The Bengal famine of 1943-44 was a major famine in the Bengal province[upper-alpha 1] in British India during World War II. An estimated 2.1 million,[upper-alpha 2] out of a population of 60.3 million,[2] died from starvation, malaria and other diseases aggravated by malnutrition, population displacement, unsanitary conditions, and lack of health care. Millions were impoverished as the crisis overwhelmed large segments of the economy and social fabric.

Published by Ian Stephens in The Statesman on 22 August 1943

Calcutta's two leading English-language newspapers were The Statesman (at that time a British-owned newspaper)[3][upper-alpha 3] and Amrita Bazar Patrika. In the early months of the famine, the government applied pressure on newspapers to "calm public fears about the food supply"[4] and follow the official stance that there was no rice shortage. This effort had some success; The Statesman published editorials asserting that the famine was due solely to speculation and hoarding, while "berating local traders and producers, and praising ministerial efforts."[4][upper-alpha 4] News of the famine was also subject to strict war-time censorship – even use of the word "famine" was prohibited[5] – leading The Statesman later to remark that the UK government "seems virtually to have withheld from the British public knowledge that there was famine in Bengal at all".[6]

Beginning in mid-July 1943 and more so in August, however, these two newspapers began publishing detailed and increasingly critical accounts of the depth and scope of the famine, its impact on society, and the nature of British, Hindu, and Muslim political responses.[7] For example, a headline in Amrita Bazar Patrika that month warned "The Famine conditions of 1770 are already upon us,"[8] alluding to an earlier Bengal famine that caused the deaths of one third of Bengal's population.[9] It also published an editorial cartoon showing starving peasants gazing at distant international food aid ships with the caption "A Mirage! A Mirage!"[10] The Statesman's reportage and commentary were similarly pointed, as for example when it opined that the famine was "man-made".[11]

A turning point in news coverage came in late August 1943, when the editor of The Statesman, Ian Stephens, had a series of graphic photographs of the victims taken, some of which he published on 22 and 29 August. Publication of the images greatly affected both domestic and international perceptions and sparked an international media frenzy.[5] In Britain, The Guardian called the situation "horrible beyond description".[12] Not only had the rest of the world been unaware of the famine: many in India itself had had little idea of the scope of it.[13] The images had a profound effect and marked "for many, the beginning of the end of colonial rule".[12] Stephens' decision to publish them and to adopt a defiant editorial stance won accolades from many (including the Famine Inquiry Commission),[3] and has been described as "a singular act of journalistic courage and conscientiousness, without which many more lives would have surely been lost".[5] The photographs spurred Amrita Bazar Patrika and the Indian Communist Party's organ, The People's War, to publish similar images; the latter would make photographer Sunil Janah famous.[14]

Footnotes

  1. The area now constitutes part of Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal and Tripura. The famine also affected the neighbouring province of Orissa, albeit to a far smaller degree (Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a, pp. 1, 144–45; Maharatna 1992, pp. 320–33). Orissa was hit by a cyclone on 10 April 1943.
  2. Cormac Ó Gráda (2007): "Compare ... the claim by the Secretary of State for India at the height of the Bengali famine of 1943–44 that the weekly death toll was about one thousand—although 'it might be higher'—at a time when the true figure was about forty thousand. Subsequent estimates of mortality in Bengal range from 0.8 million to 3.8 million; today the scholarly consensus is about 2.1 million (Hall-Matthews 2005; Sen 1981; Maharatna 1996)."[1]
    Initial official estimates of the Famine Inquiry Commission (1945a, pp. 109–110) indicated around 1.5 million deaths in excess of the average mortality rate, out of Bengal's then estimated population of 60.3 million. The widely cited results of A. Sen (1980) and A. Sen (1981a, pp. 196–202) used a variety of means to arrive at an estimate of between 2.7 and 3 million; Greenough (1982, pp. 299–309) suggested that Sen's figures should be raised to between 3.5 and 3.8 million. See either Maharatna (1996) or Dyson & Maharatna (1991) for a detailed review of the data and the various estimates made.
  3. The Statesman was sold in 1962 to "a consortium of Indian industrialists" (Hirschmann 2004, p. 155)
  4. The Statesman was the only major newspaper that had acquiesced to (or been persuaded by) government pressure to present the Quit India movement in a negative light (Greenough 1983, p. 355, note 7; Greenough 1999, p. 43, note 7).

References

  1. Ó Gráda 2007, p. 19.
  2. Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a, p. 203.
  3. 1 2 A. Sen 1977; Ó Gráda 2015, p. 42.
  4. 1 2 Ó Gráda 2015, p. 4.
  5. 1 2 3 J. Mukherjee 2015, p. 125.
  6. Ó Gráda 2015,  p. 57, citing "Consequences of Untruth," Statesman, 12 October 1943.
  7. Ó Gráda 2015, p. 43.
  8. Ó Gráda 2015, p. 9.
  9. Dutt 2013, p. 5.
  10. Ó Gráda 2015, p. 5.
  11. Islam 2007a, p. 422, citing The Statesman, "Reflections on Disaster," 23 September 1943.
  12. 1 2 Vernon 2009, p. 148.
  13. Mukerjee 2010, p. 175.
  14. Ó Gráda 2015, p. 42, note 13; p. 77, note 132

Works cited

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