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American Sahib - John Frederick Muehl

American Sahib

John Frederick Muehl
Pickle Partners Publishing , English

AN AMERICAN MEDIC ATTACHED TO THE BRITISH INDIAN ARMY DURING WORLD WAR TWO RECOUNTS HIS EXPERIENCES.

John Muehl saw India as few Americans, few Britons, and few Indians ever have the chance to see it. He was with the American Field Service, attached to the British Indian Army, and wore British uniform. "I could travel the length and breadth of the country, with the blessing of the Raj but without its stigma. I was a 'pukah sahib' in the Poona Club, a tommy in the Lady Lumley Canteen, an American tourist in Gorpuri Bazaar, and simply a friend to Raman and Singh."

He mingled with the Sikhs and Gurkhas and other Indians who fought under the British not for love of empire or for hate of Japan but for their board and keep. "Nay British sahib—American sahib," he would say when Indians showed reluctance to talk with him. Admiration for America was great enough—though it turned to suspicion by the end of this war in which America seemed to make common cause with the Raj—so that this phrase usually broke down the barrier. And AMERICAN SAHIB is John Muehl's journal of a year. It is an inside story of appalling poverty, famine, and political ferment among the Indians, and of bungling, brutality, and hypocrisy on the part of the British rulers. Fortunately for the reader, the dark picture is lightened with humor and with a sense of the patient philosophy that sustains India.

This young American's first shock came when he learned through personal conversations in exclusive officer's clubs that the Briton in India does not conceive himself as graciously bearing the white man's burden, as the propaganda would have us believe. In private, the Briton admits almost boastfully that India's function is to serve as a source of raw materials for England and a market for her products, and if she is ground down in the process that is her worry. He found the caste system in the British army worse than the Hindus'; in fact, he became convinced that India serves to necessitate a caste army which makes it possible to maintain the class system at home in England. He found Assam's forgotten front: "Someone said, 'Oh, you there! Hold that line like a good fellow!' Then he proceeded to ignore our existence." He listened to Japanese propaganda broadcasts and saw the effect of the radio's "Men of the Indian Army, why are you fighting for the white oppressor? ... We are your friends, not the British." Deepest of all went his experience in handling bodies during the Bengal famine.
Through John Muehl's eyes and ears, we too can see India and hear its people