Of Wogs, Gollywogs And Bhakts
The term Wog- an acronym for Westernised Oriental
Gentleman, was popular in the last stages of the Imperial Age, aka the first
part of the 20th century. By which time in the continuum, numbers of
Wogs had access, not only to Western ideas, but to the West itself. This
covered all the Brown and slant-eyed races – regarded as orientals and exotics
one and all. India had its caste system, its untouchables, its notions of
pollution and purity, its ancient tyrannies. China tied up and crippled the
feet of its women.
The other currency-Gollywog, popularised by Enid Blyton is being challenged lately by the Black Lives Matter Movement. It’s been a long
road. There was the highly musical and entertaining Black & White Minstrels
Show, now expunged, from every browser, even on the Dark Web. There was the
common or garden Hollywood of the 1940’s with the maid, butler, driver, pool-cleaner
parts reserved for coloreds, the blacker the better. There was apartheid.
All such racial slotting, its horrible history, and its
implied slurs are mostly gone from plain sight now. There is racism and ethnic
hatred, obdurate as ever, but under the surface. The once oppressed have also
taken to hitting back. But there are also laws against it in most of the West. It
recently sent a policeman who killed a young and innocent Black, George Floyd,
to jail for 22 years in America.
Today you have Hollywood films in which Blacks and Whites
routinely make love, even marry, and procreate. There is talk of a black James
Bond. A black Anne Boleyn has already essayed the role. The Klu Klux Clan and
organisations of White Supremacists merely exist alongside.
But who were the Gollywogs of Enid Blyton fame? They were Blacks,
who did not look like Masai Tribesmen, or Hottentots for that matter. These dressed up in Western clothes- Top Hats, Spats,
watches on chains, extravagant cravats. But they were always painted in as
rogues.
Enid Blyton’s Gollywogs were thieves, fences for stolen
goods, confidence tricksters, black marketeers. In her books they weren’t pimps
inclined to violence, but that is probably only because she wrote for children.
Gollywog Town, a separate district in Toy
Town, partied all night, bottles held aloft in white gloved hands. It might
have been all too much for Noddy and Big Ears, but sounded sublime to the young reader.
The spread of Asian
& Oriental Woggery, and the snickers it elicited, was mostly thanks to the
advent of commercial passenger steamship cum cruise vessels. These were put on
the sea by the likes of Cunard and the P&O -The Peninsular And Oriental
Steam Navigation Company. Early cruises
went from an English port to the Iberian Peninsula. Soon they were sailing to
Bombay, Singapore,Shanghai, Sydney, New York.
The Oriental Wogs, which included the mixed races, quite
often knew how to dance to In The Mood. That WWII rage by Glen Miller
and his Band did not call for the formal training of ballroom dancing. Though
there was that too, at the weekend dance halls where men met women. Our Wogs
were desperate to be accepted, at least to a workable degree. They were willing to
be more White than White. In the way, of course, was the tar-brush, the
distressing reversion to sing-song in speech, fleshier faces, fuller lips, a
certain shortness at the shoulder.
But then, the Wogs, came to encompass travelling Arabs,
Turks, Armenians, Jews, Malays, Chinese. It was one thing for Roman Catholics
to convert a swarthy, curly-haired, black-eyed Yesu into the blond blue-eyed
saviour on the cross. But altogether another to make sense of hordes, smelling
of strange foods, and speaking in tongues.
MK Gandhi tried his hand at being a Wog while studying to
be a lawyer in London. He dressed the part and took dancing lessons. But he changed
course after being heaved off a South African first-class train compartment.
His days as a Wog started to transform into that of a political activist. The
sartorial effect was completed in India, some years on, with a loincloth and a
chaddar. It was the dress of a a poor Indian peasant in the hotter parts of the
subcontinent And it was handspun Khadi, made on his 0wn wobbly charkha. All of
it was a big hit. It made a potent economic and political p0int. There were
bonfires of mill-made Manchester cotton.
And MKG turned into a Mahatma, a Christ-like general striking Apostle of
Peace.
His disciple, Jawaharlal Nehru, also changed out of his
Harrow and Lincoln’s Inn suits. And later, the tropical gabardine too. Now it
was white cloth astrakans, churidars,
sherwanis and a rose-bud. The look of a future secular prime minister, one part
Moghul, one past homespun. Less emphasis on the Kashmiri Hindu Brahmin except
for the title of Pandit.
But, Nehru’s was a woggery of the mind that even MK Gandhi
could not erase. He kept his Englishman trapped in an Indian body airs and
graces intact till his dying day. Overlaid, of course, with fashionable Socialism
and a post-colonial but very impractical internationalism. After all, the
gifted amateur was revered above the mundane professional in English sporting
circles.
And the entire ICS and IAS/IFS permanent bureaucracy
followed suit, with its brown sahib ways, the citizen be damned. This, for the seven
decades since 1947. It wore a little thinner with time, and more so after
liberalisation in 1991. Suddenly, India stopped being basket-case poor and
squalid and began to grow its economy at
more than 6% per annum.
Today’s IAS/IFS aspirants have a changed profile. They are
less privileged people, often from the provinces rather than the metro cities,
content with government salaries, perquisites and power. This even as the sons
and daughters of the brown sahib bureaucrats mostly emigrated abroad or went
into business or the multinational private sector.
The phenomenon today, of a ‘committed bureaucracy’,
demanded first by Indira Gandhi put paid to the original intent of integrity
and service. It came to be composed of left-leaning people willing to do the
bidding of their political masters. These, as a crawling sub-species of the
body politic, not averse to aiding and abetting all forms of corruption. But
fortunately, these people too are retiring, as they are in the judiciary and
academia. Thus, making space at last for the phenomenon of the Bhakt.
The Bhakt is a committed nationalist but eschews
corruption. Ditto his political masters. So the time for both has come.Since
2014, a very different dispensation came to power at the Centre and in a number
of the States. These new people speak better in Hindi and other regional
languages, notably Gujarati, and wear saffron and red Raj Tilaks. They don’t
generally come from the big cities. They speak in Ramayan and Mahabharata
inspired allegories. They tend towards vegetarianism and don't drink alcohol, but
are quick to step away from annoying any in the fold who differ.
To the earlier order,
this is the invasion of the hordes from the hinterland. The ingress of unsophisticated
Bharat into the corridors of power and legislation. Overwhelmingly Hindu in
composition, they are harbingers of a Hindu Rashtra to come.
A clash of civilisations has ensued almost immediately, as
the minorities cannot be convinced that such a government will also look after
their interests. That the legislatures apart, the judiciary, academia, the
bureaucracy, the police, perhaps even the armed forces are being saffronised
means a very different future awaits India. It is likely to be prosperous,
nationalist, somewhat militarist, confident of its place in the world, and
uncaring of illegitimate or motivated criticism.
As yet, the Bhakt is still emergent. It is depicted in
caricature by the established mainstream media and parts of Bollywood. The
voter could always be ignored once elections were over, but this time it has thrown up its own into parliament and
the state assemblies. To fight the Bhakt is clearly a losing battle. A losing
battle as long as the voters stay loyal to the saffron surge.
This alone will see to it, even in a slow and chaotic
democratic process, that the old certainties are discarded. Indeed some of it
as accomplished is evident in the six years. More will change, just as securely
as the end of Article 370 and 35A in J&K. Even its most ardent votaries do
not seriously expect its return.
One day soon, just as the Wog and Gollywog have been
discarded, the false secularism and inadequate, unproductive socialism will
also be relegated to the past. India belongs to the Bhakt now. It is no use
calling this a communal phenomenon, or the action of narrow-minded revanchist
chaddiwalas fond of cows, bovine urine and faeces.
There will be many changes made, despite the desperate
howling of those who no longer matter, to make this abundantly clear. Symbols
are revered because they translate into expressions of reality. They create new
narratives, new assumptions, aspirations, facts. A new history is uncovered,
with links and pride in a hallowed past.
Ridicule won’t stop Ayurveda, Yoga, a Uniform Civil Code,
Population Control, a military industry, the identifying of real citizens from
illegals, an economic prosperity never envisaged or seen before. Ancient Indian
wisdom from the Vedas will guide this country in place of Marxist importations
and distortions of history, and be admired afresh by the world. Right now, the
Bhakt phenomenon is still a work in progress. If 2024 and 2029 belong to it
after the national delimitation exercise, it will mean the change that has come
cannot be reversed.
(1,588 words)
June 26th, 2021
For: Sirfnews
Gautam Mukherjee
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