Bengal, Mysore, and the making of American independence by Mostofa Sarwar
Whenever we talk about the American War of Independence, our imagination conjures up images of the dusty roads of Lexington and Concord, the heated debates in the assembly halls of Philadelphia, and the rise of a nation fighting for its freedom. We generally view it as a local rebellion against British tyranny. Yet the deeper currents of history tell a different story. The birthlines of this nation were also drawn on the soil of the Indian subcontinent. Modern national identities had not yet formed. The distance was insurmountable. Consequently, there is no direct documentation of any Bengali or Indian warrior being present on American soil. However, India and America were already bound together by the invisible threads of economics, military strategy, and imperial politics. The fire of Bengal: Corruption, tea, and the birth of revolution After the Battle of Plassey, the East India Company seized the wealthy territory of Bengal. But through corruption, greed, and the devastating ...