Description
This historical work by Bishan Narayan Dar serves as a compelling advocacy document addressing the English public regarding the circumstances and concerns of Hindu communities in the North-West Provinces and Oudh during British colonial India. The book represents an important voice in nineteenth-century Indo-British relations, offering perspective from Hindu intellectuals seeking to communicate their grievances and aspirations to the English establishment.
The text combines direct appeals with supplementary materials in the appendix, providing comprehensive arguments about religious, social, and cultural issues affecting the Hindu population. Dar’s work reflects the intellectual discourse of the era, when Indian scholars and community leaders attempted to bridge understanding between colonizers and colonized populations through reasoned advocacy and documentation.
This publication remains a valuable historical resource for understanding Hindu-British colonial dynamics, nineteenth-century Indian reform movements, and the strategies employed by indigenous intellectuals to assert their communities’ rights and dignity during the imperial period.







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