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When India discovered itself
Business Standard
|July 29, 2025
Time moves differently in certain moments of history.
 In early 1945, the future seemed to stretch endlessly before British India. As the empire celebrated victory over fascism abroad, it continued to imprison freedom fighters at home. Bloodied but victorious, it seemed as permanent as the monsoons. Complete independence—purna swaraj—remained exactly what it had always been: Tomorrow's promise, next year's possibility, next decade's dream.
What happened in the next few months, then, that Indian freedom would become a tangible, historic reality? How did the British, so eager to maintain India's dominion status, end their colonial rule in a hurry? That is fundamentally the story Ashis Ray's The Trial That Shook Britain ventures to answer. History, that most contested of disciplines, suffers from our human need for clean narratives. The writing of history is itself a political act, and nowhere is this more evident than in the contested narratives of decolonisation. Indian independence has been claimed by pacifists, revolutionaries, secularists, communalists, socialists and capitalists, each group highlighting their preferred version of events. Mr Ray refuses this false choice, understanding that the end of the empire was neither purely moral triumph nor purely revolutionary victory, but a confluence of intended and unintended consequences, of careful planning and historical accidents working in ways that none of the participants fully understood.
This story is from the July 29, 2025 edition of Business Standard.
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