From Local Resistance to Mass Politics Sample Clauses

From Local Resistance to Mass Politics. A remarkable indicator of the power of the indenture abolition movement can be seen in the difference between two inquiry commis- sions: the Xxxxxxxxx Committee Report of 1910 and the XxXxxxx-Xxx Report of 1915. Commissioned by the government of India in 1912, the latter task force traveled to several indenture colonies for the purpose of producing a report and a set of recommended reforms that would once ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 205 See Xxxxxx, supra note 10, at 347–48. 206 Id. at 359–61. One example involved a group of women throwing a plantation overseer who attempted rape into a sewer pit. Id. at 360. 207 See PILLAY & CHARAN, supra note 153, at 34–39. 208 See Xxxxxx, supra note 10, at 280. 209 See id. at 286. 210 Id. at 293. 211 For two examples, underground railroads were neutralized by harsher punishments for de- sertion, and the mutual aid funds were frustrated by amendments that required fines to be paid almost immediately, thus leaving no time for reaching out to such funds. See Lal, supra note 156, at 145–46. 1854 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 134:1826 again redeem Indian indenture from charges of abuse.212 Following past practices of designing inquiry commissions to embody an arithmetic me- xxxx, the government of India sought an Englishman and an Indian to cochair the commission, though in private officials described the latter as an “Indian companion or junior.”213 The commission found its co- chairs in the Irishman Xxxxx XxXxxxx and Lala Xxxxxxx Xxx, the nephew of a wealthy Indian lobbyist.214 The task force followed the playbook of the Xxxxxxxxx Committee and other inquiries. XxXxxxx and Lal started by contacting each colonial government and its immigration department, gathering from them sta- tistical data and arranging tours.215 Before XxXxxxx and Lal arrived, the selected plantations received advance notice, which allowed them to prepare their overseers and workers for the commission’s interviews.216 Thus, where these reports did acknowledge worker abuse, it is likely that such observations were the sanitized version of true conditions. Ultimately, and, like the Xxxxxxxxx Committee, which also reported damning statistics on suicide, the XxXxxxx-Xxx Report concluded that indenture’s “advantages have far outweighed its disadvantages.”217 Readers in India had none of it. Indian National Congress member Xxxxxxxxx Xxxxxxx characterized the XxXxxxx-Xxx findings this way in 1915: “[L]ike most reports it contains a...
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