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MAHARS HAVE BEEN MARTIAL PEOPLE
The Mahars have been a martial people. The army of the East India Company which successfully fought against the army of the Peshwa was recruited from the Mahars. The last battle between the Peshwa and the British was faught at Koregaon in the Poona district. There is a column at Koregaon raised by the British to commemorate the battle. On the column are inscribed the names of the soldiers who fell in the battle on the side of the British. Nine out of ten names are of Mahars. The recruitment of the Mahars continued upto 1892 and in all the wars, the Mahars have proved their martial qualities. All of a sudden the recruitment of Mahars was stopped in 1892. Ever since the Mahars have nursed a grievance against the British Government for what they regarded as very ungrateful conduct. There is much justification for this grievance for there can be no doubt that without the help of the Untouchables the British would never have been able to conquer India.
The Mahars carried on a great agitation against their banishment from the Army. But it bore no fruit. It was during the war of 1914 that the British Government under necessity lifted the ban and raised one Mahar battalion. It was raised at the fag end of the war and the battalion had no apportunity to go on war service and show its mettle. It was posted in Waziristan in the North-West Frontier Province, and it is on record while almost every battalion stationed in the N.W.F. lost some rifles and ammunition to the Pathans, who are in the habit of raiding ammunition and rifle depots to arm themselves, the Pathans did not succeed in stealing a single title or a single cartridge from the Mahar battalion. It was expected that the British Government, having reenfranchised the Mahars for Military puiposes, would continue the Mahar battalion and add to it more Mahar battalions. But instead the British Government on the excuse of economy, disbanded the Mahar battalion. This caused great bitterness in the minds of the Mahars. When the present war came, the Mahars hoped that their turn would come. But the steps taken by the British Government in the early stages of the war only added insult to injury. The Mahars were only wanted