Who Are The Anglo-Indians?
The history of a community that bridged two
cultures
By Margaret Deefholts
The world of Anglo-India began to vanish on August 15th, 1947, when
a new nation was born. As India threw off the shackles of two centuries
of colonial rule and its people strode proud and free into the future,
the British packed their bags, their polo sticks, their regimental
jackets, and their memories - and went home to Blighty.
Not everyone, however, was glad to see them go. Among those left behind
were more than 300,000 people of mixed European and Indian descent
who traced their English, French, Dutch or Portuguese ancestry from
the paternal line going back to the 17th and 18th centuries. Of all
the European traders (and colonists, as time went on), the British
gained dominance in the guise of the East India Company. At that time,
few women were up to making the arduous sea voyage and cultural transition
from the soft green countryside of England to the searing plains of
Hindoostan. Consequently the officers, ensigns and clerks
of the Company were encouraged to marry local Indian women. Their
children carried no stigma of mixed blood in those far-off days.
Later, however, with the construction of the Suez Canal in the 19th
century, the travel time between the two countries was greatly reduced,
and women no longer hesitated to sally forth from England to join
husbands or to seek marriage prospects among British army and civil
service officers. They brought with them all the class snobbery and
insularity of the Victorian era, and offspring of mixed descent came
to be regarded with disdain.
The Anglo-Indians were more Anglo than Indian.
Their mother tongue was English, as were their religious upbringing,
their customs, and their traditions. While most of them married within
their own Anglo-Indian circle, there were many who continued to marry
expatriate Englishmen. Very few, if any, married Indians. The rigid
social barriers that the British erected between themselves and the
Anglo-Indians also existed to isolate the Anglo-Indians from the vast
majority of Indians.
__________________________
The Anglo-Indians were more Anglo than Indian.
__________________________
By and large, neither the British nor the Anglo-Indians made any attempt
at appreciating Indian music, art, dance, literature or drama. The
natives were seen as idol worshippers, and many of their
non-Western social habits were frowned upon. The aloofness between
themselves and their Indian subjects was of little concern to the
British, and even less so now that they were going home.
But the Anglo-Indians, left in a twilight zone of uncertainty, felt
a bitter sense of betrayal and dismay at the fact that Britain made
no effort to offer her swarthier sons any hospitality in the land
where their forefathers had been born.
Many Anglo-Indians, apprehensive of changes that would surely come
with Indias independence, chose to leave India. The 1950s and
1960s saw a steady stream of departures as about 150,000 Anglo-Indians,
seeking wider horizons and better job prospects, emigrated to Australia,
Britain, Canada, the USA and New Zealand. The exodus has continued
through the decades up to the present time - although now, Anglo-Indians,
like their Indian contemporaries, leave India not for reasons of uncertainty
but because the West offers a dazzling array of educational and career
opportunities.
Much has been written about the Anglo-Indians. Unfortunately, a great
deal of this commentary - including novels like Bhowani Junction and
movies such as Cotton Mary -has focussed on stereotyped characters
and situations that either oversimplify or exaggerate reality. Anglo-Indian
men have been portrayed as feckless idlers, the women as promiscuous
sirens.
Over the past few decades, however, doctoral studies in Australia,
the UK, Canada, and the USA have examined the Anglo-Indian Community
(the capital C is commonly used to denote Anglo-Indian
identity) under a more objective microscope. They point out that the
number of notable people within its ranks has been disproportionate
to its small size -in the armed services (military, navy and air force
brass), the civil administration, the arena of the arts and entertainment,
and in the field of athletics. While Anglo-Indian women once followed
the traditional occupations of nursing, teaching, and secretarial
work, they are now active in professional fields: medicine, law, and
accountancy. Some have found their niche in social work or pursue
political careers in both state and central government legislative
assemblies.
For all that, Anglo-Indians were, and still are, a fun-loving lot.
They have always had the capacity to thoroughly enjoy themselves at
a dance, a sing-a-long session, a picnic, a party. But the perception
that this applies only
to Anglo-Indians is outdated. In todays Mumbai, Kolkata and
Delhi, Indian yuppies gyrate with vigorous abandon on nightclub dance
floors. The Anglo-Indian women who were deemed fast because
their necklines were daringly décolleté, who wore lipstick,
smoked, drank, and went out un-chaperoned on dates now have their
counterparts - most of them sophisticated, upper-crust Indian women
- in all three cities.
__________________________
While
Anglo-Indian women once followed the traditional occupations
of nursing, teaching, and secretarial work, they are now active in
professional fields: medicine, law, and accountancy.
__________________________
The Anglo-Indian identity will eventually disappear. Those who have
found new lives abroad have merged into the mainstream of their adopted
countries. In todays India, the Community is indistinguishable
from their Hindu and Muslim friends and neighbours. The women wear
saris or salwar kameez (a traditional Indian suit), and the kids disco
enthusiastically to Hindi film hits and watch Bollywood movies. Although
English remains their first language, they speak the local vernacular
with ease and fluency.
That said, the Community hasnt sunk into extinction just yet.
Electronic communication has dissolved barriers of time and distance,
and in the last ten years Anglo-Indians across the world have displayed
a resurgence of pride in their Communitys heritage. Old links
of friendship have been re-forged and new links discovered by a post-Independence
generation of expatriates searching for their family roots in India.
So the flame may continue to burn for a few more generations before
flickering out forever.
I am grateful that I was born, grew up, and lived in India, with its
enormous diversity of people, languages, religions, and traditions.
And I am glad to be part of a culture known for its good cheer, its
generous hospitality, and its sportsmanship - qualities which were,
and still remain, intrinsic to the Communitys ethos.
 |
This
article appeared in Voices on the Verandah, an anthology of Anglo-Indian
writing published in 2004 by CTR Inc. Publishing, and is reprinted
here with permission.
Margaret Deefholts was co-editor of the anthology. She is the
author of Haunting India, also published by CTR, and her award-winning
short fiction has been published across Canada and in the United
States. |
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