Burmese Days
Throughout the course of history, the acquisition and retention of both power and wealthhave been the greatest priorities of mankind, that which has been surpassed by no other. However unwarranted or immoral it may seem, the power of the greatest nations of theworld has always been drawn from the rape, pillage, and plunder of foreign lands deemedto be weaker and thus obsolete. Without the procurement of the wealth of others, someof history's greatest nations would have ceased to exist. Every nation which exists todaywas built upon the blood and sweat of those conquered. To those who wish to retaintheir wealth and power, the use of murder and injustice are of no consequence. It is asimple yet horrifying fact that there are those who simply love power and who will go toany lengths to assert it and to continue asserting it. The Egyptians conquered theHebrews and forced them to build the pyramids of the pharaohs as slaves. The Romansdecimated Greece and their wealth and labor were assimilated to aid in the creation ofthe Roman Empire. Throughout history, the same tale unfolds time and time again: agreat nation arises, and then an even greater one brings about the downfall of the first,
It appears that nonation has ever been excluded from this trend, least of all Great Britain. Veraswami is so disillusioned that he actually believes that his people owe a debt totheir oppressors and wishes to stay loyal to the British in hopes that he will be rewarded. " However, theseactions and ideals did nothing more than cause the British to be of the opinion that theIndians were even more inferior than they had formerly believed. The British feelings of cultural superiority also caused an air of not onlydominance but racism towards the Indians on the part of the British. How is it possible to have developed us, with our apathy and superstition? At least you have brought to us law and order. Relations had been steady until the Mutiny of 1857, in whichthe Hindus and Moslems drew up against the British in a bloody, one-year battle. Thedeepest causes of the Mutiny were resentment over the Westernization of India and fearthat native customs, religions, and social structures would be lost. This is so because these Indians have been brought up under theinfluence of their British oppressors and have been made to believe that a person of whiteskin is superior to one of dark skin. The author, who was born in Bengal and served in the Burmese police, issaturated with his subject. Although the former tyranny ofBritish rule had been made clear to most of the Indians, a large portion of the populationstill chose to side with the British.
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