A century ago today, an Indian Muslim named Kassim Ismail Mansoor was hanged by the British in Singapore as a traitor.
The treason in question concerned the dramatic mutiny some months previous of Singapore’s 5th Light Infantry — Muslims who had feared that they would be dispatched to World War I’s European charnel house. (Ironically, the British brass had no such intent: they already considered these troops too unreliable, for some reason.)
Many of the mutineers were shot en masse by summary court-martial.
Our man Mansoor was not a fighter but a civilian coffee-shop proprietor. Having come into the confidence of some of his countrymen enough to know the mutinous thrust of their grievances, he made bold put in writing an appeal to the Rangoon consul of the Ottoman Empire — Britain’s wartime enemy — for the intervention of Turkish warships that could pick up their disaffected Muslim brethren and turn together against the British. Unfortunately for Mansor, that missive fell into British hands.
A 1937 retrospective series in the Straits Times on the distinguished career of Mansoor’s defense counsel, Sir Vincent Devereux Knowles, dives into the case here: 1, 2. Knowles, it says, knew his task was quite hopeless.
On this day..
- 2004: Three for honor-killing a 6-year-old
- 1729: Philippe Nivet, "Fanfaron"
- 1431: Beaumont and Vivonne
- 1996: Four militants, ahead of the Khobar Towers bombing
- 1509: Four Dominicans for the Jetzer affair
- 2000: Robert Earl Carter, exonerating Anthony Graves
- 1793: Ezra Mead, "in one of these fits of insanity"
- 1928: Frederick Browne and Pat Kennedy, hanged by a microscope
- 1841: Marius Darmes, frustrated regicide
- 1622: Not quite Squanto (Tisquantum), Pilgrim befriender
- 1076: Waltheof II, Earl of Northumbria
- 1718: John "Jack Ketch" Price, former hangman