When Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently spoke of India undergoing a “psychological renaissance”, shedding the mental weight of colonial rule, the remark struck a chord far beyond political circles. It echoed a deeper national effort to revisit history, not for grievance, but for understanding how past decisions continue to shape present realities. Few episodes underline this more starkly than the Bengal Famine of 1943.
More than 80 years later, the famine is no longer remembered merely as a tragic footnote of the Second World War. It has become central to how India thinks about food security, state responsibility and the cost of political indifference.
The Bengal Famine was not triggered by drought or crop failure. Food existed. What failed was governance. Nobel laureate Amartya Sen famously demonstrated that Bengal did not suffer from food shortage but from lack of access. Grain continued to move out of India even as starvation spread across villages and city streets.
Recent historical work has only sharpened this conclusion. Historian Janam Mukherjee documents how British wartime priorities, especially the “Denial Policy” that confiscated boats and rice stocks to block a feared Japanese invasion, dismantled Bengal’s rural economy. Supply lines collapsed. Prices spiralled. Hoarding flourished. Relief never matched the scale of suffering.
Declassified correspondence later revealed that repeated appeals for grain shipments were turned down in London. Winston Churchill, fully aware of the crisis, chose not to divert resources. The famine was not accidental; it was a political choice.
Contemporary accounts from Calcutta describe bodies lining pavements, children begging for handfuls of rice, and entire villages fading from the map. The colonial state neither mobilised rationing nor emergency relief at scale. Even news reporting was censored in the early months, delaying public pressure.
This history explains why famine occupies such a powerful place in India’s policy memory. Independent India’s commitment to food security, from the Green Revolution to the Public Distribution System, Minimum Support Prices and the National Food Security Act, is rooted in a collective determination that such abandonment must never recur.
That legacy remains relevant. Climate shocks, heatwaves and supply disruptions have repeatedly tested India’s food systems. During onion shortages in late 2024 and crop losses following extreme weather, policymakers invoked the need to protect the poorest from “famine-like shocks” language that directly echoes 1943.
Political discourse reflects this continuity. In Parliament, Shashi Tharoor has described colonial policy as having “weaponised scarcity,” while civil-society groups such as the Right to Food Campaign continue to invoke Bengal as a warning against complacency. Even as India has eliminated famine, nutritional inequality persists, a reality acknowledged in NITI Aayog’s latest Multidimensional Poverty Index.
Popular culture has also played a role in reviving this historical consciousness. The recent documentary From Slaves to Bond: The Rise of the British Empire – Episode I situates the Bengal famine within a wider imperial system that prioritised extraction and racial hierarchy over human life. By linking famine policy to broader imperial decision-making — from resource diversion to cultural domination, the film reinforces what historians have long argued: Bengal was not an exception, but part of a pattern.
Ultimately, the famine’s enduring lesson is simple and unsettling. Food security is not just about harvests. It is about political will. Grain existed. Relief mechanisms existed. What failed was the moral calculus of power.
As India debates agricultural reform and state capacity today, remembering 1943 is not an act of dwelling on tragedy. It is a safeguard against repeating it.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and analytical purposes only. Views expressed are based on cited sources and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publication.

