Title: Re: [Assam] GREEN GOLD: THE EMPIRE OF TEA
Hi Rajen:

I read the article. Left me completely confounded.

>I think MacFarlanes are great. they have expressed the whole thing so succinctly.

*** This is the MOST CONTRADICTORY statement I have seen in recent years from you in Assam Net. If you think the McFarlanes are GREAT, then how come you have continued to contradict what they have written about Assam's discontents?

Is it a problem with that damned English language? Or is it your unenviable need to have it both ways?

I would like to think it is the former. That would be honorable.


Take care.

c









At 1:41 PM -0600 1/23/06, Rajen Barua wrote:
Umesh:
Thanks, you liked it.
I think MacFarlanes are great. they have expressed the whole thing so succinctly.
There was an error in my writing. The word 'hundreds' in the following sentence should in fact read 'thousands'.
"Over the last two hundreds years this humble camellia tree has grown into one of the most powerful social and economic forces known to man."
Please note that the following sentence is my addition:
"And that is how Assam lost its entrepreneurial spirit."
RB
----- Original Message -----
From: umesh sharma
To: Barua25 ; assam@assamnet.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 12:35 PM
Subject: Re: [Assam] GREEN GOLD: THE EMPIRE OF TEA

Thats a great book review. The skills of Maniram Dewan need to developed again --now at a global level.
 
Umesh
 
 
"“In 1839 the way was clear to rent the whole of Assam to the highest bidder, and one came forward, calling itself “The Assam Company”, a group of merchants formed in Great Winchester street in London. The people of Assam were not allowed to take part. The British learned a great bit about tea garden economy from wealthy Assamese entrepreneur like Maniram Dewan. However when his  service was no longer required, he was isolated. Later he was hanged in a hastily conducted court on charge of treason during the Sepoy Mutiny on 1857.”  And that is how Assam lost its entrepreneurial spirit."


Barua25 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Book review
GREEN GOLD: THE EMPIRE OF TEA
by- Alan & Iris MacFarlane.
Published 2004
Overbrook Press, Woodstock, NY 12498
 
A MUST READ AND MUST KEEP FOR ALL ASSAMESE:
 
At last a book on tea, which describes the whole story with all the fascination and romance of the tea plant, and the industry it developed and much more. "Tea is more than just a drink. Over the last two hundreds years this humble camellia tree has grown into one of the most powerful social and economic forces known to man." Thus starts MacFarlan'e book "Green Gold, The Empire of Tea." Tea was very popular in China and gradually, "a huge trade in bricks of tea grew along the Silk Road cris crossing from southwest China to Siberia and as far as the Islamic civilizations of the Middle East." By the twelfth century in fact tea bricks were being used as one popular currency in China in trade. By the fifteenth century tea drinking has influenced a greater part of the world. "The records of the use of tea suggest that it first arrived in Amsterdam in 1610, in France in 1630s and England in 1657."
No one really knows where exactly the tea originated. Although China is thought to be the place or origin, modern studies show that the tea plant actually originated in the foothills of eastern Himalayas, around Assam, some sixty to hundred thousand years ago.The story of modern tea industry itself is fascinating, and it practically started with the discovery of wild tea plant, Camellia Sinensis var Camellia Assamica, in the beautiful state of Assam, India in early nineteenth century.  Since then the tea industry has contributed to the wealth and economy of many nations. Most importantly, it has contributed to the growth of the British Empire itself. But these growth in wealth and economy of nations were achieved at what cost? Tea Industry had its mixed affect on the native people of Assam who were exposed to the benefits of the western culture on one hand but on the other hand they lost their most valuable thing, their political independence because of it. In fact, the growth of the modern tea industry is intricately intertwined with the history and culture of the Assamese people during the British colonialism in the nineteenth century. To understand this sensitive story, one will have to live in Assam and while trying to understand the tea industry must also try to understand the Assamese society from inside. And that is what Mrs. MacFarlane and her son, the co-authors of the book did. Mrs. Iris MacFarlane was an widow a tea planter in Assam, and  while spending their lives in tea gardens in Assam, they have encountered the Assamese culture closely. 
 
MacFarlanes reflect that sad historyof Assam, "On March 13, 1824 the British marched slowly up from Calcutta, guns mounted on elephants, to take Assam.... The newly appointed Commissioner David Scott was reassuring, 'We are not forced into your country by the thirst of conquest, but are forced in our defense..'...And that was the beginning of how Assam lost its independence. The British were good administrators, and they took it upon themselves to replace the old style tax collection system of Assam by their own.  “The relaxed Ahom methods of tax collection in service or produce was replaced by an army of revenue ‘farmers’ tramping the country bearing demand papers totally incomprehensible to the illiterate peasantry…The Marwaries, the merchant moneylenders of Rajasthan saw their chance to fish in troubled waters….The situation was such that Maniram Dewan one of the few rich entrepreneur of Assam had to describe the situation as “living in the belly of a tiger”.  He was one who first supported the British but later was so disillusioned when he found himself being excluded from generous land deals offered to the Europeans. The British it seems wanted to have and eat the cake at the same time. “The British declared that nobody owned the forest which they declared wasteland, and which they were prepared to rent out at very low rates, but only in blocks of a hundred acres. No Assamese peasants could take up their generous offers. … The puppet king Purandar Singha never had a chance. When tea plant was discovered the British found that they had given him the wrong bit of the country, the region where tea grew.”  The rest is history. Shrewd administrator as they were, the British took the Upper Assam from king Purandar Singha because he defaulted in paying the annual tribute of Rs 50000 equivalent to US$ 1000.. And that is how Assam lost its political independence forever.  However that is not all.

MacFarlanes write, "The people of Assam were not consulted and it might seem strange that none of them objected to the selling of their country to foreigners, to seeing their forests disappear under thousands of acres of spiky green tea bushes, the profits of which went to Calcutta and London. .... They had to do that because as MacFarlane put it, "The strength of the Assamese was also their weakness when it came to putting up resistance to the newly arrived rulers. Unlike the rest of Indians, they had no strong caste allegiances: ..There were no outcastes, no women in purdah, there was no mechanism for corporate bargaining or setting up solid resistance to what was happening. Relatively crime free, caste free, self sufficient in basics of life, the Assamese saw themselves being pushed aside as Europeans, Bengalis, Marwaris, Sikhs poured in . There was little they could do, but for doing that little they were always described as spineless and lazy. From the administration point of view this was fine, from the tea planter's point of view this was irritating."

“In 1839 the way was clear to rent the whole of Assam to the highest bidder, and one came forward, calling itself “The Assam Company”, a group of merchants formed in Great Winchester street in London. The people of Assam were not allowed to take part. The British learned a great bit about tea garden economy from wealthy Assamese entrepreneur like Maniram Dewan. However when his  service was no longer required, he was isolated. Later he was hanged in a hastily conducted court on charge of treason during the Sepoy Mutiny on 1857.”  And that is how Assam lost its entrepreneurial spirit.
 
Since those days of Sepoy Mutiny the tea industry and Assam itself have come a long way. The British colonialism was over when India won independence in 1947, and Assam joined India as one of its states. Today Assam produces about 20% of world tea. However its problems of cultural subjugation and economic deprivation are not over. "The gap between the high life and huge profits of the British and the squalor and the misery of the laborers was most obscene in the nineteenth century." However even after India's independence, things actually have not improved much in favor of Assam. So much so that "in April 1979, a few young Assamese youths met in the ruined palace of the Ahom kings to talk of a free Assam for the benefits of its people." And that was how United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA) was born. After a prolonged struggle against the mighty Indian army, ULFA today seem to be slowly melting away. However they still remain in the state as a strong insurgent group sometime running a parallel government in those unruly parts of the North East India.

MacFarlanes conclude, "Tea has been an enormous boon for many countries in the world. It should not be beyond the wit of richer nations and India herself, to ensure that a fairer amount of profits made from it, as well as from oil and gas, be returned to the people who work in Assam. ...Yet fair trade, with profits with profits going to the producers, should be examined closely in relation to this plantation commodity. ...It would only seem fair that some of the wealth generated by green gold, which has hitherto flowed elsewhere, should help the people of Assam."

The book also has various other interesting aspects and historical notes of the tea industry. It is gratifying and meaningful to note that MacFarlanes have donated the book . I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to know the whole story of modern tea industry and its affect in the land where it started, Assam.  I recommend that every Assamese read and keep a copy of the book in their home.
 
Rajen Barua, Houston
20th Jan 2006
 
Note: A summary of the review is available in Amazon.Com
RB
.
 
 
 
_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
assam@assamnet.org
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org



Umesh Sharma
5121 Lackawanna ST
College Park, MD 20740

1-202-215-4328 [Cell Phone]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

How much mail storage do you get for free? Yahoo! Mail gives you 1GB!
Get Yahoo! Mail

_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
assam@assamnet.org
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
assam@assamnet.org
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to