Sir Penderel Moon | |
|---|---|
| Born | Edward Penderel Moon (1905-11-13)13 November 1905 |
| Died | 1987 |
| Alma mater | Winchester College New College, Oxford All Souls College, Oxford |
| Occupations | Civil servant Writer |
| Employer(s) | Indian Civil Service Bahawalpur State |
| Notable work | Strangers in India Divide and Quit |
| Title | Finance Minister ofBahawalpur State Chief Commissioner ofHimachal Pradesh Chief Commissioner ofManipur |
| Awards | Officer of the Order of the British Empire Knight Bachelor |
Sir Edward Penderel Moon, OBE (1905–1987) was a British administrator in India and a writer. He served as a finance minister for theBahawalpur State in the British Raj. AfterIndia's independence, he stayed on in India and worked as the chief commissioner ofHimachal Pradesh, as chief commissioner ofManipur state.[1]
Moon was born 13 November 1905 inMayfair, London to a cardiologist,Robert Oswald Moon who wrote aboutphilosophy andGreek medicine as well as diseases of the heart. Dr Moon also stood several times as a Liberal candidate for parliament.[1] He followed in his father's footsteps, first toWinchester College, then toNew College, Oxford. In 1927, he was elected a prize fellow ofAll Souls College, Oxford. He joined theIndian Civil Service in 1929, being posted to the Punjab.[citation needed]
Yuan Yi Zhu wrote that "Moon spoke several Indian languages well enough to administer justice in the vernacular as a district officer in the Punjab", as required of officers in the Indian Civil Service.[2]
Yuan wrote that "Moon was a sober observer of the British dominion in India. He thought it had done some good and some bad things, and that its eventual demise was long overdue." Yuan continued that after being "dismissed by the British government for being too sympathetic toward Indian nationalists" Moon "later spent 14 years holding important positions within the government of independent India at the invitation of its new rulers."[2]
Moon wrote several books onBritish rule in India includingDivide and Quit.[3][4] Yuan described Moon's magnum opus asThe British Conquest and Dominion of India (1989).[2]
In a 2023 book review of David Veveer's book,The Great Defiance: How the World Took On the British Empire, Yuan criticised Veveer's depiction of Moon's alongside "all the British villains in Veevers’ account". Yuan described Moon as "a mild-mannered colonial civil servant and historian", and states that Veveer condemned "Moon for committing “a gross erasure of the people of India from his story”, relying on a quotation which does not reflect what Moon actually wrote."[2]
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