaaro Ki Baraat are two scripts that we will make making here this year. The cast is being worked out and we hope to start Bin Phere…first. It’s also a small town story from the Hindi heartland,” he tells HT City.

Ban in Pakistan

If we go by its name, the movie has already been banned in Pakistan! Titled Yeh Picture Pakistan Mein Ban Hai, the film was shot in Lucknow and is being made by Sunil Subramaniam. Starring Filmistan-fame Sharib Hashmi, Aditi Sharma, Chunkey Pandey, Upasana Singh, Mukesh Tiwari, Inaamulhaq, Nand Pakistani comedian Rauf Lala, the film was shot extensively in Lucknow for nearly 40 days. The film shot in 2016 is expected to hit screens soon.

Small films lined-up

“Besides big releases, the years will see films that have been shot in 2016 also hit screens. It is good that pending films will be realised like DaasDev and Yeh Picture Pakistan Mein Ban Hai. The message in Mumbai is positive and films are coming to the state. We hope the good run continues,” tells line producer Aroon Singh Dicky.

The movies that will also release soon are Aarzi starring Zeeshan Ayyub and Shama Sikandar. Then there is Tilli directed by Sagar Sharma with Raghuvir Yadav and Atul Srivastava. Lupt directed by Prabhu Raj with Karan Anand, Meenakshi Dixit, Vijay Raaz, Javed Jafri, Nikki Walia will also be shot soon.

Sharman’s two films

The shooting of the film Babloo Bachelor, directed by Agnidev Chatterjee was held at a house in Naka Hindola with actors Sharman Joshi, Aakash Dabhade and Puneet Vasishtha. The film’s story revolves around Babloo who’s looking for a suitable bride. The film also stars Pooja Chopra and Tejashree Pradhan. Earlier in 2017 he’s shot for the film Kashi in Varanasi. 3 Idiot famed actor plays character named Kaashi who is in search of his sister Ganga in the suspense thriller. Debutant Aishwarya Devan plays the female lead. The film has Govind Namdev, Akhilendra Mishra, Manoj Joshi, Manoj Pawha and Priyanka. The film is being directed by Dheeraj Kumar.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Lucknow / by Deep Saxena & S. Farah Rizvi, Hindustan Times, Lucknow / January 02nd, 2018

200th Christmas for Faizabad church

A German music band celebrates Christmas with children

Faizabad

Built 200 years ago, Wesleyan Chapel, a fine specimen of British Architecture, for the British soldiers posted in Faizabad Cantonment, Church of North India is all decked up to celebrate Christmas.

Wesleyan Chapel, built in 1816, merged with Diocese of Lucknow in 1970 and then came to be known as Church of North India.

Talking to TOI, Rev Kaushalendra Solomon, pastor of the church said that special prayer service would be held at midnight on Christmas and then in the morning. Different religious activities will continue in the church till December 31and a special watch night service would be held on New Year eve.

The church committee led by secretary Chitij Charles has ensured special decoration with flowers and lighting as the Church has completed 200 years. Rev Solomon said that they get special cakes baked for Christmas celebrations at a local bakery.

“Ghulam Mohammad, a local scholar, said that Maulvi Ahmad Ullah Shah, who was leading the 1857 mutiny against Britishers from Faizabad, had instructed his soldiers not to damage the Wesleyan Chapel because it was a place of worship.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Neww> City News> Lucknow News / by Arshad Afzal Khan / TNN / December 25th, 2017

National film awards:The feeling is yet to sink in, says Yatindra

Lata: Sur Gatha is based on interviews with the legendary singer that took eight years to shape up.

Yatindra Mishra(HT Photo)

Yatindra Mishra, author of Lata: Sur Gatha, became the first UPite to win the Swarna Kamal award at the 64th National Film Awards that were announced on Friday.

After 12 years a Hindi work has won the Best Book on cinema category in the prestigious award. In 2005, Doordarshan’s ex-chairman Sharad Dutt from Delhi had won the award for his biography on KL Sehgal in Hindi.

Speaking to HT City from Ayodhya, Mishra said, “I still don’t believe that I have won the National Award for my book. It was only after I read it on official website and wishes started pouring in that I believed it to be true. Honestly, it is yet to sink in. It’s not just my feat but a glory for the state too.” The book gives an insight on melody queen Lata Mangeshkar’s life, her seven-decade career and its impact on Indian cinema.

The book has been selected out of 33 official entries in various languages. “Mostly books in Bengali, Marathi and other languages have bagged this award in previous years. The award carries a Swarna Kamal citation and Rs 75,000 each to the author and publisher – Vani Publication. The book, that was release in October last year, has already won three awards,” he said.

Lata Mangeshkar (HT File Photo)

Lata: Sur Gatha is based on interviews with the legendary singer that took eight years to shape up. “One year I just did the research while the interviews were spread across six years and then it took a year to pen the book,” he said.

In 2000, he wrote his first book ‘Girija’ on legendary classical singer Girija Devi followed by a book on shehnai maestro Ustad Bismillaha Khan, which is also a part of NCERT syllabus and is taught in schools. He has authored four poetry books and wrote a book on ‘Devpriya’ on dancer Sonal Man Singh.

“On cinema, I have written a musical history ‘Humsafar’ that came out during the celebrations of 100 years of cinema (2013). I also compiled Gulzar saheb’s poetry ‘Yar Julahe’ while another book is ‘Milon Se Din’ — a compilation of songs,” he tells. Mishra is now looking forward to speak to melody queen very soon. “Today I recall a line said by Lataji when I asked her about being conferred the highest civilian award Bharat Ratna. She said, ‘…shayad aapki apni bhakti aur vishwas bhi unmein sahayak hotey hai.’ (…probably your own devotion and faith helps in it).” He will be given the award by President Pranab Mukherjee on May 3.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Lucknow / by Deep Saxena,Lucknow, Hindustan Times / April 12th, 2017

Kakori memorial to be tourist attraction

Lucknow :

The Kakori memorial has finally found a place on Lucknow tourism map. The memorial is set to become one of the must-visits for tourists with the state government developing it into a tourist destination.

A grant of Rs 2.5 crore has been sanctioned by the UP tourism department for the purpose recently. Granting additional funds, UP State Tourism Development Corporation chief AP Singh has fixed a deadline of July 2018 for the renovation so that the project can be dedicated to people in August, the month in which the Kakori train robbery took place.

Regional tourist officer, PK Singh said: “We have planned overall development of Kakori Smarak area as tourism destination.”

The plan includes setting up a library at Kakori Smarak with books dedicated to freedom struggle, particularly the Kakori train robbery, history and tourist places of Lucknow.

The auditorium will be used for screening 10-minute documentary films in English and Hindi on Kakori incident.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / December 31st, 2017

The story of the Englishman who stayed back as a judge in India (and what it tells us about Nehru)

Having come to India in the service of an imperial power, William Broome died an Indian.

Justice William Broome is not a well-known figure today. But he lived an exciting and inspiring life.

He came to India as an imperial official, but defied British prejudices by marrying an Indian woman and devoting his life to India. He received Indian citizenship with the assistance of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and heard the early stages of Raj Narain’s challenge to Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election victory. He was unusual even among those British officials who stayed on in India after Independence. But his life still contains important lessons about what it can mean to be Indian.

William Broome was born in 1910 in London. He was appointed to the Indian Civil Service in 1932. He served in what was then the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh). In 1937, he married Swaroop Kumari Gour, the daughter of the lawyer, politician and academic Sir Hari Singh Gour.

This marriage was remarkable. Even though Broome served in the Indian Civil Service during a period of Indianisation, British rule in India was still characterised by racial hierarchies and segregation. The maintenance of colonial control involved the preservation of racial divides, aloofness and detachment from the Indian populace. Even India’s Anglo-Indian population was stigmatised and excluded by the English-born.

In marrying Gour, Broome defied these prejudices. He raised his children as Hindus (Broome was an atheist), learned numerous Indian languages and developed a strong interest in Indian culture.

Being Indian
Broome was appointed as a district and sessions judge in 1941. His independence in that role was legendary. When the chief secretary of the United Provinces declared that too many detainees under the Defence of India Rules were receiving bail, Broome responded by threatening the chief secretary with contempt of court.

Unlike most British judges and civil servants, Broome stayed in India as a judge after Independence. By 1958, Nehru was able to write of Broome that “I have seldom known any Englishman who has so Indianized himself in various ways as he has”, and that “he is as much as Indian as anybody can be who is not born in India and indeed probably more so than many people born in India”.

In that year, with Nehru’s assistance, Broome renounced his British citizenship and became an Indian citizen. He was appointed to the Allahabad High Court, where he served until his retirement in 1972. His judgments in this role demonstrated a strong concern for civil liberties, even going further than the Supreme Court of that time.

One of Broome’s final cases as a judge was to hear the early stages of Raj Narain’s challenge to Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election from Rae Bareli – the challenge that ultimately led to the Emergency. Broome had known Nehru and had once enjoyed a friendly relationship with Indira – he and his wife were even invited to Rajiv and Sonia Gandhi’s wedding reception. But he nonetheless made important procedural rulings in Narain’s favour. (Although Broome’s friendship with Indira Gandhi seems to have ended after this case, it is striking that no effort was made to delegitimise his decisions by referring to his foreign birth.)

Broome died in Bengaluru in 1988. Having come to India in the service of an imperial power, he died an Indian.

A noteworthy life
Broome was unusual. Although thousands of British citizens remained in India after Independence, few British officials or judges did so. Of those officials, Broome was one of the few who devoted himself to India not just as an administrator, judge or scholar but as a citizen. The fact that he embraced India until his death, and was embraced in turn, must be weighed against the departure of so many other British citizens, whether at Independence or upon their retirement, and the alienation of many Anglo-Indians from the new independent nation. His life was not necessarily representative of how other people of British descent in India felt or acted after Independence.

But Broome’s life is still noteworthy.

He was retained as a judge by the independent Indian government partially through pragmatism: despite the long struggle for independence, free India kept many of the institutions and officials that had governed (even subjugated) colonial India. But his life also reflected important, idealistic aspects of the new Indian state.

Broome came to India as an official of an occupying colonial power. He served as an official and a judge in a regime that imposed various rigid classifications: between races, between religions, between governors and governed. Broome rejected these classifications. After achieving Independence, the government of India did so too.

In the current age of escalating intolerance and xenophobic nationalism, Jawaharlal Nehru’s idea of India remains a powerful alternative to those who would make the nation great again by slicing away undesired pieces of it. Nehru refused, as Ramachandra Guha puts it, to “reduce India or ‘Indianness’ to a dominant religious or linguistic ethos”. Nehru himself described Indian unity as encompassing “the widest tolerance of belief and custom…every variety acknowledged and even encouraged”. Nehru’s idea of India was, as he put it, a nation of “enduring capacity to absorb other people and their cultural accomplishments”, drawing upon and enriched by ideas and faiths and traditions from around the world. Even though this vision failed to attract or keep many, even most, of the British people who had lived and worked in India under the colonial regime, it did allow Broome to be accepted as an Indian.

The fact that Broome was seemingly one of a kind demonstrates that this vision has not been completely honoured in practice. Broome was married to the daughter of a very distinguished Indian, held important offices and was seen to have “Indianized himself”. He may have been easier to accept as an Indian than someone without these characteristics, thus demonstrating limits to Indian tolerance.

There is hence a gulf between Nehru’s vision of India and how that dream has been fulfilled. But the vision is still important and still inspiring today.

Douglas McDonald-Norman is a researcher in Indian law, politics and history and a contributor to Law and Other Things.

For more information on William Broome, see Douglas’s article for the Indian Historical Review, “Becoming Indian: William Broome and Colonial Continuity in Post-Independence India”.

source: http://www.scroll.in / Scroll.in / Home> Magazine> History Revisited / by Douglas McDonald-Norman / December 26th, 2017