Children of Kali

Children of Kali

by KevinRushby (Author)

Synopsis

They murdered more than a million travellers without spilling a drop of blood. They were inspired by religious fanaticism, yet came from many faiths. Their weapon was the handkerchief, their sacrament sugar, and their goddess Kali. They were the thugs. He is responsible for more than a 100 murders. He lives in the deepest jungles left in India and avoids capture, his followers claim, by magical powers. Some say he is a freedom fighter, others that he is a vicious hoodlum. He is Veerappan, India's most wanted man, and the most famous member of the modern thug cult. In this work, Kevin Rushby investigates this dark side of India. His quest to find Veerappan and the origins of thuggism takes him to prisons and gangster hideouts, probing the nature of crime and punishment in a country where the distinction between good and evil can be as murky as the Ganges. Rulers with underworld connections, politicians without scruples, bandits as social workers and heroes - all the elements of misrule are here. In towns and villages where the thugs were hunted down in the 1830s, he finds that the British view of the cult was moulded by imperialistic and orientalist needs; the truth was far less palatable (especially for the young Queen Victoria who took a keen interest). It was the religious perversions that allowed thugs to sacrifice travellers to Kali, which still exist and inspire criminals to this day.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Constable
Published: 19 Sep 2002

ISBN 10: 1841193933
ISBN 13: 9781841193939

Media Reviews
On a journey both muddled and strange, travel writer Rushby quests to India in curiosity about the Thugs who were reputed to kill travellers as a sacrifice to Kali and were eradicated during the 1830s and 1840s by a hero of the British Raj, William Henry Sleeman. With 100 sepoys, Sleeman hunted down more than 3,000 members of the supposedly murderous sect who were variously hanged, imprisoned or transported. Via Bollywood, the Yum Yum Hills and various surreal encounters, Rushby uncovers delusions and misconceptions until he concludes that there was no religious sect but a witch-hunt partly inspired by the threat posed by robbers to Britain's opium trade. Based more on Rushby's travel experiences than solid historical research, this thought-provoking book nonetheless rewrites an obscure episode of history while finding no black-and-white truths, but rather grey ones.
Author Bio
Kevin Rushby has lived and worked in Sudan, Malaysia, Thailand and Yemen. He is now a full-time writer and author of Chasing the Mountain of Light and Eating the Flowers of Paradise, and Hunting Pirate Heaven.