Saturday, September 29, 2012

Mutiny!

There is another ancestor of mine, my mother's father's father, who became a Christian from a Hindu background way back in the mid-nineteenth century - Lala Chandu Lall (1834-1903) - and I researched the story of his life and times!  He was born at a time when the Mughal emperor Akbar Shah II ruled over a disintegrating empire in Delhi.  The British East India Company had wrested Delhi from the Marathas in the Battle of Delhi 1803 and installed the Mughal emperor who was only titular.  When Bahadur Shah Zafar ascended the throne in 1837, his empire did not extend beyond Delhi's Red Fort!

Chandu Lall was a Khatri who came from Katra Neel in the heart of Chandni Chowk, Delhi.  He grew up at a time when the Mughal empire was on the wane and the British East India Company's influence was rapidly increasing and was the dominant political and military power at that time.  Bahadur Shah Zafar was a pensioner with the British East India Company and maintained a court that was courtesy the British!  Not interested in governance, the Mughal emperor was a noted poet and a Sufi saint and his court was home to the famed Ghalib and Zauq.  His syncretic philosophy  was that both Hinduism and Muslim were of the same essence.  The Hindus visited dargahs and could quote Hafiz and were fond of Persian poetry.  The children of the administrative Kayasthas and Khatris castes studied under maulvis and attended the madrassas.


Chandni Chowk in 1858
Chandni Chowk was built by Emperor Shahjehan and designed by his daughter Jahanara in the 17th century.  It runs through the middle of the walled city from the Lahore Gate of the Red Fort to the Fatehpuri Mosque on the west and was the grandest of the markets in India.  Katra Neel was a rich neighbourhood and is now a large wholesale cloth market.

Katra Neel in the 21st Century

Lala Chandu Lall grew up in Delhi where the British East India Company's Governor General Lord Dalhousie's Doctrine of Lapse annexed many princely states in India between 1848 and 1856.  English education was being established by Macaulay, who also brought about the Indian Penal Code.  Persian and Sanskrit were replaced by English.  The Delhi College was originally the Madrassa Ghaziuddin Khan, named after the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb's general who started it in the 1690s.  In 1792 it became the oriental college for literature, science and art situated near Paharganj outside the Ajmeri Gate.  Through the influence of Macaulay, it was called the Anglo Arabic College in 1828 and became famous as the Delhi College.  It was one of the first institutions in India to initiate instruction in modern science through the local language.  It served as "an institution that mediated between eastern and western cultures and mentalities, and did so in the vernacular, contributing to the emergence of an Urdu-speaking and reading elite in North India, composed of individuals of all religious persuasions."

Lala Chandu Lall attended the Delhi College and was much influenced by Master Ramchander, the famous mathematician of Delhi College respected by the Indians and foreigners alike for his academic prowess and who had become a Christian in 1852.  Even Dr. Chiman Lall, was an alumni of the Delhi College, who was Bahadur Shah Zafar's personal physician, had become a Christian, and who was killed during the 1857 riots, known by the British as Sepoy Mutiny but by Indians as the First War of Independence.  In one of the reports of the Society of the Propogation of the Gospel (SPG) taken from the Yale Divinity School library, it states - "Large number of Musalmans and Hindoos are often present during our service in Church, they are attracted by the music, but frequently stay to the end and listen to the sermon."  Lala Chandu Lall was one such person who was attracted to the glorious Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.  As was the custom in those days, he was married at a young age to Sohini and they had one child Isa Charan.

After the public Baptism of Master Ramchander and Dr. Chiman Lall on 11 July 1852, the seeds of dissent were growing. There was a marked difference now from the secular ways of Bahadur Shah Zafar's court and resentment against the Gospel propogating Christians was rising.  When the Bengal soldiers rebelled against the British East India Company army, they felt that their religion was being compromised and the British were deceiving them into becoming Christians by making them taste pork and beef lard said to have been used in the ammunition that they were supposed to use by putting the bullets to their mouth.  The simmering emotions erupted and fuelled by rumour and slander, went right from Calcutta to Meerut, Lucknow and Delhi and then on to the north of India.  Britishers - men, women and children were butchered mercilessly.  Even in Bahadur Shah Zafar's court, Dr. Chiman Lall was murdered and Master Ramchander barely escaped as Christians were being hunted down.  Bahadur Shah Zafar made a public declaration of siding with the rebel Indian soldiers and when the Britishers were finally able to control the riots, being in their turn merciless to quell the emotions and killings, they exiled Bahadur Shah Zafar to Rangoon thus making a formal end to the travesty that was once the mighty Mughal empire. The other casualty of the 1857 riots was the British East India Company as the British Crown took over and the governor general was now the Viceroy representing Queen Victoria who was later announced as the Empress of India.  

In such an atmosphere Lala Chandu Lall took his baptism as is mentioned in the Mission Life Vol.III in the chapter, 'Work Amongst the Educated Classes at Delhi' by C.J. Crowfoot  -
"Lala Rám Chandra and Dr. Chimmum Láll, an account of whose baptism was given in my last paper, belonged to this class; and the chain of converts commenced by them, although it is but a thin one, has continued unbroken. In 1859 Tara Chand and Chandu Láll, who had both been pupils in the first class of the Government College, were baptized. They have both continued to live in Delhi since their baptism, and the high consistency of their lives has been at all times the greatest support to the Missionaries, and the best pledge of future success. Tara Chand has been working for many years as an ordained Missionary in Delhi, and Chandu Láll holds an important post in the Commissioner's office."    

Lala Chandu Lall and his wife were involved in ministering to new believers in Delhi as C.J. Crowfoot mentioned in his letters - 
"Sunday, Oct. 4th, Delhi.- Today J., the young Brahman, who is mentioned in Tara Chand's letter, has signified his wish to come to be baptized in church; and the baptism is to take place during this evening's service. It has, I hope, been kept a secret; for we are afraid that [294/295] his relatives, if they hear of it, may resort to any means, violent or other, to prevent his baptism from taking place. I trust that strength will be given him to-day to face the ordeal through which he will have to pass. It is really no slight one. After his baptism he is to live for some while with Chandu Láll........"
"St. Stephen's Mission, Delhi, Friday, Oct. 16th.- Last Sunday-week J., about whom I once sent you a letter from Tara Chand, was baptized. Tara Chand performed the ceremony; Chandu Láll and his wife and myself were witnesses. He had kept his intention secret from his relatives, so that there was not a larger number of heathen present than there usually is at our evening service. Afterwards, in the evening, he dined with Chandu Láll, thus hopelessly breaking his caste. He was a Brahman of very high caste........."
"April 26th, 1869.--I am going to a meeting of the Delhi Society. This is a Society composed of some of the leading gentry amongst the natives, and some of the English residents--the Commissioner always taking the chair. Meetings are held at which essays are read, debates [298/299] are carried on, and a news-room and a library is attached to the debating-room. This evening Tara Chand is to give us a lecture on 'Socrates.' Hitherto the society has not done much good, most of its members being respectable old gentlemen who come to pay their salaams to the Commissioner; but now many young educated men are joining. Chandu Láll is secretary--rather a remarkable fact, showing that when a really good man becomes a Christian he does not necessarily lose respect in the eyes of his countrymen, however much he may lose caste...." 
"April 26th, 1871 -" ......So when, twenty years ago, Rám Chandra and Dr. Chimmum Láll were baptized, there was a general movement; so again, when Tara Chand and Chandu Láll became Christians, four or five others were expected to follow their example. And so it was two years ago. Still, I hope that one is right in regarding these movements as the ebb and flow of a tide of feeling which, though slowly, is yet surely advancing...."

We know from these records that Lala Chandu Lall became a Christian as a matter of deep conviction, because he withstood the resentment against Christians at this time.  His wife Sohini had died and he remarried, this time to Emily Abel, the daughter of a British army chaplain.  Lala Chandu Lall made the decision to leave Delhi and relocate to Lahore in Punjab. In the Yale Divinity School library SPG report published in 1871 it says that  "Our school has sustained another heavy loss, Lala Chandu Lal, who has for the last year been acting as head master and for the last eight years has been working in the School, has left it.  This however is a loss which though we regret it much for the immediate interests of the School, we do not regret when we look at the wider interests of the Mission; Lala Chandu Lal now holds an important post in a Government Office, his influence will henceforth be exerted in a sphere quite independent of the Mission; this we consider a great gain." Lala Chandu Lall had been involved with the St. Stephen's School which later became the prominent St. Stephen's College of  Delhi University.  Family sources say that Lala Chandu Lall joined the Government Education Department in Lahore and there was involved with the starting of the Rang Mahal School which later became the renowned Forman Christian College.  He was an educationist and a disciplinarian even though he was a loving father to his children and all his children did exceedingly well for themselves.

An old picture of Lala Chandu Lall taken in the late 19th century at Lahore, Punjab

With Emily, Lala Chandu Lall had thirteen children - 1) Mohini b1865;  2) Prem b1867;  3) Bertie b1869;  4) Pati b1871;  5) Pyarelal (Pare) b1873;  6) Dayavati b1875;  7) Shanti b1877;  8) Sadanand b1879;  9) Grace b1881;  10) Samuel b1883;  11) Benjamin b1885;  12) Mary b1889;  13) Luther b1891.

Lala Chandu Lall and his wife Emily at the marriage of their eldest daughter Mohini to Rai Bahadur Mayadass of Ferozepur

Lala Chandu Lall was very nationalist minded and continued his Indian lifestyle till the end of his days.  His children were very British in their outlook and way of life, being influenced by Emily their mother.  Family sources says that Emily's father, the Rev. Ralph Abel was an army chaplain, of Jewish ethnicity, a Protestant reverend of the Anglican church and a British national.  He lies buried in the Holy Trinity church in Lahore.  

Soon after the birth of their youngest child Luther in 1891, Emily passed away and Lala Chandu Lall was a widower once more.  He continued to be involved with Christian activity in Lahore.  It had been a fresh start for him at Lahore and he had cut connection with his extended family in Delhi because he was hurt that they accused him of taking money from the British to renounce Hinduism.  He mentioned it in the Punjab Christian Conference held in Lahore at that time.  This accusation still continues till today when people cannot understand why a Hindu or a Muslim can, of their own free will, start believing in the Lord Jesus Christ as the Son of God, Who came in the flesh, died, was buried and on the third day He rose again and is alive forever.  Even now Indians think that Jesus is a foreigner and are willing to add Him into their pantheon as long as they don't have to believe He is the Only Diety.  He stated it Himself in John 14:6 - "I am the Way, the Truth and the Life, no man comes to the Father, but by Me."

Government House, Lahore, 1857


In Lahore, Lala Chandu Lall established himself.  Lahore had been the capital city of the Sikh empire under Maharaja Ranjit Singh till 1849 and by 1857 it was under the British Raj and the capital city of the Punjab.  It was the culture centre of the Indian subcontinent extending from the eastern banks of the Indus river all the way to Delhi.

Lahore Market, 1857
Anarkali, Lahore
The Hazuri Bagh, Lahore 1857
Shalimar Gardens, Lahore 1857


Lala Chandu Lall was my great grandfather and his eleventh child Benjamin was my mother Shuniela's father.  He lived in exciting times and had the courage of his convictions and rebelled against the caste and inequality of his times believing that God has created all mankind as equal, it is man who has made them unequal. That was his mutiny!

20 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for this wonderful account of history of my dada and the country when it had happened. It reminded me of our days of partition. I am so proud of my dada for taking this step of accepting Jesus at the time of persecution, and also it is a wonderful testimony of sharing love and harmony without caste. Beta continue to do this good work...

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    1. Dear Shuneila We must be related! My great grandmother Shanti, was one of the offspring of Emily Abel. Shanti married my Great Grandfather Partap Ramchander. I do hope this note reaches you. My name is Richard Maurice. Email: richardmaurice28@gmail.com

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  2. that was really educational of the rich heritage we share mama!

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  3. Very interesting read Damini. Lots of new facts. Some things I had heard about...but you added lots of details. Where did you go to do the research? Are there some books or papers available? Also liked the old city sketches of lahore etc....do you have these? I have more questions. But these will do for now. Good to get these facts in writing about my Great grand-father Chandulal. May I add that my father Sadanand Mayadas always said his mother Dayawati would mention how fond she was of your grandfather Ben Chandulal (her younger brother)and how proud she was of him for the life he had decided to lead...dedicated to the work of God.

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  4. Wanted to make another comment on the Mayadas-Chandulal wedding photo...how interesting that Ernest Mayadas and Dayawati Chandulal who were later to marry are in the front row as young children. It is them isn't it?
    I got the photo a couple of years ago from Aunty Barri (Dr. Mohini Dass)and we had tried to calculate the date of the wedding and the ages of the children who are in the photo.

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  5. Thanks so much. So glad that you found it interesting. Most of the source of the published matter is already mentioned in the blogs and of course family seniors have added to it. Couldn't make up my mind whether to mention our great grandfather as Chandu Lall or Chandu Lal or Chandulal!

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  6. Great article, wonderfully researched. Loved the way you've merged history and scripture and good to know our ancestors played a vital role in India's history. A good opportunity for us to share our heritage with our children and grandchildren. Look forward to lots more from you!

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  7. Hi Damini,
    what a wonderful article and lovely pictures of the Lall's from Katra Neel. My great great Grand Father Chandu Lall.
    The little boy Parmanad Samuel Lall in the picture was my great Grand father, who's son was my late grand father J S Lall.
    Thank you:)

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    1. Hi Nandini: thanks for your appreciative comments on the blog about our common ancestor! I would love to connect with you..would you like to send me a message at damini.shah.1@facebook.com? Looking forward to hearing from you. I remember meeting your grandfather John Lall when I was quite little and I knew your aunt Joy well, in Shimla and in Chandigarh, she was my music teacher! Looking forward to hearing from you, Damini

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  8. It is a great research article. Thank you for taking time to inform us of our Godly heritage. May the good work that God began in the past be continued to be fulfilled in our life and our family's lives. May God be glorified in all this. I am proud to be part of this blessing. Rachel

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    1. Thanks Rachel...great that we share a godly heritage! I remember you as a very little girl many years ago, and now you have a lovely family! How are you doing? So good that we can be in touch! Damini

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  9. Dear Damini,
    Thanks for this lovely article. I am a Phd Student and working on 'The influence of British Rule on Indian Fashion'. Please let me know if it is possible to meet you sometime. Also I wanted to request you for using an image from this blog - the family image, if I have your permission. My twitter handle is ToolikaG, and my name is Toolika Gupta. pl. let me know the best way to contact you.

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    1. Thanks Toolika, for appreciating this article. These are all research done on a personal level & the photo you mentioned belongs to a personal family collection & not willing for it to be used anywhere else. I'm sorry though I wish you all the best on your research.

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  10. I have seen the trave of Emily. It lies unwashed and in ruins. I'd love to help you get in contact with your ancestors

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  11. Thanks a lot for recording these stories. They shall be part of our Story too. I am doing a research on Dr.Chiman Lal, Would you have any archives to share or direct me to?

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  12. You could mail it to me: sathishsimon@gmail.com

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  13. Thank you for this very interesting article. My GG Grandfather, Master Ramchander, Professor of Mathematics, Delhi College in the 1850s, was a dear friend and mentor of Lala Chandulal.
    I would be grateful for your email contact, as I am presently researching our family history and writing about Master Ramchander.
    Richard Maurice (richardmaurice28@gmail.com)

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