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Live On Stage
Monday March 3 2025, 7pm GMT

Kavita Puri and Sathnam Sanghera on War, Empire and the Untold Story of the Bengal Famine

Art &
Culture

This event is part of ‘Conversations at the Kiln’, a new event series at Kiln Theatre programmed by Intelligence Squared. For more events with speakers from the worlds of literature, art, poetry and politics, click here.

The Bengal Famine is the forgotten story of the Second World War. Between 1943 and 1944, at least three million Indians, all of whom were British subjects, died from starvation or diseases linked to malnutrition.

It is one of the darkest chapters in colonial history, yet the memory of those millions who perished is not broadly nurtured in Britain, India or Bangladesh. There is no memorial, museum, or archive dedicated to them anywhere in the world – not even a plaque.

Who better to shed light on these untold stories than the award-winning journalist Kavita Puri? Described by The Radio Times as ‘our foremost chronicler of the lives of British South Asians,’ Puri has received critical acclaim for her radio series and writing on Indian history.

Now, on March 3, she joins author Sathnam Sanghera to uncover this tragic chapter of British and Indian history. Drawing on the themes of her hit podcast Three Million, Puri will tell the dramatic and complex story of British colonialism, Indian nationalism, global war and the end of empire, while challenging national mythologies, the prevailing British narrative of World War II, and what we understand a hero to be.

Puri will also discuss the extensive archival research that went into the making of the podcast, and the new discoveries uncovered by forensically piecing together the stories of eyewitnesses and survivors.

Join us for a thought provoking evening at Kiln Theatre, and have your questions answered in the Q&A.

Partition Voices
by Kavita Puri

BUY ON:

Empireworld: How British Imperialism Has Shaped the Globe
by Sathnam Sanghera

BUY ON:
Event Name

Kavita Puri and Sathnam Sanghera on War, Empire and the Untold Story of the Bengal Famine


ATTEND IN PERSON


Speaker
  • Kavita Puri

    Journalist, broadcaster and host of Three Million

Featuring
  • Sathnam Sanghera

    Columnist, Historian and Author of Empireland: How Modern Britain is Shaped by its Imperial Past

Speakers are subject to change.


Location
  • Kiln Theatre
  • 269 Kilburn High Rd
  • London
  • NW6 7JR
Time
  • Monday 3 March 2025
  • 7pm to 8:15pm GMT





Speakers

Speaker

Kavita Puri

Journalist, broadcaster and host of Three Million


Award-winning journalist, broadcaster and executive producer. She is the author of the critically-acclaimed Partition Voices: Untold British Stories, based on her BBC Radio 4 series which won the Royal Historical Society's Radio and Podcast Award and its overall Public History prize. She is also the creator, writer and presenter of Three Million on BBC Sounds which was named a Podcast of the year in the Times, Guardian/Observer and This Week. The series won many awards, including Gold for Best New Podcast at the British Podcast Awards 2024, and the same year Puri was a finalist for the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2024. She is the Chair of the Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction 2025.  
Featuring

Sathnam Sanghera

Columnist, Historian and Author of Empireland: How Modern Britain is Shaped by its Imperial Past


Sunday Times bestselling author of Empireland: How Modern Britain is Shaped by its Imperial Past. He was born to Punjabi immigrant parents in Wolverhampton in 1976. He entered the education system unable to speak English but went on to graduate from Christ's College, Cambridge with a first class degree in English Language and Literature. He has been shortlisted for the Costa Book Awards twice, for his memoir The Boy With The Topknot and his novel Marriage Material. Empireland has been longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, was named a Book of the Year at the National Book Awards of 2022, and inspired both the Channel 4 series Empire State of Mind and Sanghera's children's book about the British empire Stolen History. His latest book, Empireworld: How British Imperialism Has Shaped the Globe, is the sequel to Empireland, and is available now.

Speakers are subject to change.