Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2019
Bombay, the hub of Britain's Indian Ocean empire, hosted a ceaseless flow of humanity: sailors and lawyers, street performers and royal refugees. When fate set obstacles in their way, the residents of this teeming metropolis petitioned colonial officials, looking on them as patriarchal providers of last resort. These petitions, which this article terms ‘personal pleas’, adeptly braided different, often contradictory, idioms of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century imperial governance, from stylized imitations of traditional authority to bureaucratic proceduralism. Their functional contribution to Raj governance, however, remains a puzzle since the vast majority of petitions were rejected. For the British, the steady flow of rejections threatened to unmask the disjuncture between the expectations and realities of Raj paternalism. As a result, colonial officials viewed personal pleas with a mixture of ridicule and concern. Yet, while unsettling for officials, personal pleas rarely spurred the collective politics associated with anti-colonial resistance. Thus, where other articles in this special issue focus on petitioning's functional contributions to the consolidation of state bureaucracies and the formation of new publics, this article traces the genre's more emotive dimensions. Even as they failed to consolidate colonial discipline or resistance, personal pleas provided a vehicle for the airing of the lived contradictions and tensions of empire. They allowed rulers and subjects alike to fantasize about the possibility of a more benevolent order, and to vent their frustration when those fantasies crumbled in the face of imperial indifference.
1 ‘Curiosity File’ of Petitions, Poems and Addresses Presented to the Prince and Princess of Wales, British Library [hereafter BL], Mss Eur F143/47.
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37 Nazli Rafiya to Queen Mary, 10 May 1932, BL, IOR/R/1/1/2237, p. 54.
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43 Request for Interview with Viceroy's Wife, 2 March 1945, BL, IOR/R/1/1/4257.
44 The Humble Petition of Mahomed Jaffer bin Bulloo Tokum Mahumadan Inhabitant of Bombay to Governor of Bombay, 29 December 1883, Maharashtra State Archives [hereafter MSA]/Judicial 1884/vol. 91/no. 119; The Humble Petition of Piaree Jehan the Grand Mother of one Begum Jehan Since Deceased and Vagir Jehan now in London of Bombay to Commissioner of Police, Bombay, 11 November 1895, MSA/Judicial 1897/vol. 184/no. 944. Most of the volumes of petitions preserved in the Judicial Department in the Maharashtra State Archives do not include page numbers; in these cases reference is to the file number.
45 From Adavya Vallad Beherya Mahar to Governor in Council, Railway Dept. Bombay, 12 October 1887, MSA/Judicial 1887/vol. 103/no. 1337, pp. 387–9, 409.
46 From Ahmed Yar walad yar Mahomed Khan to Governor of Bombay, 10 August 1886, MSA/Judicial 1886/vol. 73/no. 1234.
47 Pir Alli Muzzfershah to the Governor of Bombay, 11 December 1896, MSA/Judicial 1896/vol. 169/no. 1979, p. 77.
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52 The Humble Petition of Chandha Ayah to Governor of Bombay, 23 December 1895, MSA/Judicial 1896/vol. 161/no. 1104, p. 342.
53 The Humble Petition of Heerabai to Governor of Bombay, 21 January 1880, MSA/Judicial 1880/vol. 111/no. 375.
54 Petition Rules, Financial Department, 27 January 1885, MSA/Judicial 1886/vol. 71/no. 346. For another example, preserved in the Aden records, but issued from Bombay, see Memorial Rules—Petition Rules, General Department, Bombay Castle, 18 February 1905, BL, IOR/R/20/A/2519.
55 Ram Rao to the Governor in Council, Bombay, 20 April 1877, MSA/Revenue 1878/vol. 1010/no. 109.
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61 The Humble Petition of Krishnabai widow of Balla Gopalla Scindhe of Nassik to the Acting Governor of Bombay, 29 August 1907, MSA/Judicial 1907/vol. 164/no. 1575, pp. 35–6.
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