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Churchill's Secret War

The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II

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About this listen

In the tradition of The Rape of Nanking and A Problem from Hell, this account will change the way we think of Churchill and World War II.

In 1943 Winston Churchill and the British Empire needed millions of Indian troops, all of India's industrial output, and tons of Indian grain to support the Allied war effort. Such massive contributions were certain to trigger famine in India. Because Churchill believed that the fate of the British Empire hung in the balance, he proceeded, sacrificing millions of Indian lives in order to preserve what he held most dear. The result: the Bengal Famine of 1943-44, in which millions of villagers starved to death.

Relying on extensive archival research and first-hand interviews, Mukerjee weaves a riveting narrative of Churchill's decisions to ratchet up the demands on India as the war unfolded and to ignore the corpses piling up in the Bengali countryside. The hypocrisy, racism, and extreme economic conditions of two centuries of British colonial policy finally built to a head, leading Indians to fight for their independence in 1947.

Few Americans know that World War II was won on the backs of these starving peasants; Mukerjee shows us a side of World War II that we have been blind to. We know what Hitler did to the Jews, what the Japanese did to the Chinese, what Stalin did to his own people. This story has largely been neglected, until now.

©2010 Madhusree Mukarjee (P)2010 Audible, Inc.
Asia Europe Great Britain India Military Political Science Politics & Government South Asia World War Winston Churchill Imperialism British Empire England Middle East Stalin Africa United Kingdom Social justice

Critic reviews

"[W]ell-researched…This gripping account of historical tragedy is a useful corrective to fashionable theories of benign imperial rule, arguing that a brutal rapaciousness was the very soul of the Raj." ( Publishers Weekly)
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This was an engrossing listen, but the narrator could have bothered to learn how to pronounce the names of the people better. That was a really jarring experience.

Interesting reading, marred by pronunciation

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Great book! And very well read. Highly recommended

Very easy to listen to

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Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

I liked the book itself quite a bit but found the narrator too distracting. The narrators atrocious pronunciation of Indian words was almost comical and distracted me from the serious storyline.

Good book but failed narration

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