Poging GOUD - Vrij
The Bengal Files Unleashes the Burden of Truth
The Sunday Guardian
|August 17, 2025
Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri's 'The Bengal Files' is a meticulously crafted cinematic portrayal of real events. It vividly brings to life the political turmoil of 1946, including the Noakhali Hindu massacre.
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As you immerse yourself in filmmaker Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri's latest presentation, The Bengal Files, you are confronted with a profound realization. The film challenges, among others, the widely held belief in India's non-violent freedom struggle, a narrative that historians and scholars have carefully crafted. This revelation, though unsettling, is a crucial step towards a more comprehensive understanding of India's history.
After Independence, the so-called "nationalist" historians and scholars affiliated with the Indian National Congress and those of Marxist persuasion made a conscious effort to write a history of India's "non-violent" freedom struggle. "The basic focus of the chroniclers of the Indian freedom movement," writes Shivaji Ganguly (Indian Revolutionary Struggle, India Quarterly, October-December 1983), "has been the Gandhian non-violent struggle under the Indian National Congress."
The narrative of a peaceful, non-violent Gandhian movement that eventually threw out the British Raj from India would then also be projected as a model for other peaceful resistances around the world, including in the US during the American Civil Rights Movement led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
The empowered Cabinet Mission of the British government arrived in India on March 24, 1946. Its three British Cabinet ministers—Pethick Lawrence, Stafford Cripps, and A.V. Alexander—were tasked by the British government to arrange for a peaceful "transfer of power" into Indian hands. After three months of intense negotiations, the Mission returned home empty-handed. Their report concluded that there is "an almost universal desire, outside the supporters of the Muslim League, for the unity of India."
Dit verhaal komt uit de August 17, 2025-editie van The Sunday Guardian.
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