2. Riches to rags
The Colonial Legacy
We in the industrialized nations often view development as a
straightforward historical progression: poor countries are simply further behind
on the path to development than rich ones. But this view ignores the fact that
the destinies of nations have been linked, in ways which have often benefited
one nation at the expense of another. In eastern Bengal, as in most of the third
world, involvement with the West began with trade, and later gave way to direct
political control by a colonial power. The legacy of Bangladesh's colonial
history is a variation on a familiar theme: as the region became a supplier of
agricultural raw materials to the world market, local industry withered and food
production stagnated. The country not only did not develop, it actually
underdeveloped.
European traders-first the Portuguese in the 16th century and
later the Dutch, French and English-were lured to eastern Bengal by its
legendary cotton textile industry, which ranked among the greatest industries in
the world. Today, in a Dacca museum, one can see a specimen of the famous Dacca
muslin, once prized in the imperial courts of Europe and Asia. A pale turban
rests in a glass display case. Thirty feet long and three feet wide, the turban
is so fine that it can be folded to fit inside an ordinary match box. The
weavers of Dacca once produced this cloth on their handlooms, using thread spun
from the cotton which grew along the banks of the nearby Meghna River. Today
both the cotton and the weavers have disappeared. The variety of cotton plant
adapted to the moist Bengali climate is extinct, and Bangladesh must import
virtually all its cotton from abroad.
What happened to Bengal's cotton industry? After the British
East India Company wrested control of Bengal from its Muslim rulers in 1757, the
line between trade and outright plunder faded. In the words of an English
merchant, "Various and innumerable are the methods of oppressing the poor
weavers... such as by fines, imprisonments, floggings, forcing bonds from them,
etc."1 By means of "every conceivable form of roguery," the Company's
merchants acquired the weaver's cloth for a fraction of its value.
Ironically, the profits from the lucrative trade in Bengali
textiles helped to finance Britain's industrial revolution. As their own
mechanized textile industry developed, the British eliminated competition from
Bengali textiles through an elaborate network of restrictions and prohibitive
duties. Not only were Indian textiles effectively shut out of the British
market, but even within India taxes discriminated against local
cloth2 The rapid decimation of local industry brought great hardship
to the Bengali people. In 1835 the Governor-General of the East India Company
reported to London, "The misery hardly finds a parallel in the history of
commerce. The bones of the cotton weavers are bleaching the plains of
India."3
The population of eastern Bengal's cities declined as the
weavers were thrown back to the land. Sir Charles Trevelyan of the East India
Company filed this report in 1840:
The peculiar kind of silky cotton formerly grown in Bengal, from
which the fine Dacca muslins used to be made, is hardly ever seen; the
population of the town of Dacca has fallen from 150,000, to 30,000 or 40,000,
and the jungle and malaria are fast encroaching upon the town Dacca, which used
to be the Manchester of India, has fallen off from a flourishing town to a very
poor and small one.4
As Britain developed, Bengal underdeveloped.
With the decline of local industry, eastern Bengal assumed a new
role as a supplier of agricultural raw materials. At first, using a contract
labor system not far from slavery, European planters forced the Bengali peasants
to grow indigo, the plant used to make blue dye. But in 1859 a great peasant
revolt swept Bengal, and after this "indigo mutiny" the planters moved west to
Bihar. Jute, the fiber used to make rope and burlap, soon became the region's
main cash crop. By the turn of the century, eastern Bengal produced over half
the world's jute, but under British rule not a single mill for its processing
was ever built there. Instead, the raw jute was shipped for manufacture to
Calcutta, the burgeoning metropolis of west Bengal, or exported to Britain and
elsewhere.
The British not only promoted commercial agriculture, they also
introduced a new system of land ownership to Bengal. Before their arrival,
private ownership of agricultural land did not exist; land could not be bought
and sold. Instead, the peasants had the right to till the soil, and zamindars,
notables appointed by the Muslim rulers, had the right to collect taxes. Hoping
to create a class of loyal supporters as well as to finance their own
administration, the British in 1793 vested land ownership in the zamindars, who
were henceforth required to pay a yearly tax to the British. In one stroke, land
became private property which could be bought and sold. If a zamindar failed to
pay his taxes, the state could auction his land.
The British set their original tax assessment so high that many
estates were soon sold for arrears, and as a result, land rapidly changed hands
from the old Muslim aristocracy to a rising class of Hindu merchants. In eastern
Bengal, where the majority of peasants were Muslim, Hindu zamindars came to own
three-quarters of the land. Conflicts between landlords and tenants began to
take on a religious coloring.
The architects of the land settlement expected that the new
landlords would devote their energies to improving their estates. But the
zamindars found it far easier to collect rent than to invest in farming. Instead
of agricultural entrepreneurs they became absentee landlords. Numerous
intermediaries (sometimes as many as 50), each of whom subleased the land and
took a share of the rent, arose between the zamindars and the actual tillers of
the soil.5 This led to exorbitant rents, which had a disastrous
effect upon the peasants. Many were forced to borrow from moneylenders whose
usurious interest rates further impoverished them. As early as 1832, a British
inquiry commission concluded: "The settlement fashioned with great care and
deliberation has to our painful knowledge subjected almost the whole of the
lower classes to most grievous oppression.6
Little of the wealth extracted from the peasant producers by way
of commercial agriculture, rent and land taxation was ever productively invested
in Bengal. The budget of the colonial government clearly revealed the colonists'
sense of priorities. Resources which could have financed development were
instead devoted to subjugating the population. For example, in its 1935-36
budget, the Indian government devoted 703 million rupees to military services
and the administration of justice, jails and the police. Another 527 million
rupees were paid as interest, largely to British banks. Only 36 million were
invested in agriculture and industry.7
Throughout their rule, the British also consciously exploited
Hindu-Muslim antagonisms in a divide-and-rule strategy.8 When they
finally departed in 1947, Bengal was split along religious lines between the new
independent nations of India and Pakistan. West Bengal, which was mainly Hindu
and included Calcutta, went to India. Predominantly Muslim East Bengal became
East Pakistan joined in an awkward union with West Pakistan, a thousand miles
away.
In one stroke, land became private property which could be
bought and sold.
Pakistan and the Birth of Bangladesh
With the creation of Pakistan many Hindu zamindars fled to
India. In 1950 the oppressive zamindari system was legally abolished. Control of
the land passed into the hands of a predominantly Muslim rural elite. Although
the members of this new elite lived in the villages, they were reluctant to
invest in agricultural production, preferring the easier profits to be made by
moneylending and trade.
As East Pakistan, the east Bengal region did experience a
limited amount of industrial development. The first jute mills were finally
built in the world's foremost jute-producing region. Growth remained stunted,
however, by a new colonial relationship in which the West Pakistanis replaced
the British. The majority of Pakistan's people lived in the eastern wing, yet
westerners dominated the military and civil service. East Pakistan's jute was
the main source of the nation's foreign exchange, but development expenditures
were concentrated in West Pakistan. Incomes grew in the west but not in the
east, and the widening disparities created political tensions between the two
wings.
In 1971 these tensions culminated in civil war. The stage was
set by the December 1970 national elections, when Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's Awami
League won an overwhelming victory in East Pakistan on a platform of regional
autonomy. The West Pakistani rulers responded by launching a vicious military
crackdown. Bangladesh's bloody birth trauma began. As the Bengalis waged a
guerilla struggle and millions of refugees poured across the border into India,
Bangladesh was suddenly catapulted from relative obscurity into the headlines of
the world press. The Indian government, straining under the refugee burden and
worried lest the liberation struggle assume more radical overtones, finally sent
its army into Bangladesh in December, and the Pakistanis surrendered two weeks
later.
Independence brought hope that the country, freed at last from
the shackles of colonial domination, could begin to develop its abundant
resources and address the needs of its people. But beneath the euphoria of
independence lurked the deeply rooted problems of economic stagnation and
impoverishment. When we arrived in Dacca in 1974, the triumphant flush of
enthusiasm had faded, giving way to growing anger and despair. Many Bengalis
blamed soaring rice prices and the autumn famine on the corruption of Mujib's
ruling party, and on the hoarding of grain by merchants. A Dacca rickshaw puller
told us, "First the English robbed us. Then the Pakistanis robbed us. Now we are
being robbed by our own people."
Since independence Bangladesh has received a massive influx of
foreign aid-over $1 billion per year. Yet the country's agriculture and industry
continue to stagnate and the living conditions of the poor steadily deteriorate.
Bangladesh's colonial legacy cannot be easily erased. The British and Pakistani
rulers may be gone, but they left a social order which condemns millions to
needless
hunger.