Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
After revisiting Sind in 1876, Sir Richard Burton wrote, ‘The Hindu's reed-pen is a rod of iron and abjectly the unhappy Sindi trembles before it.’ By ‘Hindu,’ Burton meant the Hindu bania, the trader and moneylender, and by ‘Sindi’ he meant the Sindhi Muslim zamindar (landholder), the perennial debtor. The creditor tyrannized over the debtor, imposing ever harsher and more inequitable terms on him. What is interesting is that Burton scarcely appeared to recognize the Hindu banias as Sindhis at all; he wrote as if they were interlopers on the Sindhi scene. It was a colourful summary of the average British official's attitude towards debt. Twenty years later, Evan James, the Commissioner in Sind, quoted Burton's remark to lend support to his own argument that debt was an intolerable burden on Sindhi Muslims in general and the great zamindars in particular.
2 Burton, R. F., Sind Revisited (London, 1877), vol. 1, 299.Google Scholar
3 James, H. E. M., Commissioner, Sind, to Governor, Bombay, 12 08 1896Google Scholar, Note A (P.G.B., R.D.L., 1899 (July-December), Confidential Proceedings, 798–9, and Statements 1 and 2, 803–9). Unfortunately, the report did not state what were the criteria for selecting the ‘representative’ villages so, as with all Indian statistics, the results should be treated with caution.
4 Ibid., 802.
5 Government Advocate, Punjab, quoted in Ibid., 813.
6 Ibid., Note C, 825.
7 Haig, M. R., Settlement Officer, to Collector, Shikarpur, 27 07 1869 (B.N.S. no. CC, 10).Google Scholar
8 Superintendent, Land Records and Agriculture, Sind, 7 February 1894 (B.N.S. no. CCCIX, Appendix XX, 70) and 31 May 1899 (B.N.S. no. CCCCLXX, 37); Assistant Collector, Sehwan, 30 April 1895 (B.N.S. no. CCCXXI, 52); P.G.B., R.D.L., 1885 (July-December), 1174, 1886, 228; Abbasi, M. U. (ed.), The Colourful Personalities of Sind (Karachi, 1944), 96–7.Google Scholar
9 Haig, 6 01 1873 (B.N.S. no. CXCIV, 38).Google Scholar
10 Mountford, L. J., Manager, Encumbered Estates, Sind, ‘Relations between Debtors and Creditors in Sind’ (P.G.B., R.D.L., 1902 (08–12), 1759) [hereafter referred to as ‘Debtors and Creditors’].Google Scholar
11 Ibid., 1765.
12 Superintendent, Sind Revenue Survey, 24 May 1892 (B.N.S. no. CCXVI, 17).
13 Mountford, , ‘Debtors and Creditors,’ 1766.Google Scholar
14 Settlement Officer, Nawabshah, 10 April 1919 (B.N.S. no. DXXXVIII, 12).
15 Mountford, , ‘Debtors and Creditors,’ 1784.Google Scholar
16 Settlement Officer, Sehwan, 23 April 1909 (B.N.S. no. CCCCLXXXVIII, 10).
17 Burton, R. F., Sindh and the Races that Inhabit the Valley of the Indus (London, 1851; reprinted Karachi, 1974), 46.Google Scholar
18 Collector, Shikarpur, 30 September 1880 (P.S.C., R.D., file 86, 1882, vol. I, pt I, compn 12, 69).
19 James, , ‘Report on the Zemindars of the Muncher Lake, 1872’ (Papers relating to the Indebtedness of the Zemindars of the Muncher Lake in Sind (Madras, 1874), 41 [hereafter referred to as Muncher Papers]).Google Scholar
20 Mountford, ‘Debtors and Creditors,’ 1777.Google Scholar
21 Ibid.
22 James, , Commissioner, Sind, 20 June 1900Google Scholar (P.G.B., R.D.L., 1902 (July-December), 1557).
23 Quoted in James, Report, 1872 (Muncher Papers, 41).Google Scholar
24 Deputy Collector, Upper Sind Frontier, 18 December 1882 (P.S.C., J.D., file 1, 1880–1893, vol. III, pt. I, compn 4, 270–1).
25 Ibid.
26 Quoted in Note to Commissioner, Sind, 29 October 1899 (P.S.C., J.D., file 1, 1899, vol. III, pt I, compn 12, 69).
27 See correspondence in ibid., 1896, vol., III, compn 13).
28 Hindu community of Mirpur Sakro, petition, 2 April 1873 (ibid., 1874, vol. II, pt I, compn 11).
29 Mir Ghulam Muhammad Khan, petition, 3 June 1899 (ibid., 1899, vol. III, pt I, compn 12, 159).
30 Mountford, ‘Debtors and Creditors,’ 1765.Google Scholar
31 Gungadin Ramsing, petition, 26 July 1873 (P.S.C., J.D., file 1, 1873, vol II compn 1).Google Scholar
32 James, note, n.d. (ibid., 1896, vol. III, compn 13, 156).
33 James, 14 November 1900 (P.G.B., R.D.L., 1901 (January-June), 689).
34 Sind Encumbered Estates Annual Administration Report, 1988–1900, 9, 125–6.Google Scholar
35 Ibid., 125.
36 Mountford, ‘Debtors and Creditors,’ 1746, 1752.Google Scholar
37 Superintendent, Sind Revenue Survey, 30 July 1883 (B.N.S. no. CC, 92).
38 Collector, Shikarpur, 13 October 1901 (P.G.B., R.D.L., 1902 (August–December), 1712).
39 Darling, M. L., The Punjab Peasantry in Prosperity and Debt (Oxford, 1947, 4th edn), 52–3.Google Scholar
40 Jack, J. C., The Economic Life of a Bengal District (Oxford, 1917), 59–61.Google Scholar