What a book to read at the very start of the new year. Thomas Manuel had analysed opium as no one before and brought forth hard facts most of us are not familiar with.
Consider this
1. Indian economy was dependant for 200 years on opium growth, export and smuggling.
2. At it's peak, opium was the 3rd largest revenue generator for British India after land and salt.
3. The author calls, rightly so, East India company as a drug cartel and British Raj in the 19th century as a narco state sustained by an illegal drug.
The swamis and sanyasis in India were early users of opium but in the 1600s it was the Portugese and English who began trading in opium for the first time.
Britain got addicted to tea from china but had no money to pay for the excess imports. So they got the Chinese addicted to opium, despite the local laws of prohibiting its use. When the Chinese emperor resisted, using strict officers, opium wars were forced on it, the first in 1842. China was always a reluctant recipient and grower of opium.
What is absolutely eye opening is the role of Indians in the opium trade. Here are a few nuggets
1. Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, a prolific parsee philanthropist founder of the JJ hospital and JJ school of arts, was a partner in a firm which did massive trading in opium. Despite his public persona he lobbied for compensation for destroyed drugs after the first opium war.
2. Sassoon. Were Jewish family who came from Baghdad in 1832. David Sassoon exported opium to Canton and sent his son as an agent there. He set up branches in Hong Kong and Shanghai and went into the Malwa opium trade. He was a banker to the opium trade. His future generations went on to make Sassoon docks, become founder member of HSBC Bank, even finance the construction of gateway of India.
3. Dadabhai Naoroji. First Indian member of the British parliament. Said ' cannot believe in the sincerity of those who questioned the curse of opium trade '. His firm traded in both alcohol and opium though he personally refused to take profits derived from these, leaving them for his partner.
4. Indian National Congress. When anti opium commission was set in 1893, it's members interviewed people in India and Britain. The official congress stand was that the revenue loss after stopping opium trade will place revenue burden on people of India.
It was only in 1924 that the Congress passed the first resolution against opium, 40 years after it was founded.
5. Rabindranath Tagore. The great man said at age of 20 years that opium was being forced down the Chinese throats.
However his grandfather dwarkanath Tagore traded in opium. He owned half of an opium clipper, completing the journey from Calcutta to Canton in just 25 days. During the first opium war he also provided coal to the ships.
It was only the repeated requests by China and the intervention by human rights bodies and, ultimately the USA which put an end to the legal opium trade.
The last shipment of opium from India to China was in 1913.
In the last few chapters the author outlines the current state of legal opium trade for medicine and the state in Punjab.
A fine book for a hard look at history.