One Man Against an Empire
M.N. Roy, British Intelligence and the Colonial Surveillance State
The compelling story of the hunt for one enigmatic foe of the British, birthing an entire colonial surveillance network and an Empire-wide intelligence strategy.
Description
Manabendra Nath Roy was the prime focus of British paranoia in the 1920s and ’30s. For the colonial establishment and its intelligence services, there was no greater covert threat than this charismatic revolutionary and Communist activist. From the moment he left India in 1915, seeking arms to launch a full-scale revolution against the subcontinent’s colonial overlords, he was doggedly tracked; his every move surveilled and reported. Everyone he met came under the scanner. His collaborators were harassed, coerced and bribed. His lovers were followed and harangued. There were even suggestions of early attempts to eliminate him.
Roy played a significant role in the Communist Party of Great Britain during its early years, and his influence in the imperial capital was seen as greatly inimical. Lenin and the Comintern, who bankrolled Roy handsomely in the 1920s, hoped he would galvanise the Indian proletariat and strike a mortal blow against the British Empire.
This compelling book narrates the untold story of M.N. Roy’s persistent clandestine attempts to undermine British authority through a network of agents, and the massive security establishment that thwarted his efforts in response.
Author(s)
Gautam Pemmaraju is a Mumbai-based writer, researcher and filmmaker, and creative consultant. He is the co-author of an authorised biography of His Holiness the Dalai Lama (with Tenzin Geyche Tethong); and editor of A Life In Shadow: The Secret Story of ACN Nambiar, A Forgotten Anti-Colonial Warrior by Vappala Balachandran.
