Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Photographs
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: The ‘Native’ Diplomat
- 2 Shirtless Srinivasan
- 3 A Worthy Successor to Gokhale
- 4 The Silver-Tongued Orator
- 5 The Most Picturesque Figure
- 6 A Rather Dangerous Ambassador
- 7 Like the Anger of Rudra
- 8 An Honourable Compromise
- 9 A Trustee of India’s Honour
- 10 We Have No Sastri
- 11 Conclusion: An Amiable Usurper
- Appendix A The 1921 Imperial Conference Resolution
- Appendix B The Cape Town Agreement of 1927
- List of Archives
- List of Illustration Sources and Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
7 - Like the Anger of Rudra
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Photographs
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: The ‘Native’ Diplomat
- 2 Shirtless Srinivasan
- 3 A Worthy Successor to Gokhale
- 4 The Silver-Tongued Orator
- 5 The Most Picturesque Figure
- 6 A Rather Dangerous Ambassador
- 7 Like the Anger of Rudra
- 8 An Honourable Compromise
- 9 A Trustee of India’s Honour
- 10 We Have No Sastri
- 11 Conclusion: An Amiable Usurper
- Appendix A The 1921 Imperial Conference Resolution
- Appendix B The Cape Town Agreement of 1927
- List of Archives
- List of Illustration Sources and Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
Summary
In the first weeks of 1923, Nairobi was pregnant with ominous rumours. Local Portuguese settlers, it was rumoured, had been instructed to wear badges on their arms to differentiate themselves from Indians. Up-country white settlers were spotted in town recruiting their racial kin for a militia. While the chatter spread in urban Nairobi, the countryside simmered with rage. The local European associations were ‘blowing upon the ambers of revolt’ against the Crown Colony government, as E. Powys Cobb, a legislative councillor, and Phillip Wheatley, a veteran artillery officer, toured the country, urging local associations to ‘set [the country] alight’. A second Ireland was in the offing, or so some local associations threatened. In Nakuru, a town situated in the Rift Valley, the largest meeting of a local settler community was held, in the presence of key settler leaders including Lord Delamere, who had been secretly designated as the first president of the future provisional government. Here, the crass messaging of the other local European associations was jettisoned for a more polished, yet very targeted, resolution that promised to ‘take such action as [the settlers] may consider proper and necessary’.
Stirrings of a coup whirled around the country. Wheatley was appointed as the military leader of the proposed rebellion. With the slogan of ‘For King and Kenya’, recruiters for local vigilance committees emphasized that rebelling against the local government would be the highest form of duty to the crown. Kenyan Indians, feeling gravely under threat, appealed to the colonial government. But the Kenyan government, under the South African-born Governor, Robert Coryndon, watched passively from the side-lines, dismissing their fears of violence as ‘much exaggerated’. In the first week of February, once the preparations for the alleged coup were practically complete, Coryndon finally cabled the Colonial Office that plans were afoot to ‘paralyse the functions of government’. The imperial government sprang into action and docked three battleships at the harbour in Zanzibar.
This hoped-for rebellion was astonishingly bold in its aims. After raiding Government House, the insurrectionists planned to install a new de facto government of the settlers.
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- India's First DiplomatV. S. Srinivasa Sastri and the Making of Liberal Internationalism, pp. 123 - 152Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021