Saturday, March 20, 2021

Fwd: PPR'S REVIEW OF THE BOOK " REBEL SULTANS" BY MANU.S.PILLAI

         REBEL SULTANS BY MANU.S.PILLAI;PUBLISHED BY JUGGERNAUT;PAGES 299 ; PRICE R699/-


                         **************************

Who is Manu Pillai?.

The following story could be apocryphal but has all the trappings of truth!.

Manu Pillai was the blue-eyed boy and Chief of Staff of Shashi Tharoor. Once he put up a note to his boss on "Boating on the River Oxus" which included a dozen sesquipedelian words---            the Boss Shashi had not heard and that was the last Pillai was heard of in Shashi's Office. 

Three years ago, Manu Pillai wrote an outstanding book--"The Ivory Throne" a fascinating feast of contemporary history.It is a remarkable amalgam  of history and anecdotage  about Kerala society over three centuries .This book fetched for him the coveted Sahitya Akademi Yuva Puraskar.

Pillai is back with another explosive bang !

His latest book is "Rebel Sultans: The Deccan from Khilji to Shivaji".The volume catapults

Deccan to the centre of our attention – where it belongs.

Pillai begins the book by alluding to the Deccan as a cosmopolitan space: 'Fine horses bred in Iraq trotted along the Deccan's roads, even as the region's elite succumbed to the sartorial fancies of their friends in Iran. Travellers from lands as diverse as Burma and France descended upon the Deccan's dusty plains'.

Pillai highlights the Deccan as important not only because its dynasties predate the ascension of the Mughals and the Marathas, but also because its court cultures force us to recalibrate our understanding of the early modern world.

Pillai presents a history of the five Deccani Sultanates, together with the Vijayanagar Empire, the Marathas, the Mughals and other dynasties with which they came into contact. He weaves a thrilling account of a historically significant and somewhat ignored area and arena in the history of South Asia . He goes beyond recounting a bland narrative of peaceful coexistence and cultural interchange between Hindus and Muslims. Concentrating on Persian and European encounters with the Sultanates, Pillai amply proves the commanding and cultural significance of the region in the early modern world.

Pillai throws a flood of light on the lacuna in the pre-Maratha histories of the Deccan. His area of study is from Alauddin Khilji's victory over the Yadavas in 1296 to the death of Aurangzeb in 1707. 

The book concentrates on the four most significant Sultanates—the Bahmanis, Adil Shahis, Nizam Shahis and Qutb Shahis. We have an analysis of the origin of the Bahmani Sultanate and its rivals. Pillai explores the role of the Bahmani and Vijayanagar kingdoms capping it with a recounting of the Sultanates' collective defeat of the Vijayanagar Empire. The focus shifts thereafter to the Adil Shahi, Nizam Shahi and Qutb Shahi kingdoms, portraying the impressive players in the drama—such as : Ibrahim Adil Shah II, Malik Ambar and several of the Qutb Shahs.

Pillai does not fail to portray the cultural and religious segment of the region's history . Eloquent is the chapter 'Saraswati's Son', which focuses on Ibrahim Adil Shah II of Bijapur. Pillai is the master of  the comprehensive arena of secondary literature.

Considerable importance has been given by Pillai to Hindu–Muslim relations in the Deccan, an important wing of Deccan's tortuous history. According to him while Hindu–Muslim rivalries existed, 'the world was really not perceived in terms of religious or communal divide'. Pillai not only mentions shared styles of art, architecture and dress between Hindu and Muslim dynasties but also highlights less appreciated areas of exchange between religious communities such as the shared Sufi and Virashaiva devotional site at Ahmad Shah's tomb. Pillai displays perfect comprehension the early modern Deccan as a region where interreligious differences hardly appeared as unalloyed Hindu–Muslim divide. He interprets an inscription commissioned by the Vijayanagar King, Bukka Raya, which lists 'the Turks' alongside other adversaries such as the Hindu rulers of Orissa and the Tamil Colas. He notes that the inscription depicts the Sultans 'as respected political rivals (of Vijayanagar), just like the other Hindu powers of the peninsula'. Pillai's analysis of tensions between Jains and Sri Vaishnavas at Bukka Raya's court also highlights that major religious disputes did not take always place between Hindus and Muslims.

Persian and European encounters with the Deccan had a lot of influence on the cultural and political importance of the region.

While the names of Muhammad Qutb Shah and Ibrahim Adil Shah have slipped into oblivion, at the turn of the seventeenth century, the courts of Golconda and Bijapur attracted the attention of travellers from around the world. Pillai emphasizes the cosmopolitan culture of the Deccan in every chapter of the book, from Ibrahim Adil Shah II's coveted collection of Chinese porcelain to Tavernier's likening of Qutb Shahi Golconda to Paris. The book underscores the need to turn our attention to the Deccani Sultanates not merely as predecessors of the Mughals and Marathas, but as important cultural and historical actors in their own right.

Pillai's use of scholarship from a range of fields and his inclusion of many sources from the last ten years gives the work a distinct calibre. The book is an outstanding contribution to the literature on an important and understudied period in South Asian history from which many will benefit.

His bibliography is extensive and sophisticated, and the book is simply un-putdownable.It lists almost  150 books along with  50 articles, and the author humbly declares  that like Sir Isaac Newton that he "stands on the shoulders of many generations of scholars."

According to Pillai "To know India, then, we must know the Deccan. But to tell all its tales together is a daunting proposition – the land is rich, and a thousand pages would not suffice." Instead, we get a fast-paced roller-coaster ride, exploding with "remarkable men and women who all claimed for themselves the esteem of posterity."

The  praiseworthy portion of the book is the opening chapters that chronicle the Bahmani and Vijayanagar kingdoms – which has in popular lore been recast as India's holy crusade between Hinduism and Islam. There are three points here. The first is that what we today call Hindu was often recorded and recognised as "Brahmin" in those times– reflecting not just the near-hegemony of a community with control over textual records but also how underlining which communities we subconsciously refer to when we use the composite category of Hindu today.

The second is the nature of Hindu-Muslim conflict. Pillai narrates several instances where there was no so-called Hindu unity in favour of Vijayanagar, or when the Muslim rulers of Bahmani allied with Hindu kings in Andhra and Odisha. The book, however, admits some Muslim rulers did desecrate temples, and the barbarism of Hindu kings triggered wars with Muslim rulers, acknowledging that it is possible to cherry pick these incidents to re-construct a narrative of religious crusade.

The third lies in the choice of the kingdom we use to represent Hinduism today. Why does the modern right-wing use the Vijayanagar kingdom, where Brahmins had near-outright grip on power, as a example of Hindu power, but not the older and equally remarkable Kakatiya kingdom that drew its rulers from diverse communities, many of whom hailed from lower castes and called themselves sons of the soil? How different would Hinduism look today if the Kakatiyas became the model instead of the Brahmin power?

Rebel Sultans is a remarkable, daring book,  worth reading again and again.

PPR

24/03/2021.


Saturday, March 13, 2021

Fwd: PPR'S REVIEW OF THE BOOK " THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM IN INDIA" BY H.R.BHARDWAJ


The Criminal Justice System in India by

 H.R.Bhardwaj ; Published by Konark Publishers

     Pvt Ltd ; 234 ; Price Rs. 500/-

********************************


The author of the book under review Shri H.R. Bharadwaj was the Governor of Karnataka and Kerala . He had the second longest tenure in Law Ministry since independence. He introduced the concept of rural courts. He was a crusader for improvement in judicial infrastructure and computerisation of law courts. He introduced wide-ranging reforms in the field of legal aid, legal education and improvement in service conditions of Supreme Court and High Court judges.


Bhardwaj's zest for civil liberties and human rights found expression when he was senior counsel of the Supreme Court of India and earlier as a counsel for Uttar Pradesh. He served as Minister of State in the Ministry of Law and Justice from five years . He became Minister of State in the Ministry of Planning and Programme Implementation and Minister of State in the Ministry of Law, Justice and Company Affairs . He he served as Union Cabinet Minister of Law and Justice.


It is universally observed that crimes occur in every society. The litmus test of a society lies in the way its criminal justice system functions. Unfortunately, the standards of criminal justice system have been on a decline in India and efforts have been made for upholding the values cherished by the country's judicial system.


The Criminal Justice System in our country underscores the fact that the judges and lawyers have a duty towards society and their integrity and legal acumen determine the quality of justice. The State has a right to do what is fair and just while ensuring the rightful claims of citizens .


This book has thoroughly analysed the various arms of judiciary and presented the criminal justice system in a refreshingly new perspective with focus on human rights and civil liberties.


India is going through testing times with its criminal justice system. Due to some of the redundant provisions in the judicial system, human rights are gravely compromised in the country. Bhardwaj's book gives an insight into what led to the present scenario and he argues why the legitimate claims of citizens cannot be overlooked in a democratic nation. He also focuses on the role played by judges and lawyers in upholding the highest standards of the judiciary.


As Law Minister, he introduced gram 'nyayalayas', or rural courts, but it was his political handling of certain other cases such as de-freezing of Ottavio Quattrochi's bank accounts, made famous in the Bofors case, that made the headlines.

The Supreme Court of India gave the meaning to Life and Liberty during the last 75 years of Independence. However, penal laws, arbitrary arrests, faulty and biased investigations, illegal confessions continue unabated. The criminal justice is at a considerably low ebb.

Justices Bhagwati and Krishna Iyer invested new meaning to law. According to them, "Bail is the rule and refusal is an exception". The rule has been diluted and no bail has become the rule.

The book is a classic review of several connected topics such as the working of the police, the public prosecutor, the magistrates and other courts, the condition of prisons and the remand homes.

The legal profession will have to play a more dynamic role in the shaping of a modern legal and judicial system.

Bhardwaj provides a historical analysis of Justice according to Dharma, the Islamic system of Justice which came to India in the eighth century, the British system of Law, the Indian Penal Codes and the Constitution of India.

The book teems with case laws and quotes from several legal luminaries like M.C.Setalvad—who believed that the system is workable with suitable amendments. 

Bhardwaj  calls for a radical restructuring of the the three pillars of the judicial systems,---

1).The Laws—substantive and procedural.

2).Police,Prosecutors, Courts, Prisons.

3).Lawyers, Judges and Probation Officers. 

The major problems of criminal justice arise out of the faulty investigations. Reasons for this are lack of proper investigation by the police, lack of public co-operation. The legal profession also has an important part to play in ensuring criminal justice.


A brief history of the Police in India is given---analysing the several police commissions, the Law Commissions. A cogent analysis is given of the crucial role of Public Prosecutors and Attorney Generals.

The Courts are established to provide redress for grievances and to satisfy the demands of justice. They are the arbiters of disputes between private parties and between the State and the citizens.

Bhardwaj emphasises that reporting by the Press of judgements and sentences should be fair and accurate.

Discussing the subject of Bail Bhardwaj says—Law relating to bail has not progressed much in India and it remains a matter of judicial discretion.

Criminal justice in a welfare society must be speedy and inexpensive. Judgements of Supreme Court point out that they fail to provide the desired assistance to courts in dispensation of criminal justice.

A new jurisprudence of human rights is being evolved in India slowly but steadily. It is now recognised that human rights are fundamental values, which are being incorporated in the laws of democratic countries.

This book is a very valuable guide to all students of law, members of the legal fraternity—even the common man interested in the nation's progress.

P.P.Ramachandran.

14/03/2021.




Saturday, March 6, 2021

Fwd: PPR'S REVIEW OF THE BOOK "THE EVERYTHING STORE" BY BRAD STONE



          

The Everything Store—Jeff Bezo and the Age of Amazon by Brad Stone ; Published by Tranworld Publishers ; Pages 464; Price Rs,499/---

                        *************************

Jeff Bezos is the man who turned a crazy-at-the-time idea to sell books over the Internet into a $ 1.67 trillion behemoth.

Bezos announced recently that he will step down as CEO of Amazon. His move will enable him to spend more time on other interests and find ways to spend a personal fortune that thanks to Amazon's booming stock price is now about 195 billion.

Bezos is called The Gilded Age Moghul. What makes Bezos tick is graphically revealed in the book under review written by Brad Stone.

It is the definitive story of Amazon.com, one of the most successful companies in the world, and of its driver, brilliant founder, Jeff Bezos.

 Amazon.com began by delivering books through the mail. But the visionary founder, was not happy with being a mere bookseller. He wanted Amazon to become the Everything Store, offering unlimited choice and attractive convenience at potentially disruptive low prices. For achieving this , he created a corporate culture of reckless ambition and utmost secrecy .

The author of the book Brad Stone was guaranteed access to current and former Amazon employees and Bezos family members, giving readers the first in-depth account of life at Amazon. Compared to competitor innovators -- Jobs, Gates, Zuckerberg -- Bezos is an essentially private man. But he rests on his restless pursuit of new markets, pushing Amazon into risky new ventures like the Kindle and cloud computing, and transforming retail in the same way Henry Ford revolutionised manufacturing. The Everything Store is the  revealing, definitive biography of the company that placed one of the first and largest bets on the Internet and forever changed the way we buy and read.

In the summer of 1955, Bezos was working in a basement alongside his wife, packing paperbacks into boxes. Today, he is perhaps the 21st century's most important tycoon: one who finances space missions and newspapers for fun, and receives adulation from Warren Buffett and abuse from Donald Trump. Amazon, his firm, is not merely a bookseller but a digital conglomerate worth $1.3trn that consumers love, politicians love to hate, and investors and rivals have learned never to bet against. Now the pandemic has fuelled a digital surge that shows how important Amazon is to ordinary life in America and Europe, because of its crucial role in e-commerce, logistics and cloud computing . In response to the crisis, Bezos has returned to day-to-day management. However the world's fourth-most valuable firm faces many problems: a fraying social contract, financial bloating and re-energised competition. The digital surge began with online "pantry-loading" as consumers bulk-ordered toilet rolls and pasta. Amazon's first-quarter sales rose by 26% year on year. When stimulus cheques arrived in mid-April Americans let rip on a broader range of goods. Two rivals, eBay and Costco, say online activity accelerated in May. There has been a scramble to meet demand, with Bezos doing daily inventory checks once again. Amazon has hired 175,000 staff, equipped its people with 34m gloves, and leased 12 new cargo aircraft, bringing its fleet to 82. Undergirding the e-commerce surge is an infrastructure of cloud computing and payments systems. Amazon owns a chunk of that, too, through AWS, its cloud arm, which saw first-quarter sales rise by 33%. One question is whether the digital surge will subside. Shops are reopening. Yet the signs are that some of the boom will last, because it has involved not just the same people doing more of the same. In America "silver" customers in their 60s have set up digital-payment accounts. Many physical retailers have suffered fatal damage. Dozens have defaulted or are on the brink. In the past year the shares of warehousing firms, which thrive on e-commerce, have outperformed those of shopping-mall landlords by 48 percentage points. All this might appear to fit the script Bezos has written over the years in his letters to shareholders, which are now pored over by investors as meticulously as those of Buffett. He argues that Amazon is in a perpetual virtuous circle in which it spends money to win market share and expands into adjacent industries. From books it leapt to e-commerce, then opened its cloud and logistics arms to third-party retailers, making them vast new businesses in their own right. Customers are kept loyal by perks such as Prime, a subscription service, and Alexa, a voice-assistant. By this account, the new digital surge confirms Amazon's inevitable rise. That is the view on Wall Street, where Amazon's shares reached an all-time high on June 17th. Yet from his ranch in west Texas, Bezos has to wrestle with those tricky problems. Some common criticisms of Amazon are simply misguided. Unlike Google it is not a monopoly. Last year Amazon had a 40% share of American e-commerce and 6% of all retail sales. There is little evidence that it kills jobs. Studies of the "Amazon effect" suggest that new warehouse and delivery jobs offset the decline in shop assistants, and the firm's minimum hourly wage of $15 in America is above the median for the retail trade.

Amazon's second problem is bloating. As Bezos has expanded into industry after industry, his firm has gone from being asset-light to having a heavy balance. Today it has $104bn of plant, including leased assets, not far off the $119bn of its old-economy rival, Walmart. As a result, returns excluding AWS are puny and the pandemic is squeezing margins in e-commerce further. Bezos says the firm can become more than the sum of its parts by harvesting data and selling ads and subscriptions. So far investors have taken this on trust. But the weak e commerce margins make it harder for Amazon to spin off AWS. This would get regulators off its back and liberate AWS, but would deprive Amazon of the money-machine that funds everything else. Bezos's last worry is competition. He has long said that he watches customers, not competitors, but he must have noticed how his rivals have been energised by the pandemic. Digital sales at Walmart, Target and Costco probably doubled or more in April, year on year. Independent digital firms are thriving. If you create a stock market clone of Amazon lookalikes, including Shopify, Netflix and ups, it has outperformed Amazon this year. In much of the world regional competitors rule, not Amazon; among them are Mercado Libre in Latin America, Jio in India and Shopee in South-East Asia. China is dominated by Alibaba,jd.com and brash new contenders like Pinduoduo. Imitation is the sincerest form of capitalism. Bezos's vision of a world that shops, watches and reads online is coming true faster than ever. But the job of running Amazon has become no easier, even if it no longer involves packing boxes.

The book is based on 300 interviews, as well as the author's fifteen years of reporting for Newsweek, the New York Times,  and Businessweek.It is at once a deftly crafted biography of both Amazon, the company, and Jeff Bezos, the man. Stone's book takes the story forward and he enriches what is known with new details and testimony, weaving together an immense amount of material into a readable, compelling account of a complex, dynamic company and its inspired founder.

                                       

                                                          

   P.P.Ramachandran.

7/3/2021.