Under British colonial rule, or Raj, the English treated most Indians much like we treated (and sometimes still treat) about 20 percent of our population. That is, we whites showed disrespect, haughtiness, prejudice, ignorance, and downright hatred toward a people who differed only in the color of their skin.
There were exceptions. This book explores the lives of five English subjects and two American citizens, all enlightened, spiritual, selfless. They lived as Indians, practiced the tenets of Mahatma Gandhi, supported India's independence from England, spoke for the poorest of the poor, established schools, promoted equal rights for women, served time in jail, farmed, taught, wrote, ran for political office, cared not a whit for themselves, and cared for all of India.
Chances are you've not heard of Anne Besant, Dick Keithahn, Samuel Stokes, Madeleine Slade, Philip Spratt, Charles Andrews, or Benjamin Horniman. Read "Rebels Against the Raj..." and you'll get to know them well.
Guha ends his biography with these words: "These individuals came to India at different points of time, from widely varying backgrounds and with widely varying motivations. Once here, they lived in different parts of the country and pursued different callings and obsessions. What unites them was, first, the courage and fearlessness they displayed in their personal lives; second, the depth and duration of their commitment to their new homeland; and, third, the contemporaneity, indeed, timelessness, of what they lived and struggled for. So many years after the last of these rebels passed on, what they did and what they said still speaks to Indians today. If only we could listen." (p. 419, hardback edition of 2022)