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The dandy, charming, strangling highwaymen

The Thugs were a colourful band of murderers and robbers that held colonial India in thrall, writes Peter Gruner

Thug – The True Story of India’s Murderous Cult by Mike Dash
Granta, £20


Murderers in India’s native states could be trodden to death by elephants


Three captured Thugs demonstrate their strangling technique


Thugs get to grips with a traveller

THE average Thug, at first, would come across as a rather decent and agreeable cove, not in the least fierce or aggressive, let alone a murderer.
You’d find him – or he’d find you – quietly walking through the rough and inhospitable terrain of 19th-century India, with a bunch of other so-called travellers, and by coincidence they were going your way.
They’d probably invite you and your travelling companions to join them, saying that the bigger the party the less chance of being attacked by bandits.
They’d be charming and disarming company for days, even weeks, and then quick as you like, it would be out with the ceremonial scarf – a piece of fine cotton cloth about a yard long – and goodnight Calcutta.
As Mike Dash describes, in his brilliantly researched book Thugs – the name given to groups of bloodthirsty Indian killers and thieves – also saw themselves as men of honour.
That didn’t stop them, of course, doing what they did best – mercilessly throttling to death wealthy traders and then cutting up their remains and burying them to avoid identification. The traders would then be robbed of everything they had.
The book, which is shortly to go into paperback, is not just an intriguing history of British imperialists struggling to defeat one of the world’s most mysterious and murderous religious cults. It is also a bit of a boy’s own adventure detailing the lengths to which investigators from the East India Company went to track down and finally apprehend the Thug, despite threats to the officers’ safety and a wall of secrecy.
It was only when travellers started disappearing in rather alarming numbers that the British realised something was wrong. They were slow to react at first, probably because in the main it was not European travellers – usually in well-armed convoys – who were disappearing but Indians.
The British were also so isolated within their little sphere of privilege, that in 1810 you didn’t even admit to liking a curry, let alone profess an interest in, for example, Persian poetry. Indeed, one British lady when asked what she had seen of India while there replied: “Oh, nothing, thank goodness.”
Slowly came reports of the disappeared from their families and with them came the rumours of these strange murderous tribes, who could strangle a man on horseback and dispatch an entire group of men within minutes. Finally, the British administrators had to do something.
The word ‘Thug’ is an ancient one and first appears in India’s sacred Sanskrit tongue, meaning to cover or conceal. Its literal meaning is almost always robber, cheat, or conman. Men from the same family would form gangs with religious rituals and habits, which would have been passed down through generations. About 1,500 Thugs were thought to be working in small gangs around Lucknow and Jaipur in the early 1800s.
Strangling was the preferred method of death but not the only one. Victims would also be invited to share a hearty meal with a friendly band of travellers, all going in the same direction. But it would be poisoned with ground seeds of the thorn apple, a deadly relative of belladonna, which deprives the object of his senses.
However, a Thug was also a man of principle and pride. “The surest way to anger a captured strangler,” writes Dash, “was to suggest that he was nothing more than a common criminal.”
Thugs were highly superstitious and there were many varieties of humans they couldn’t kill, including women and children. You were also safe if you were a fakir, musician or a bard. If you had leprosy, were a member of a specific caste or profession such as an elephant driver, oil vender, washerman or sweeper, you were spared. Anyone travelling with a cow was okay and Sikhs were unharmed, at least in Bengal.
The Thugs so fascinated Victorian Britain, that in 1839 Queen Victoria demanded to see the proofs of Confession of a Thug by Colonel Philip Meadows Taylor, a colonial officer in Hyderabad.
Finally William Sleeman, an East India Company officer, was given the unhappy task of attempting to end the Thugs’ reign of terror on the roads of India.
Sleeman was lucky enough to have brought before him captured Thugs, a few of whom were persuaded to turn ‘King’s Evidence’, or become ‘approvers’ as they were known. From these men he wrung out as much information as possible.
But it was an uphill task for Sleeman’s tiny band of officers. Thugs never murdered in their backyards, but hundreds of miles from where they lived; all evidence of the victim was buried; and the Thug was often protected by his village chiefs.
Sleeman’s brilliant innovation – later copied by the fledgling British police – was the creation of his ‘machine’, a paper database, which stored and processed the information provided. In short he determined to get as much information as he could on every Thug he could find out about – home address, aliases, family relationships, as well as information on every crime they committed.
“All this work, moreover, had to be undertaken at a time when the Indian police force was fragmented, poorly paid and appallingly corrupt,” writes Dash, “when pen, paper and foolscap indexes were the best available technology; and when the techniques of photography, finger printing and forensic analysis were more or less undreamed of.” But soon hundreds of Thugs were being arrested and committed for trial.
Sleeman and his small team were so successful in helping to wipe out the death cult that a village to the north east of Jubbulpore was renamed Sleemanabad, and the brass lamp Sleeman himself presented to the temple there was kept burning for more than a century in his honour; it is still there today.
 



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