Adieu Sir Mark Tully: The Englishman Who Never Left India
Sir William Mark Tully passed away on 25 January 2026.
KBE. Former BBC Bureau Chief
in India for two decades. A BBC journalist for over thirty years. Winner of
numerous awards. Author of nine books.
All this is known. All this will be written, recorded, archived.
And yet, none of it quite captures the man.
In the days following his
passing, I read deeply moving obituaries written by friends whom I admire.
Rajendra Aklekar, journalist with Mid-Day and chronicler of
India’s rail history and heritage. Deepak Sapra, one of the most outstanding alumni of my railway alma mater and author of the much-loved The Boy Who Loved
Trains. Incidentally, Sir Mark wrote the foreword to their books,
as he did to mine, My Train 18 Story. Reading their tributes
stirred something personal in me. I felt compelled to write, not merely because
Sir Mark was a towering journalist, but because he had left an indelible
imprint on my own life and thinking.
What truly set Mark Tully
apart, what made him singular and irreplaceable, was not just what he reported,
but how and from where he reported. He did not merely cover India. He belonged
to it. He consciously stepped away from the BBC’s often distant and patronising
gaze and chose instead to look at India from within, as one of its own. He
wrote not as a foreign correspondent passing judgement, but as a deeply
involved participant, guided by affection, humility, and an unyielding moral
compass.
Mark Tully once said it was
his karma to live in India. He believed this country had shaped the way he
lived, the way he thought, and the way he understood fate. Very few outsiders
ever acknowledge India with such honesty. Fewer still allow it to change them
so completely.
Among his many works, No
Full Stops in India, which was his first work that I read, stands apart, not merely as a book, but as a
worldview. It is journalism, autobiography, travelogue, and social analysis
seamlessly woven together. It refuses easy conclusions. It resists tidy
summaries. It insists that India cannot be boxed into headlines or reduced to
convenient theories. The title itself is a declaration. India has no full
stops. Its stories do not end neatly. Its contradictions coexist. Order and
chaos walk side by side. Tradition and modernity argue, collide, and yet
somehow embrace.
Mark Tully’s greatest
strength lay in his refusal to simplify India for foreign consumption. Instead
of explaining India away, he allowed its complexity to breathe. His
observations were shaped by insight and lived experiences,
by patient watching and quiet listening. For anyone who wishes to understand
India beyond clichƩs, No Full Stops in India remains essential
reading.
His journeys along the Grand
Trunk Road were, in many ways, journeys through India’s bloodstream. That
ancient highway was not merely a reporting location. It was a living archive of
centuries. Along it, he encountered faith and commerce, decay and renewal,
rupture and continuity. Through his writing and documentaries, the Grand Trunk
Road became a metaphor for India itself, always moving, always layered,
carrying history without being imprisoned by it.
If one thread ran quietly but persistently through Mark Tully’s life, it was his love for trains. That love began in the misty hills of Darjeeling during the war years, when he could not return to England. As a schoolboy at the New School, he travelled daily on the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. Decades later, he recalled it with undimmed wonder: “How could I ever forget the DHR? It was the train that took me to school every day.”
The narrow gauge line, the
loops and zigzags, the patient little locomotives climbing steep gradients,
this was not merely transport. It was an initiation. The train passed through
markets, tea gardens, and crowded streets, dissolving the boundary between
railway and town. That was where his lifelong romance with Indian trains began.
When he later returned as
BBC’s India chief, that relationship deepened. He believed the best way to
understand India was to travel by train, preferably in sleeper class. There,
strangers shared food, arguments, opinions, and silences. Languages mingled.
Social hierarchies blurred. A railway coach became a moving microcosm of India.
Mark Tully often compared
Indian trains to Indian life itself. Sometimes late. Often chaotic.
Occasionally exasperating. Yet always collective, and always capable of sudden,
unexpected beauty. His affection for steam engines was especially poignant. To
him, they were living beings, breathing, sweating, struggling forward with
dignity. Their disappearance saddened him deeply.
In many ways, his relationship with trains mirrored his relationship with India. Rooted in childhood, sustained by curiosity, and carried through life with enduring love.
I became a fan of Mark Tully
not merely because he was a great journalist, but because he was, in spirit,
more Indian than Indians. He neither romanticised India nor dismissed it. He
respected it enough to criticise it honestly, and loved it enough to defend
what deserved defending.
On 24 February 2019, writing
in Hindustan
Times, Mark Tully argued forcefully that Train 18, later known as
Vande Bharat Express, should not be dismissed as elitist. He recognised it as
an ambitious and indigenous effort by the engineers of the Integral Coach
Factory, Chennai, after decades of sterile debate within Indian Railways on the
need for modern trains.
When that very team was later
humiliated and victimised by a venal and jealous section of senior railway
officialdom, Mark Tully spoke again. On 12 January 2020, he wrote with rare
moral clarity about what the Train 18 episode revealed about India. He condemned
the lack of respect for achievement, the misuse of vigilance machinery, and the
culture of fear that discourages initiative. He warned that such treatment
would encourage a dangerous habit within government organisations: the habit of
doing nothing, agreeing to nothing, risking nothing.
His words cut deep because
they were true. And because they came from someone with no personal stake, only
a stake in India’s future.
His writing on Train 18
emboldened me to meet him at his Delhi home. He received me with warmth and
grace. He listened with care and understood fully, even as I emptied a copious
number of chilled beers that kept appearing on the table, courtesy Gillian, his
gracious partner. With characteristic generosity and courage, he offered to
write again on the subject, which he did, fully aware that the powers that be
would not take kindly to such forthrightness and that it would further estrange
him from them. From that moment grew a relationship marked by kindness,
encouragement, and a shared concern for Indian Railways and the health of
Indian institutions.
He agreed to write the
foreword to my book My Train 18 Story, and did so with
extraordinary insight. In it, he placed my experience within a larger national
malaise: the colonial legacy, rigid hierarchies, fear driven bureaucracy, and
what Inder Malhotra once called the Abominable Indian No Men. With precision and
compassion, he showed how initiative is punished and conformity rewarded, not
only in the railways, but across Indian governance.
Sir Mark Tully’s passing is
not merely the loss of a legendary journalist. For me, it is deeply personal.
It is the loss of a moral voice, a generous mentor, and a fellow traveller.
From now on, every train
journey will carry his presence for me. In shared compartments, in the rhythm
of wheels on rails, in the stubborn persistence of Indian Railways despite
everything, I will sense his spirit: curious, patient, empathetic, and endlessly
in love with the journey itself.
Adieu, Sir Mark Tully. You
did not merely write about India. You walked its roads, rode its trains, shared
its silences, and earned your place within its heart.
And to borrow from
Shakespeare, a line that seems written for him:
“His
life was gentle; and the elements so mix’d in him, that Nature might stand up
and say to all the world, This was a man.”
...

Rebirth of an Indian on ENGLISH SOIL who loved to stay IN india made his KaramBhumi.
ReplyDeleteAn extra ordinary tribute written by you. God bless the departed soul.
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ReplyDeleteGod bless the departed soul.Vinamra Shraddhanjali.
ReplyDeletešš
DeleteSince my childhood days, i adore Sir Mark. You have correctly portrayed him a mentor of all railway-men. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHe will always be remembered for his love for India and Indian.
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DeleteSir Mark Tully was a British journalist who god-dp spent most of his life in India, deeply understanding its culture and people.
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DeleteMay his soul Rest In Peace.
ReplyDeleteTo Sir Mark Tully, journalism and love for Railway were two sides of the same coin. They were inseparable.
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DeleteHeartfelt Tribute šš»
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DeleteA true picturization of a great man -a rail lover with an overarching love for India by an equally outstanding man-a technocrat and a literary buff for whom quoting n enacting Ghalib n Shakespeare come just as easily
ReplyDeleteKind words, thanks šš
DeleteMay his soul rest in peace.
ReplyDeleteš
DeleteThanks for sharing a description of his about our country which if you and I use it will not be accepted by any person. I keep wondering whether we have at all an aptitude for listening to the ground reality however unpalatable it is as we perhaps romanticize only the ideal world and are loathe to accept any deviations.
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DeleteMr. Tully wrote the forword for the wonderful bestseller titled, "My Train 18 Journey". RIP
ReplyDeleteTrue
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DeleteMay his soul rest in peace.
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DeleteGood Evening sir
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ReplyDeleteThanks for the wonderful writeup about Tully Saheb (many called him Tuli Saheb?). Here was a man who loved India, lived in and breathed India, was fearless and enhanced BBC's stature (not the other way round). Adieu, Sir Mark Tully.
ReplyDeletešš sir
DeleteExpecting a usual, maybe, repetitive obituary, I was almost about to let go reading this, what with the overload of reading these days. Thank God I read it fully. Your appreciation for him comes from the heart, and I commend you for bringing out the Man in true light.
ReplyDeleteYes, his writings during 2019-20 did not please the PTB. I was working with the Indian Steam Railway Society in that period , where he was a Vice President for many years, and we would meet him at the monthly meetings in the Conference Room of the National Rail Museum. When Lohani's brief term as CRB was not extended beyond one year, he wrote in the Hindustan Times regretting the short tenure and criticising the government's approach in such appointments . In reaction, the Secretary Railway Board was instructed to banish the Steam Society from holding its meetings in the Rail Museum, and the Society actually became a pariah for the Ministry for some time.
RIP Mark Tully.
I knew it from you before he gracefully mentioned it šš
DeleteOm shanti Shanti Shantihe
ReplyDeleteRanjanesh Sahai
ReplyDeleteA great tribute to a learned man .
ReplyDeleteBeautiful to the core. How correctly you have described both about Sir Mark and the typical Indian behind everything in India, whether it is building a peice of art like Tajmahal or Tr 18. The creators suffered in both the instances? Very well articulated, Sudhanshu
ReplyDeleteHeard but never thought of going to read about Sir Mark Tully. Thanks Sir to create the curiosity back to read about him specifically being a railway lover more in sleeper case which allows to have a story in every journey. Rest in peace Sir Mark
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