| This is a novel set in
British India of the 1920's and although written as fiction the majority
of events are true. Adapted from personal interviews with ex-soldiers
who served in India in the period written of, or drawn from fact closely
researched over two years. The story Centers in the main around a British
battalion serving in India, hence the title, "Gora-Wallahs,"
which is the name Indian soldiers called the British soldiers. Even
though some of the leading characters are officers and soldiers, the
story is not confined exclusively to the role of the military in service
in India, there are other main characters.
Robert Christie, born in
India and now returning to take up a career with the Indian Civil Service.
Adjudged autocratic during its reign, the Indian Civil Service is now
recognized as the most even-handed governmental body the world has ever
seen. Although tyrant ruled, it was based on benevolent tyranny, the
tyrants at all level of governing were raised and educated with such
high moral integrity that they could neither lie or commit a disloyal
act. They exercised their positions the belief that they were there
to protect the rights of the common man and to that end they were unsurpassed.
Emma Schofield, a doctor
for many years in charge of a mission hospital on the Northwest Frontier.
Living from day to day, because of the ever present lawless Pathan tribesmen,
in the shadow of violent death.
Kishna, A Rajput princess
who Robert Christie falls in love with. Rose Rickman, the niece of the
battalion regimental sergeant-major who takes up nursing and upon being
kidnapped by Pathan bandits becomes embroiled in a border war.
On reading, the book may
seem at times too fundamental, the values of the characters too forthright.
. Before 1914 the British Army in India was riddled with drunkenness
and venereal disease. The Great War swept that all away to be replaced
by a younger generation broadly schooled and overall prouder of their
chosen calling.
Regardless of the fact, unbeknown
at the time, that the British Empire in India had only another few short
decades to run, the country still contained many of the vices and virtues
that were there when Alexander the Great ventured onto its furnace hot
North-western plains. |