The untold story of the Royal Indian Navy's 1946 mutiny –
Delhi-based artist Vivan Sundaram and cultural theorist Ashish
Rajadhyaksha use original recordings, opera, poetry and chants for an
immersive experience.
Gireesh.GV
It is February 1946. Two young boys arrive at the office of the Free Press Journal,
then located at Horniman Circle in Bombay, to meet the editor, S
Natarajan. They had seemingly jumped the wall separating the Castle
Barracks and the Mint nearby; a close shave from a brutal exchange
between the ratings and the Naval police. The boys first went to the
office of the Bombay Sentinel but were turned away. The editor, BG Horniman, asked them to meet Natarajan instead. The Free Press did not have a special evening edition, while it was a routine affair at the Sentinel.
Natarajan obliged and agreed to listen to them. According to him,
“there was nothing to be gained by saying that 700 ratings wounded and a
couple of hundred dead were not probable, and that we in Dalal Street
and most definitely the friends in the Sentinel office could
hardly have lived through all the shooting in ignorance.” Natarajan’s
description comprises the foreword in BC Dutt’s first-person account,
titled Mutiny of the Innocents (1971). The trouble the boys spoke of was the Royal Indian Navy’s mutiny.
During the tumultuous February of 1946, the Free Press Journal became a significant newspaper – or perhaps one of the very few, along with the Evening News – publishing regular reports on the rebellion launched by the seamen on the HMIS Talwar, the
shore establishment of the Royal Indian Navy docked at Colaba, Bombay. A
crucial but eclipsed incident in the history of the city, and
pre-independent India, the Mutiny broke out on February 18 as a protest
against the poor living conditions and below par food, which the ratings
had to endure. Lasting only for six days, the undercurrents of the
protest soon spread at full throttle across 66 ships moored at the
Bombay harbour, as well as naval establishments at ports around India,
killing more than 200 ratings. BC Dutt, in his comprehensive tome, aptly
writes, “...we had our battleship Potemkin but no Eisenstein.” Mutiny of the innocents (1971)
Armature of an overlooked history
These
strokes of protest and dissent, relegated to mere footnotes of history
and erased from public memory, are manifest in a collaborative art
project Meanings of Failed Action: Insurrection 1946, conceived
by Delhi-based artist Vivan Sundaram and cultural theorist Ashish
Rajadhyaksha, along with British sound artist David Chapman and film
historian Valentina Vitali. A 40-feet long cavernous container made out
of stainless steel and aluminium, designed to resemble the watertight
hull of a ship, is buoyed at the centre of the Coomaraswamy Hall at
Mumbai’s Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sanghralaya, forming the
kernel of the exhibition. It seats about 40 visitors at a time; the
42-minute-long sound piece comes close to performance, or theatre, or
what is called immersive theatre. “It is almost a discursive space for a
second level of performance,” said Sundaram.
The origins of the project can be traced to the landmark site-specific exhibition, Structures of Memory: Modern Bengal,
by Sundaram, held in 1998 at the Durbar Hall of the Victoria Memorial
in Calcutta. “Since most of my works through the years have been very
informal, or made using everyday material – perhaps like a form of Arte
Povera – I thought this must have a more structured, professional,
industrial production quality to it,” he shared.
When Minimalism
started developing in the United States during the late-1960s and
early-1970s, the focus was not on the aspect of craft but on that of
lending an industrial quality to the work. The idea, then, was to take
the Minimalist aesthetic and introduce certain elements as “conceptual
interventions” in a single-standing structure.
The eight-channel
audio track, created by Chapman, begins dramatically – the resonances of
a turbulent sea, the crash of the waves, the roaring of the engine to a
start. In the distance, a foghorn wails; the roaming beams of what
could be a lighthouse pierce the shadows. Sounds indicative of impending
danger, punctuated by sirens, resound in the vessel. The recordings
include an operatic piece, Namdeo Dhasal reciting poetry, collective
chants of protestors, and verbal accounts from the witnesses of the
turmoil – all conjuring up scenes of the anti-colonial mutiny. “We
definitely wanted it to be a concentrated, intense experience,” added
Sundaram.
Constructing the archive
Along
the periphery of the sculpture is a long mural created using cuttings
from newspapers and journals from 1946, which carried reports of the
Mutiny, along with a series of archives comprising books, letters,
telegrams and even a rare painting by Chittoprasad, which captures the
naval officers’ revolt against the British. The first written accounts
of the Mutiny were published in the late-1950s, largely by the People’s
Publishing House in Bombay.
“We used the Imperial War Museum’s
audio archives to access the voices of British officials, along with
interviews and historical recordings,” said Rajadhyaksha. The archival
material was sourced from nine institutions, both in India and Britain,
including the Centre of South Asian Studies at the University of
Cambridge, the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, the Maharashtra
State Archives in Mumbai, the PC Joshi Archives at the Jawaharlal Nehru
University, Delhi and the VV Giri National Institute, which has recently
started digitising its collection. Container performance space detail“A
number of the natural sounds were recorded by Chapman to capture very
elusive effects,” Rajadhyaksha explained. “As we began putting the
material together, we started creating a bank of sounds. We had certain
actors play certain roles; for instance, the voice of a British major
from 1946, commanding the regiment on the HMISTalwar would
be sourced from the archives, and then the voice of the admiral would
probably be lent by a British actor.” Moreover, the archive at the
Centre of South Asian Studies at Cambridge had BC Dutt’s original voice.
“This was quite astonishing, and a big kick-start as far as the sound
installation was concerned,” he added. Surprisingly, seemingly small
newspapers in London, such as the Birmingham, the Western Daily Press carried detailed reports of the Mutiny. Closer home, it was the Free Press Journal, where BC Dutt later worked as an employee.
Rajadhyaksha
explained the process of stitching together various voices for the
sound, coupled with several extraordinary pieces they stumbled upon. One
of the voices is that of Mervyn Jones, a British writer and communist,
and the son of psychoanalyst Ernest Jones (who was the biographer of
Sigmund Freud), who was at the Taj Mahal Hotel at Apollo Bunder during
the Mutiny, and has a vivid description of what had ensued at the
harbour, sitting at the window at the Hotel. “He then goes to Supari
Baug in Parel, where he actually encounters a British vehicle spraying
bullets at the crowd,” shared Rajadhyaksha. References have been taken
from popular culture as well, including Utpal Dutt’s classic play Kallol (1964)
which was centred on the Mutiny. “[We got] actor Shyamlal Chakravarty
to recite sections of the play – specifically the entire attack on the Talwar – across locations in Kolkata, one of them being on a ferry at the banks of the Hooghly,” he said.
Ripple effect
Mutiny of the innocents (1971)The
naval insurrection captured the imagination of erstwhile Bombay, with
riots spilling onto the streets, and joined by members of the working
class and trade unions – beyond the locale of the harbour and into
Byculla, Parel and Lalbaug. “It was incredible how a sympathetic
movement caught the establishment totally by surprise – nobody had
envisaged it. It was a kind of coalition that was across the board,”
said Rajadhyaksha.
While the Mutiny wrecked havoc only after the
World War II was over, broadly speaking, the War didn’t end in 1945 – it
moved towards Asia, creating a series of events, across from India all
the way to south-east Asia – such as the Korean War and the Cold War.
“The idea of civil disobedience in India, or passive resistance, or the satyagraha movement were all tinged by the War,” explained Rajadhyaksha. In his book Timeless Wake: Legacy of the Royal Indian Navy during World War II, Commodore
Odakkal Johnson, curator of the Maritime History Society in Mumbai,
described how the British attitude towards Indians changed dramatically,
for the worse, once the war ended. The Mutiny did not receive much
support from the leaders of the Indian Freedom Movement either. Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru had a tactical disagreement with the incident, stating
that failed events do not have any role to play, while Mahatma Gandhi
took a more philosophical stance, expressing his disagreement on the
violent turn of occurrences.
The 1946 Bombay Mutiny puts the focus back on an
event that began as a food strike and grew to be reason enough for the
British to leave India
There are 34 of us huddling in the dark, cramped hold of a ship, as a
siren shatters the silence. Spotlights sweep over our heads as we are
buffeted by waves of sound — hydrophone recordings of ship’s engines,
the clatter of textile machinery, the crash and bang of ocean waves
meeting rock, and then a loud explosion. “News came in that the Royal
Indian Navy Ships in Bombay harbour had mutinied,” announces a crisp
English voice, which I later learn belonged to Mervyn Jones, son of
psychoanalyst Ernest Jones and former member of the Communist Party of
Great Britain. “And in support of them the trade unions in Bombay had
declared a general strike. So, it was a terrific crisis and I felt I
really must go down to Bombay and see what’s going on, I’ll never
forgive myself if I missed the opportunity of this historic event.”
Thus begins the sound installation that is the centrepiece of Meanings of Failed Action: Insurrection 1946,
a mammoth art project that explores the events and historical
narratives around the 1946 Bombay Mutiny. Put together by veteran artist
Vivan Sundaram and cultural theorist Ashish Rajadhyaksha — and
featuring sound-work by British artist David Chapman — the show is on
display at the Coomaraswamy Hall, Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu
Sangrahalaya. Sundaram has channelled his experiments with immersive
theatre and concepts from minimalism to create a steel-and-aluminium
‘ship’, which serves as the performance space for Chapman’s sterling
sound-work. The installation is accompanied by a 40-foot mural of
photos, news clippings and headlines from that turbulent
pre-Independence era, as well as an extensive archive of books, photos
and police correspondence dealing with the incident. The project is an
experiment in what Rajadhyaksha calls “liminal history, that is, history
where you have to find ways to address the ghosts of the past using
terms and modes that are not of conventional historians.”
On February 18, 1946, 1,500 sailors aboard the HMIS Talwar, the signal
training establishment of the Royal Indian Navy in Colaba, went on
strike, ostensibly to protest against the terrible conditions they were
forced to work in. A day earlier, the ratings had demanded decent food
only to be told by sneering British officers that ‘beggars cannot be
choosers’. But this was no mere food riot. The strike quickly took on
the hue of a nationalist insurrection, with the ratings demanding the
release of all Indian political prisoners, better living conditions and
the end of British rule. By the following morning, 60 ships and 11 shore
establishments pulled down the Union Jack and hoisted the three flags
of the Congress, the Muslim League and the Communist Party. Pretty soon,
the insurrection spread to Calcutta, Karachi, Madras, Jamnagar,
Visakhapatnam, and other Navy stations, eventually involving over 20,000
Indian seamen.
Despite being condemned by both the Congress and the Muslim League, the
uprising gained immense popular support, especially in Mumbai, where
thousands of workers joined in and took to the streets to participate in
a general strike called by the Bombay Students’ Union and the CPI. As
the British Empire brought the full extent of its military might to bear
on the mutineers, the lack of support from political leaders and the
strike committee’s political inexperience led the ratings to surrender
on February 23, 2016. The workers’ strike was crushed as well, with 217
people dying in police firing on a single day. Though the mutiny was
widely considered a ‘failure’, British Prime Minister Clement Attlee
later said it was one of the major events that led to the decision to
leave India, much more so than the Quit India movement. Yet the latter
remains a much-celebrated milestone on the march to Independence, while
the mutiny has become a historical footnote.
“Despite the erasure, the incident keeps popping back up again and
again, refusing to die,” says Rajadhyaksha, who undertook extensive
research in India and London for the installation and its accompanying
archive. “As a result of its refusal to die, it attaches to larger and
larger and more and more complex questions. We want to open up this
historical incident as a symbolic space around which all these different
positions revolved. The idea was to try and look at this incident and
build an art project around it that opens up a huge number of questions —
both of form and history.”
Indeed, there are many parallel, contesting narratives revolving around
the mutiny. The British first tried to dismiss it as a food riot, though
a 1948 inquiry branded it as part of a “larger communist conspiracy
raging from the Middle East to the Far East.” In the sound-work, Jones
talks about its potential to be a major insurrection in the grand
tradition of socialist uprisings. Historian Sumit Sarkar imagines the
different possibilities for Indian independence that the insurrection
success could have thrown up. On the other hand, you have what
Rajadhyaksha calls the “bitter cynicism” of BC Dutt, one of the main
players in the naval strike committee, who speaks of there being no
future for the mutiny.
The incident also threw light on the schisms and limitations of the
Congress-led nationalist movement, and its inability to accommodate
popular nationalism outside of its ambit. The lack of support from
leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru and Muhammad Ali Jinnah has been condemned
as a betrayal. “On the other hand, there are genuine intellectual
positions that Nehru, Gandhi, Patel and Jinnah took which are in
themselves quite defensible,” says Rajadhyaksha. “The Congress party
found itself in a very difficult position because they hadn’t
anticipated the insurrection, especially not the scale of support for
it.”
Interspersed with quotations and reworkings of folk songs and poetry
inspired by the mutiny, the sound-work throws these unresolved,
conflicting histories in sharp contrast through the words of witnesses
and protagonists. The intention is not to solve the problem, but to get
listeners to imagine the many possibilities — of different nationalisms,
different histories, and romantic revolutions — that it throws up. At a
time when the country is struggling to deal with ever-narrower
definitions of nationalism, Meanings of Failed Action could not be more relevant or necessary. You won’t leave with answers, but maybe you’ll finally know what questions to ask.
(The show is on display at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, Mumbai. It closes on March 25)