The Biography of Dadabhai Naoroji
Dadabhai Naoroji,
known as the Grand Old Man of India, was a leading Indian nationalist
and critic of the British economic exploitation of India.
He was born into a Parsi (Zoroastrian) family in Bombay. The Parsi had fled Persia in the
seventh century to avoid forcible conversion to Islam and established a
colony in Bombay where they prospered through trade with the British
and Portuguese.
This background was helpful to Naoroji, as he spent much of his adult life in Great Britain and established the fi rst Indian business firm in that country. He was also the first Indian (in fact, the first Asian) to be elected to the British parliament. When taking his seat he was allowed to swear on a book of Avesta (Zoroastrian scripture) instead of the Bible
.
Naoroji was educated in mathematics and
natural science at Elphinstone College and taught there before moving
to Great Britain in 1855.
In Britain he worked as a businessman and was
involved in politics and also became a professor of Gujurati at
University College, London. Naoroji continued to travel between Britain
and India and remained active in Indian politics, serving as the prime
minister of Baroda state (an Indian princely state) and as a member of
the legislative council of Bombay. Naoroji founded the Indian National
Association, which later merged with the Indian Nation Congress (INC)
and served three times as president of the INC.
Naoroji was a tenacious critic of British economic policy
in India. He developed the drain theory, which charged that Britain
was draining money and resources from India to Britain.
To amass
evidence for this theory, he examined import and export
figures for India for 37 years and demonstrated that there was an
annual discrepancy of about $135 million in favor of Britain. Although
economic exploitation of colonies was a common practice at the time
(indeed opportunity for such exploitation was a principal reason why
countries acquired colonies), Naoroji continued to write and speak
against it, appealing to the British self-image as a nation that
engaged in “fair play.”
Naoroji died in 1917, but left a legacy of influence that touched such great Indian figures as Mahatma Gandhi.
No comments:
Post a Comment