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Multiple Images: Jute Mill Strikes of 1929 and 1937 Seen Through Other's Eyes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Omkar Goswami
Affiliation:
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

Extract

The jute mills of Bengal had witnessed communal violence as well as bursts of working men's unrest even in the late nineteenth century. In the eyes of the employers, however, they were merely localized and disorganized flashes of protest, which could be typically nipped by the arrival of the Scottish mill manager and his entourage of Nepali darwans. A quick arbitration by the sahib under the peepul tree, liberally laced with pidgin Hindi abuse, was followed by the protector's judgment. Some would be happy with the verdict, others would remain aggrieved while the bara sahib, after a few words with the European assistant and the native sirdar, would imperiously stride back to his office, acknowledging numerous salams on his way. With such powerful ma-baaps, the mills rarely felt the need to report what they considered were piffling matters to the local police or the district magistrate. Thus, in February 1886, the Indian Jute Mills' Association could rule that ‘all hands whose work stopped during the days the mills were closed [for short-time working] should cease to be paid for that time’ without the slightest fear of serious protest from the labouring people. And in the late 1920s, in spite of the Rowlatt satyagraha, the Khilafat and the non-cooperation movement, the Chairman of IJMA could note with great satisfaction that ‘for many years the jute mill industry has been more or less immune from industrial disputes’.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1987

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References

I am grateful to Shahid Amin, Partha Chatterjee, Partha Sarathi Gupta and Chitra Joshi for extremely helpful comments made during an earlier presentation. I hope Dipesh Chakrabarty and Ranajit Dasgupta will excuse my naive and ill-equipped intrusion into their domain.

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104 Ibid.

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123 It started on 20 August and ended on 11 September; it involved more than 25,000 workers who suffered a wage loss of Rs 315,000.

124 RCLI, V(1), p. 151.Google Scholar

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139 CSAS, BP, Vox XII, Mortimer-Benthall, Chapman, 7.6.1937.Google Scholar

140 Ibid.

141 BLA Progs, Mazumdar, N. Datta, 20.8.1937, p. 363.Google Scholar

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