Move to India After Cambridge, Stephens worked for the
London Underground and as
Ernest Debenham's
private secretary. In 1930 he joined the Bureau of Public Information in
Delhi, India, and from 1932 to 1937 worked as its director. After this he moved to
The Statesman in Kolkata (then Calcutta), first as assistant editor, then in 1942 as editor, succeeding Arthur Moore. According to his obituary in
The Times, for which he also wrote, he displayed "independent judgment and wide knowledge gained from travel", as well as a "flair for descriptive writing". Referring to the situation as "famine" was prohibited under "Emergency Rules", Photographs were not obviously covered by the Emergency Rules, so Stephens sent photographers out to take images of the victims. Their publication was widely regarded as "a singular act of journalistic courage and conscientiousness," according to the historian Janam Mukherjee, "without which many more lives would have surely been lost". "In some definite sense," writes Mukherjee, "the event ever since known as the 'Bengal Famine of 1943' had been born." The following Sunday, 29 August, Stephens published more photographs and an editorial, "All-India Disgrace". In Calcutta alone, "[s]cores of persons collapsing from under-nourishment are daily picked up from the streets," he wrote. "[R]ecorded deaths from starvation cases in hospitals between August 16 and August 29 were 143; 155 dead bodies are known to have been removed from public thoroughfares by the authorities' new Corpse Disposal Squad during the ten days ending on August 24." Things were significantly worse in the rural areas (the
mofussil). According to the historian Zareer Masani, Stephens had a visiting card made with four images of the victims printed on one side. "He took the train to Delhi with three hundred of these cards and made sure that every senior government official got this token from him." When Stephens visited Calcutta again in 1975, people old enough to recognize him thanked him in the street, Masani writes: "Are you Ian Stephens, the editor? Thank you for what you did for Bengal!"
Return to England Stephens resigned from
The Statesman in 1951 after disagreeing with the Indian government over its policy in
Kashmir. He spent time in Kashmir and Pakistan, then returned to England and a six-year fellowship at King's College, Cambridge, which he used to write
Horned Moon (1953) about his travels. ==Selected works==