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VARC DPP Set – 5

VARC DPP Set – 5

Direction (1 - 4) Read the following passage and answer the given questions.


Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow them.

Countries devastated by the Germans in the Second World War, like Poland and Greece, are becoming more strident in their demands for massive compensation from Germany. In contrast, there is hardly a voice, let alone a movement, in India to hold the British accountable for the greatest tragedy that befell the country in the 20th century under their watch — the Bengal famine in 1943.

The Bengal famine took half as many lives as the Holocaust did. Sadly, it continues to be perceived as a tragic occurrence and not an atrocity. Unlike Jallianwala Bagh, it doesn’t have a remembrance day or a noteworthy memorial.

The famine was gruesome. Every day thousands of emaciated dead had to be removed from the streets of Calcutta by police and government-funded corpse disposal organizations. As more of the starving poured into the city from the devastated countryside, the best the Chief Minister of Bengal, Khawaja Nazimuddin, could come up with was to write to the Governor that he proposed to have them removed from the city by force.

occurrence of the famine while ignoring the fact that enough food was available within India to have prevented its occurrence. As the Earl of Huntington observed, in a parliamentary debate on October 20, 1943, while the loss of the Burma rice and the cyclone of 1942 were strong “contributory factors” to the famine, the fact remained that “these losses were largely made good by the exceptional crop in Northern India in the spring of 1943”.

Voluminous official records from that period available in the India Office Records section of the British Library also establish that the famine was not the outcome of a lack of foodgrain. Rather, political machinations, greed, hoarding and bureaucratic bungling on a massive scale stymied efforts to procure and transport grain from where it was available — Punjab and the United Provinces — to starving Bengal in quick time.

Even the Viceroy, Lord Linlithgow, acknowledged this in his letter of September 27, 1943 to the prevaricating Governor of Punjab Sir Bertrand Glancy. He demanded that Glancy act decisively to procure and move grain, charging “that the Punjab cultivators are engaged in blackmailing the starving peasants of Bengal so as to make inordinate profits at a time when they have already made substantial profits indeed”. Even as the famine began to abate in 1944, the Intelligence Bureau was alerting government of the possibility of its recurrence, if adequate measures were not taken. A careful reading of official papers establishes that at all levels of British-Indian administration the effort was more to create records and “keep the files healthy”, to save ‘official’ skin at some future enquiry, rather than to get to grips with the problem through resolute action.

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1. On the basis of your reading of the passage, with which of the following comments do you think the author is likely to agree?
  • Option A: Winston Churchill should be absolved from the blame of causing the Bengal famine.
  • Option B: Had the officialdom been proactive, and not wasted time on creating records, death in the Bengal famine could have been obviated.
  • Option C: In pre-independent India, farming was not at all lucrative.
  • Option D: The Indian bureaucracy today follows the legacy of British-Indian bureaucracy of preindependent India.
Correct Answer: B (Had the officialdom been proactive, and not wasted time on creating records, death in the Bengal famine could have been obviated.) That the officialdom was not positive in its approach to the situation is evident from the passage. The bureaucracy wasted time creating records for future inspections, rather than taking steps to transport grain from Northern India. Hence the author is likely to agree with this.

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2. Which of the following does the Chief Minister of Bengal's response suggest?
  • Option A: The British-Indian administration's lackadaisical attitude to the situation arising out of famine.
  • Option B: The Chief Minister's inability to tackle a difficult situation.
  • Option C: The Chief Minister's obsequious nature while dealing with his superior.
  • Option D: The British-Indian administration's lack of empathy for the suffering victims of the famine.
Correct Answer: D (The British-Indian administration's lack of empathy for the suffering victims of the famine.) Having the immigrants to the city removed by force shows the Chief Minister's lack of empathy.

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3. Which of the following CANNOT be inferred from the passage?
  • Option A: Allowing free movement of grains and preventing hoarding could have ameliorated the effects of Bengal famine.
  • Option B: Imposing restriction on the movement of grains among Indian states is counterintuitive.
  • Option C: The bureaucracy of the Indian Government during the Bengal famine years was parochial.
  • Option D: The bureaucracy of the Indian Government during the Bengal famine years made substantial gains when thousands of people died in the streets of Calcutta.
Correct Answer: D (The bureaucracy of the Indian Government during the Bengal famine years made substantial gains when thousands of people died in the streets of Calcutta.) It was the farmers of Northern India who made a profit. Nothing in the passage suggests that the bureaucracy made substantial gains.

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4. The author of the passage is likely to advocate all the following EXCEPT:
  • Option A: The descendants of the Bengal famine victims accepting reparations from the present British government, if given.
  • Option B: Construction of a fitting commemorative monument for the victims of the Bengal famine.
  • Option C: An apology from the British Prime Minister owning responsibility for the Bengal famine.
  • Option D: Arranging Bengal famine remembrance lectures every year.
Correct Answer: C (An apology from the British Prime Minister owning responsibility for the Bengal famine.) The passage doesn't support such an extreme step as suggested in this option.