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SPECIAL DECOLONIZATION COMMITTEE OF THE
SUBCONTINENT
Introduction
Colonial India was a constituent of the subcontinent under the jurisdiction of the British
through trade and conquest. One of the main trade catalyst for this trade remained to be
spices. Primordial groups remained attracted to the wealth of the Indians due to the long
era of Mughal rule which enriched the empire and region in various ways. Though
successful or not, the East India Company under the British remained the most
sustainable group which retained its power in the subcontinent for their own benefit for a
very prolonged period of time (100 years of Company rule plus 90 years of British
Crown rule). This study guide walks us through the colonial history of India from the
middle of the 19th century and the reactions thereof. It guides us through the means
and mechanisms that facilitated colonial raj and how British policies helped structure the
social, political and economic domains of Indian society.
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What is expected from Decolonization Committee at HUMUN ‘17?
HUMUN 2017 hence sets a committee that will assign all the delegates with stakeholder
personalities so that they can partake in the discussion. As representatives either of a
country’s government, a political party or an outfit of the sort, the delegates are
expected to analyse the situation unfolding in the subcontinent for the set timeframe.
Through this analysis, they are expected to produce terms and conditions under which
the British depart from the subcontinent and how the process of decolonization of the
vast area of the land that made up pre-partitioned India is to take place. As mentioned
before, the case study of the committee is as follows: Through the study guide, we are
made aware of many of the events leading up to the partition (1947), inclusive of party
formations, representations from each side, case studies of turmoil incidents taking
place due to the colonized rule of the British etc. The situation should be addressed
towards the future of the subcontinent where terms and conditions of the resulting
political order are to be discussed by the delegates i.e. the state which India should be
left in with regards to resources, legitimization, state-centric rule, citizenship rights,
minority inclusivity, division of lands, leadership and other similar matters.
A BASIC TIMELINE OF EVENTS THAT LED UP INDEPENDENCE
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A Brief History and Analysis of the Political scenario in the 1930s that led to the
partition (1858-1939)
1858: The East India company was formed as part of the trade between Britain and the
East Indies. With an interest in cotton, silk, indigo dye, salt, saltpetre, tea, and opium,
the company expanded as a result of booming trade and made its way into the
subcontinent during the late 18th century. Ruling for a whole century, the East India
Company was abolished in 1858 after the War of Independence the year prior and the
Government of India Act was passed. The Government of India Act placed India under
the direct control of the British government, ending the rule of East India Company.
1885: To safeguard Indian rights, the Indian National Congress was founded as a forum
for emerging nationalist feelings. This party acted as a platform to voice Indian opinion
against the rising British rule and grew to be a defining political organization in the
Independence Movement to come.
1905-1911:
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1) The partition of Bengal (1905) took place under Lord Curzon as a result of the
growing population which was causing problems with the spatial designation. The area
extended over 189,000 square miles with a population of 80 million. To ease
administrative issues and to restore governmental efficiency, partition was deemed
necessary and carried out. Bengal was divided in two provinces East Bengal and West
Bengal.
2) The Simla deputation (1906): The SD was the first systemic attempt on the part
of the Muslims to present their demands to the British government and to seek their
acceptance. The SD comprised 35 prominent Muslims from all over India. The
delegation emphasized that the democratic principle or the principle of election should
be introduced keeping in view the peculiar conditions and circumstances of India. The
diversity and the fact that there are different kinds of people living here, the fact that the
Muslims consider themselves to be a separate identity.
3) Formation of All India Muslim League (AIML): Just 3 months later on 30th
December the Muslim leaders desired to create a permanent political forum or the
Muslim League. The Muslim League was established in Dhaka on 30th December in
1906.
1919-1920: After the end of the First World War, Britain, including the subcontinent,
were affected greatly socially, economically and politically. It was in 1919 that the
Amritsar Massacre, also known as the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre, took place. Troops
of the British Indian Army open fired at over three hundred non-violent, unarmed
demonstrators. These Indian nationalists who were demonstrating in Amritsar, Punjab
met to protest against the heavy war tax imposed on the Indians during World War One
as well as the oppressive social, political, and economic conditions in India. Through the
evident dissatisfaction of the Indian people in demanding more representation and a
higher level of self-governance, the Montague-Chelmsford reforms were brought about
which introduced diarchy thus giving more political representation to the natives of India.
1930: Gandhi organized a peaceful demonstration to defy the hated Salt Acts.
According to British laws, Indians could buy salt from no other source but the British
government while also paying a sales tax on it. Thus, the British had a monopoly on salt
production and forbade the Indians from producing it.
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1930 - 1934: The League began viewing Muslims as one that needed a separate nation
from Hindus as a result of the Civil Disobedience Acts (1930-1934) and the Round
Table Conferences (1930-1932).
1935: Government of India Act legitimized local self-rule. Consequently, it affected the
relationship between Hindus and Muslims due to Muslims being a minority in some
provinces and sub-districts. This sowed the feeling among Muslims that they would be
outnumbered by Hindus and would have little to none political representation.
World War II and its aftermath relate to independence for India
World War II led to events that made independence perhaps an inevitable process as a
result of the course of events which would follow. Additionally, Britain committed India to
fight on its side for war without asking the most important and leading Indian
representatives on the legal platform - Jinnah and Gandhi.
Furthermore, Provincial elections seemed to have convinced the League that Muslims
were a minority and would have to play a second fiddle in any democratic structure
post-Independence. It feared that the Muslims may even go unrepresented. The
Congress's rejection to form a Congress-League government in the United Provinces
agitated this issue.
Pre-partition 1940-1947
1940: The Lahore Resolution of the Muslim League demanded for a separate state for
the Muslims of India. Churchill became Prime Minister in Britain while the viceroy made
a statement on India's constitutional development - the August Offer - announcing that
more places would be open to Indians in an expanded Executive Council and on a new
War Advisory Council. Congress and League rejected the August Offer and Congress
launches the Civil Disobedience Act.
1941: Congress civil disobedience sets prisoners free.
1942: Subhas Chandra Bose forms the Indian National Army. Additionally, the British
government announced its decision to send Sir Stafford Cripps to India. After his
proposals were published, Congress and League rejected the Cripps proposals. As a
result, Congress launched the 'Quit India movement' after which it is declared an
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unlawful organization; Gandhi and all members of the Congress Working Committee are
arrested.
Britain's 1942 offer Cripps Mission. This was an attempt by the British to try to gain
support of the nationalists by promising governmental changes after the end of the war.
Their main aim was gaining control of India during the course of the war for added
support in front of foreign lands. The offer did not however mention India's
independence.
1944: Gandhi-Jinnah talks end in failure.
1945: A number of events took place during this year where the first trial of the Indian
National Army men opened. Towards the end of the Second World War, Germany
surrendered and imprisoned Congress leaders were released. Additionally, the Labor
Government comes into power in Britain and Japan also surrenders. The General
Elections in India in 1945 resulted in Congress gaining 59 out of 102 seats and the
Muslims winning in all their respective constituents.
1946: Elections to the provinces seemed to indicate that Congress did well in the
General Constituencies (where there were no reservations for any religious group) but
the League's success in the seats reserved for Muslims was popular within themselves.
As a motivation for Jinnah on political power, he thought that he could be the first Prime
Minister if there was a separate nation for Muslims.
In March 1946, the British Cabinet sent a three-member mission to Delhi to examine
this demand and suggest a suitable political framework. It agreed that India should
remain united with some autonomy for Muslims in the NorthWestern and Eastern
regions but they could not make the Congress and the League unite to agree to the
specific details of the proposal. Partition became more or less inevitable. Gandhi tried
his best to persuade Jinnah but in vain. He was prepared to make Jinnah as the first
Prime Minister of India but Congress would not accept it.
In August 1946, Direct Action Day was agitated among the Muslims for winning its
demand on Pakistan and communal riots broke out in Calcutta and Punjab region. The
Cabinet Mission visited India which announced its constitutional scheme and tried for a
united federal India. The Cabinet Mission presented the scheme for the formation of an
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interim government at the center. Congress rejected the proposals for an interim
government but accepted the overall scheme, agreeing thereby to join the proposed
Constituent Assembly. On the other hand, the Muslim League accepted the scheme
and agreed to join the interim government. The Muslim League passed resolutions
retracting its acceptance of the Cabinet Mission plan and calling upon Muslims to
observe August 16th as 'Direct Action Day'. As communal violence was still undergoing,
the resultant four days of clashes ended with more than five thousand people dying and
an additional fifteen thousand wounded.
1947: Muslim League demanded the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly. Prime
Minister Attlee announced of the British intention of leaving India by June 1948, as well
as that Mountbatten would become Viceroy till then. Jinnah declared that the Muslim
League would not yield an inch in their demand for Pakistan. Outbreak of communal
disturbances remained ongoing in Lahore, Multan, and other Punjab towns and cities.
The Prime Minister's letter sent to the Viceroy-designate on the policy and principles in
accordance with which power should be transferred resulted in Mountbatten to act as
Viceroy and Governor-General. Viceroy Mountbatten held the first of five interviews with
Gandhi and the first of six interviews with Jinnah.
The British House of Commons passed an act on 16th July which granted two nations
as well as independence to both in a month's’ time. Mountbatten met the Indian leaders
during this time and gave them the Partition Plan. Over discussion and agreements on
the plans, Mountbatten, Nehru, Jinnah, and Baldev Singh make the news public to the
population of the subcontinent over the All India radio. Additionally, Mountbatten also
gave a press conference discussing the plan and supportive decisions.
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The first meeting of the Partition Committee was held which analysed the votes in
Bengal Legislative Assembly supporting the decision that the province should be
partitioned. The Indian Cabinet mutually agreed to establish the States Department and
the Indian Independence Bill was published.
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Under Sir Cyril Radcliffe, in August 1946, the Radcliffe line was established becoming t
the border demarcation of India and Pakistan.
.
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Muslim League vs Congress:
The Congress failed to mobilize the Muslim masses in 1930s and allowed the League to
mobilize its support, which grew to large numbers as it attracted people through religion.
The Congress under Nehru were confident in their sociological approach that they
underestimated the Muslim League and its power. They were under the delusion that
Muslims would not support a party just because of religion and would support the
Congress because of its ideologies but they were wrong. The League now saw itself as
the sole representative of all Muslims in the country. The Congress refused this claim
since some Muslims still supported it.
While the Indian National Congress was calling for Britain to Quit India, in 1943 the
Muslim League passed a resolution demanding the British Divide and Quit.
As colonizers, the British had followed a divide-and-rule policy in India which consisted
of the British conducting a census in which they categorized people according to religion
and viewed and treated them as separate entities. The British based their knowledge of
the people of India on religious texts and the intrinsic differences they found in them
instead of examining how people of different religions coexisted. They were also fearful
of the potential threat from the Muslims, who were the former rulers of the subcontinent,
ruling India for over 300 years under the Mughal Empire. To win them over to their side,
the British helped establish the Mohammedan Anglo Oriental College at Aligarh and
supported the All-India Muslim Conference, both of which were institutions from which
future leaders of the Muslim League and the ideology of a separate nation-state
emerged. As soon as the League was formed, Muslims were placed on a separate
electorate. Thus, the separateness of Muslims in India was built into the Indian electoral
process.
There was also an ideological divide between the Muslims and the Hindus of India.
While there were strong feelings of nationalism in India, by the late 19th century there
were also communal conflicts and movements in the country that were based on
religious identities rather than class or regional ones.
Some people felt that the very nature of Islam called for a communal Muslim society.
Added to this were the memories of power over the Indian subcontinent that the
Muslims held, especially in old centers of Mughal rule. These memories might have
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made it exceptionally difficult for Muslims to accept the imposition of colonial power and
culture. Many refused to learn English and to associate with the British. This was a
severe drawback as Muslims found that the more cooperative Hindus found better
government positions and thus felt that the British favored Hindus. Consequently, social
reformer and educator Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, who founded Mohammedan Anglo
Oriental College, taught the Muslims that education and cooperation with the British was
vital for their survival in the society. However, tied to all the movements of Muslim
revival was the opposition to assimilation and submergence in Hindu society.
Hindu revivalists also deepened the chasm between the two nations. They resented the
Muslims for their former rule over India. Hindu revivalists rallied for a ban on the
slaughter of cows, a cheap source of meat for the Muslims. They also wanted to change
the official script from Persian to the Hindu Devanagri script, effectively making Hindi
rather than Urdu the main candidate for the national language.
The Congress made several mistakes in their policies which further convinced the
League that it was impossible to live in an undivided India after freedom from colonial
rule because their interests would be completely suppressed. One such policy was the
institution of “Bande Matram,” a national anthem historically linked to anti-Muslim
sentiment, in the schools of India where Muslim children were forced to sing it.
The Congress banned support for the British during the Second World War while the
Muslim League pledged its full support, which found favor from the British, who needed
the help of the largely Muslim army. The Civil Disobedience Movement and the
consequent withdrawal of the Congress party from politics also helped the League gain
power as they formed strong ministries in the provinces that had large Muslim
populations. At the same time, the League actively campaigned to gain more support
from the Muslims in India, especially under the guidance of dynamic leaders like Jinnah.
There had been some hope of an undivided India, but the Congress rejection of the
interim government set up under the Cabinet Mission Plan in 1942 convinced the
leaders of the Muslim League that compromise was impossible and partition was the
only course to take.
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Description of major stakeholders
Indian National Congress: This was set up as a broad-based political organization in
1885 to represent the political concerns of all the Indians in their dealings with the
British. Its birth was helped by two liberal-minded British men; Sir Allan Hume and Sir
Henry Cotton. From the start, however, it was dominated by a Hindu majority. The
Congress was originally created for the idea of making reforms within the British
parliamentary government by placing greater prevalence on such issues as a better
educational system and greater representation of the Indian population within the
parliamentary government. At first, it concentrated on making suggestions on social
issues to the government, but gradually it became a more political organisation. In 1920,
under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi and others, it became a political party and
spearheaded the nationalist movement for independence from Britain. But with later
developments many Muslims, including Muhammad Ali Jinnah, gave up expecting it to
represent all Indians and saw it as a Hindu political voice. Some others, however, like
Moulana Abul Kalam Azad, still believed it was possible for religious groups to work
together for everyone’s benefit, thus supporting it. It is often known as the Congress
party or simply, the Congress.
All India Muslim League:
Some leading Muslims thought that the gulf between the Hindus and the Muslims could
not be bridged; they urged Muslims to keep away from Congress and to speak up for
their own interests, and formed their own political party; the All India Muslim League. A
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deputation of 36 leading Muslims met the viceroy at Simla and in 1909 separate
electorates for religious minorities was introduced, which was thoroughly opposed by
the Congress at that time. In spite of its original commitment to ‘feelings of loyalty’
towards the British, by 1913 the Muslim League supported self-government as well, but
one in which the ‘the rights of the Muslim minority had to be protected.’ This cumulated
in a unanimous adoption of a resolution for a separate state for Muslims by the Muslim
League on 23 March 1940; the name of this state was to be ‘Pakistan’. Predictably,
Congress was baffled by the implications of this resolution, and utterly opposed this
separatist ideology. Muslim League became the second largest political party in terms
of seats in assemblies after the 1946 elections, and was instrumental in both the
independence and partition of colonial India.
The British:
In 1858, British Crown rule was established in India, ending a century of control by the
East India Company. The life and death struggle that preceded this formalisation of
British control lasted nearly two years, cost £36 million, and is variously referred to as
the 'Great Rebellion'. Inevitably, the consequences of this bloody rupture marked the
nature of political, social and economic rule that the British established in its wake.
Two-fifths of the sub-continent continued to be independently governed by over 560
large and small principalities, some of whose rulers had fought the British during the
'Great Rebellion', but with whom the Raj now entered into treaties of mutual
cooperation.
But the 'Great Rebellion' did more to create a racial chasm between ordinary Indians
and Britons. According to some historians, this was a social segregation which would
endure until the end of the Raj, graphically captured in EM Forster's 'A Passage to
‘India'.
Financially speaking, there were two incontrovertible economic benefits provided by
India. It was a captive market for British goods and services, and served defence needs
by maintaining a large standing army at no cost to the British taxpayer. However, the
economic balance sheet of the empire remains a controversial topic and the debate has
revolved around whether the British developed or retarded the Indian economy.
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The British Raj unraveled quickly in the 1940s, perhaps surprising after the empire in
the east had so recently survived its greatest challenge in the shape of Japanese
expansionism. The reasons for independence were multifaceted and the result of both
long and short-term factors.
With aforementioned details on partition, the British played an imminent rule starting
from the works of the East India Company till they departed the subcontinent. The world
war had left British with no means to maintain their massive empire anymore. The
arrival of Lord Louis Mountbatten as India's last viceroy in March 1947 brought with it an
agenda to transfer power as quickly and efficiently as possible. The resulting
negotiations saw the deadline for British withdrawal brought forward from June 1948 to
August 1947.
Contemporaries and subsequent historians have criticised this haste as a major
contributory factor in the chaos that accompanied partition. Mass migration occurred
across the new boundaries as well as an estimated loss of a million lives in the
communal bloodbaths involving Hindus, Muslims and also Sikhs in the Punjab. The
people, the country, the administration and the policy makers were ill-equipped to deal
with partition and political order of this magnitude at such a short notice.
Some Stakeholder Personalities
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CLEMENT ATLEE:
Clement Attlee, in full Clement Richard Attlee, 1st Earl Attlee of Walthamstow, Viscount
Prestwood (born Jan. 3, 1883, Putney, London, Eng.—died Oct. 8, 1967, Westminster,
London), British Labour Party leader (1935–55) and prime minister (1945–51). He
presided over the establishment of the welfare state in Great Britain and the granting of
independence to India, the most important step in the conversion of the British Empire
into the Commonwealth of Nations. He was perhaps the leading Labour politician of the
20th century. He transformed his party into the natural opponent of the Conservative
Party and thus polarized British politics.
LOUIS MOUNTBATTEN:
Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten, original name Louis Francis Albert Victor
Nicholas, prince of Battenberg (born June 25, 1900, Frogmore House, Windsor, Eng.—
died Aug. 27, 1979, Donegal Bay, off Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ire.), British
statesman, naval leader, and the last viceroy of India. He had international royal-family
background; his career involved extensive naval commands, the diplomatic negotiation
of independence for India and Pakistan, and the highest military defense leaderships.
As viceroy of India (March–August 1947) he administered the transfer of power from
Britain to the newly independent nations of India and Pakistan at the partition of the
subcontinent that took effect at midnight Aug. 14–15, 1947. As governor-general of
India (August 1947–June 1948) he then helped persuade the Indian princes to merge
their states into either India or Pakistan. He was created viscount in 1946 and earl in
1947.
CYRIL RADCLIFFE AND BOUNDARY COMMISSION:
Boundary Commission, consultative committee created in July 1947 to recommend how
the Punjab and Bengal regions of the Indian subcontinent were to be divided between
India and Pakistan shortly before each was to become independent from Britain. The
commission—appointed by Lord Mountbatten, the final viceroy of British India—
consisted of four members from the Indian National Congress and four from the Muslim
League and was chaired by Sir Cyril Radcliffe.
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The commission’s mandate was to draw boundaries in the two regions that would keep
intact as much as possible the most-cohesive Hindu and Muslim populations within
Indian and Pakistani territory, respectively. As the August 15 independence date
loomed and with little chance for agreement in sight between the two sides, however,
Radcliffe ultimately made the final determination on the frontiers. The partition left
millions of Muslims on the Indian side and similar numbers of Hindus in Pakistani
sectors and sparked mass migrations by members of each religious community seeking
what they hoped would be safety on the other side of the border. Nonetheless, in both
Punjab and Bengal before and during the transition of power, widespread sectarian
violence left some one million people dead. India and Pakistan have settled some of the
boundary issues left unresolved by the British, but strife has continued in some areas,
notably the Kashmir region.
Cyril Radcliffe was born in 1899 who later became a lawyer in England. He did not
travel much outside England except going for a vacation somewhere in Italy. At the age
of 48, he was summoned to New Delhi barely on June 3, 1947 barely 37 days before
India would be partitioned into two independent nations. He was appointed as the
chairman of the Boundary Commission whose sole job was to submit a report that
would contain “the partition map.”
Radcliffe’s office was in New Delhi where a whole bunch of government workers were
working feverishly to partition the undivided India solely based on the latest census
report, which contained the most valuable information on the composition of Hindus and
Muslims of any village. Totally based on that information, the Boundary Commission
was cutting the maps of two very important provinces of undivided India namely, East
and West Bengal and Punjab. He was given this extraordinary power to divide these
provinces based not only on census data but also on the geography of the land. Special
consideration was given on the flow of the river; therefore, the Radcliffe could still give a
Muslim-dominated part to India and a Hindu-dominated part to Pakistan at his whim. His
decision would be final and that would seal the fate of tens and thousands of people
living in those disputed areas both Bengal and Punjab.
MOHANDAS GANDHI:
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Mahatma Gandhi, byname of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (born October 2, 1869,
Porbandar, India—died January 30, 1948, Delhi), Indian lawyer, politician, social
activist, and writer who became the leader of the nationalist movement against the
British rule of India. As such, he came to be considered the father of his country. Gandhi
is internationally esteemed for his doctrine of nonviolent protest (satyagraha) to achieve
political and social progress.
JAWAHARLAL NEHRU:
Jawaharlal Nehru, byname Pandit (Hindi: “Pundit” or “Teacher”) Nehru (born November
14, 1889, Allahabad, India—died May 27, 1964, New Delhi), first prime minister of
independent India (1947–64), who established parliamentary government and became
noted for his neutralist (nonaligned) policies in foreign affairs. He was also one of the
principal leaders of India’s independence movement in the 1930s and ’40s.
Nehru met Gandhi for the first time in 1916 at the annual meeting of the Indian National
Congress (Congress Party) in Lucknow. Gandhi was 20 years his senior. Neither seems
to have made any initially strong impression on the other. Gandhi makes no mention of
Nehru in an autobiography he dictated while imprisoned in the early 1920s. The
omission is understandable, since Nehru’s role in Indian politics was secondary until he
was elected president of the Congress Party in 1929, when he presided over the historic
session at Lahore (now in Pakistan) that proclaimed complete independence as India’s
political goal. Until then the party’s objective had been dominion status.
SARDAR VALLABHAI PATEL:
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Vallabhbhai Jhaverbhai Patel, byname Sardar Patel (Hindi: “Leader Patel”) (born Oct.
31, 1875, Nadiad, Gujarat, India—died Dec. 15, 1950, Bombay [now Mumbai]), Indian
barrister and statesman, one of the leaders of the Indian National Congress during the
struggle for Indian independence. During the first three years of Indian independence
after 1947, he served as deputy prime minister, minister of home affairs, minister of
information, and minister of states.
As a lawyer, Patel distinguished himself in presenting an unassailable case in a precise
manner and in challenging police witnesses and British judges.
Patel traveled to London in August 1910 to study at the Middle Temple. There he
studied diligently and passed the final examinations with high honours. Returning to
India in February 1913, he settled in Ahmadabad, rising rapidly to become the leading
barrister in criminal law at the Ahmadabad bar. Reserved and courteous, he was noted
for his superior mannerisms, his smart, English-style clothes, and his championship in
bridge at Ahmadabad’s fashionable Gujarat Club. He was, until 1917, indifferent to
Indian political activities.
In 1917 Patel found the course of his life changed after having been influenced by
Mohandas K. Gandhi. Patel adhered to Gandhi’s satyagraha (policy of nonviolence)
insofar as it furthered the Indian struggle against the British. But he did not identify
himself with Gandhi’s moral convictions and ideals, and he regarded Gandhi’s emphasis
on their universal application as irrelevant to India’s immediate political, economic, and
social problems. Nevertheless, having resolved to follow and support Gandhi, Patel
changed his style and appearance. He quit the Gujarat Club, dressed in the white cloth
of the Indian peasant, and ate in the Indian manner.
From 1917 to 1924 Patel served as the first Indian municipal commissioner of
Ahmadabad and was its elected municipal president from 1924 to 1928. Patel first made
his mark in 1918, when he planned mass campaigns of peasants, farmers, and
landowners of Kaira, Gujarat, against the decision of the Bombay government to collect
the full annual revenue taxes despite crop failures caused by heavy rains.
In 1928 Patel successfully led the landowners of Bardoli in their resistance against
increased taxes. His efficient leadership of the Bardoli campaign earned him the title
sardar (“leader”), and henceforth he was acknowledged as a nationalist leader
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throughout India. He was considered practical, decisive, and even ruthless, and the
British recognized him as a dangerous enemy.
DR B. R. AMBEDKAR:
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, (born April 14, 1891, Mhow, India—died December 6, 1956,
New Delhi), leader of the Dalits (Scheduled Castes; formerly called untouchables) and
law minister of the government of India (1947–51).
In 1947 Ambedkar became the law minister of the government of India. He took a
leading part in the framing of the Indian constitution, outlawing discrimination against
untouchables, and skillfully helped to steer it through the assembly. He resigned in
1951, disappointed at his lack of influence in the government. In October 1956, in
despair because of the perpetuation of untouchability in Hindu doctrine, he renounced
Hinduism and became a Buddhist, together with about 200,000 fellow Dalits, at a
ceremony in Nagpur.
MAULANA ABUL KALAM AZAD:
Abul Kalam Azad, original name Abul Kalam Ghulam Muhiyuddin, also called Maulana
Abul Kalam Azad or Maulana Azad (born November 11, 1888, Mecca [now in Saudi
Arabia]—died February 22, 1958, New Delhi, India), Islamic theologian who was one of
the leaders of the Indian independence movement against British rule in the first half of
the 20th century. He was highly respected throughout his life as a man of high moral
integrity.
In Calcutta, he joined the Indian National Congress (Congress Party) and galvanized
India’s Muslim community through an appeal to pan-Islamic ideals. He was particularly
active in the short-lived Khilafat movement (1920–24), which defended the Ottoman
sultan as the caliph (the head of the worldwide Muslim community) and even briefly
enlisted the support of Mohandas K. Gandhi.
Azad and Gandhi became close, and Azad was involved in Gandhi’s various civil-
disobedience (satyagraha) campaigns, including the Salt March (1930). He was
imprisoned several times between 1920 and 1945, including for his participation in the
anti-British Quit India campaign during World War II. Azad was president of the
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Congress Party in 1923 and again in 1940–46—though the party was largely inactive
during much of his second term, since nearly all of its leadership was in prison.
After the war Azad was one of the Indian leaders who negotiated for Indian
independence with the British. He tirelessly advocated for a single India that would
embrace both Hindus and Muslims while strongly opposing the partition of British India
into independent India and Pakistan. He later blamed both Congress Party leaders and
Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, for the ultimate division of the
subcontinent. After the two separate countries were established, he served as minister
of education in the Indian government of Jawaharlal Nehru from 1947 until his death.
His autobiography, India Wins Freedom, was published posthumously in 1959. In 1992,
decades after his death, Azad was awarded the Bharat Ratna, India’s highest civilian
award.
MOHAMMAD ALI JINNAH:
Mohammed Ali Jinnah, also called Qaid-i-Azam (Arabic: “Great Leader”) (born
December 25, 1876) Karachi, India [now in Pakistan]—died September 11, 1948,
Karachi), Indian Muslim politician, who was the founder and first governor-general
(1947–48) of Pakistan.
An excerpt:
Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the voice of one hundred million Muslims, fought
for their religious, social and economic freedom. Throughout history no single man
yielded as much power as the Quaid-e-Azam, and yet remained uncorrupted by that
power. Not many men in history can boast of creating a nation single handedly and
altering the map of the world but Jinnah did so and thus became a legend.
"Few individuals significantly alter the course of history. Fewer still modify the map of
the world. Hardly anyone can be credited with creating a nation-state. Mohammad Ali
Jinnah did all three." Stanley Wolpert.
In the words of John Biggs-Davison, "Although without Ghandi, Hindustan would still
have gained independence and without Lenin and Mao, Russia and China would still
have endured Communist revolution, without Jinnah there would have been no Pakistan
in 1947."
21
Lord Mountbatten had enormous confidence in his persuasive powers. But as far as
Jinnah was concerned, he felt that though he tried every trick, he could not shake
Jinnah’s resolve to have partition. Mountbatten said that Jinnah had a consuming
determination to realize the dream of Pakistan." And he remained focused on that till his
death.
LIAQUT ALI KHAN:
Liaquat Ali Khan, (born Oct. 1, 1895, Karnal, India—died Oct. 16, 1951, Rawalpindi,
Pak.), first prime minister of Pakistan (1947–51). Born the son of a landowner, Liaquat
was educated at Aligarh, Allahabad, and Exeter College, Oxford. A barrister by
profession, like his leader, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, he entered politics in 1923, being
elected first to the provincial legislature of the United Provinces and then to the central
legislative assembly. He joined the Muslim League and soon became closely
associated with Jinnah. By degrees he won first the respect and then the admiration of
the Muslim community for his share in the struggle for Pakistan; when independence
was won in 1947 and Jinnah became the first governor-general, Liaquat was the
obvious choice as prime minister. In this post his achievements were outstanding. If
Jinnah founded Pakistan, Liaquat established it, laying down the main lines of policy,
domestic and foreign, that afterward guided the country. After Jinnah’s death, Liaquat
was acclaimed as qaid-i-millet (“leader of the country”). Liaquat was assassinated in
Rawalpindi in 1951.
AGA KHAN III:
Aga Khan III, personal name Sultan Sir Moḥammed Shah (born November 2, 1877,
Karachi, India [now in Pakistan]—died July 11, 1957, Versoix, Switzerland), only son of
the Aga Khan II. He succeeded his father as imam (leader) of the Nizārī Ismāʿīlī sect in
1885.
22
Under the care of his mother, who was born into the ruling house of Iran, he was given
an education that was not only Islamic and Oriental but also Western. In addition to
attending diligently to the affairs of his own community, he rapidly acquired a leading
position among India’s Muslims as a whole. In 1906 he headed the Muslim deputation
to the British viceroy, Lord Minto, to promote the interests of the Muslim minority in
India. The Morley-Minto reforms of 1909 consequently provided for separate Muslim
electorates. The Aga Khan served as president of the All-India Muslim League during its
early years and initiated the fund for raising the Muslim college at Aligarh to university
status, which was affected in 1920.
When World War I (1914–18) broke out, the Aga Khan supported the Allied cause, but
at the subsequent peace conference he urged that the Ottoman Empire (and its
successor state, Turkey) should be leniently treated. He played an important part in the
Round Table Conference on Indian constitutional reform in London (1930–32). He also
represented India at the World Disarmament Conference in Geneva in 1932 and at the
League of Nations Assembly in 1932 and from 1934 to 1937. He was appointed
president of the League in 1937. During World War II (1939–45) he lived in Switzerland
and withdrew from political activity.
23
QARMA:
1) How was the British divide and rule policy implemented during their time of rule
over the Indians?
2) How were divisions made in the armed forces between India and Pakistan?
3) The conflict with natural resources was an ongoing fight. What kind of divide can
possibly be made in those primary resources?
4) How are border adjustments to be made with regards to the minorities present in
each area?
5) How did India’s participation in the Second World War affect its relationship with
its British colonial masters?
6) At the end of the Second World War, Britain owed more to India than it could
afford to pay back. How far do you think this is the reason more than anything else for
Indian Independence in 1947?
7) How far had the conflict between the Muslim League and the Congress been
created by the British, if at all?
8) Look at all the ways that the Indians resisted against the British and ascertain
whether or not they were effective and to what degree.
24
References:
Smith, N. (2014). Pakistan: History, culture and Government. Oxford: OUP
Inventing Boundaries: gender, politics and the Partition of Indiaedited by Mushirul
Hasan (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000)
Pakistan as a peasant utopia: the communalization of class politics in East Bengal,
1920-1947 by Taj ul-Islam Hashmi (Boulder, Colorado; Oxford: Westview, 1992)
The Sole Spokesman: Jinnah, the Muslim League and the demand for Pakistan by
Ayesha Jalal (Cambridge University Press, 1985)
The Partitions of Memory: the afterlife of the division of Indiaedited by S. Kaul
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2001)
Borders & boundaries: women in India's partition by Menon, Ritu & Bhasin, Kamla (New
Delhi: Kali for Women, 1998)
Remembering Partition: violence, nationalism and history in India by Gyanendra Pandey
(Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001)
'Reviews: The high politics of India's Partition: the revisionist perspective' by Asim Roy
(Modern Asian Studies, 24, 2 (1990), pp. 385-415)
Websites:
https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/postcolonialstudies/2014/06/21/partition-of-india/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/
http://www.rediff.com/news/interview/how-world-war-ii-changed-india/20160524.htm
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-33105898
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/interactive/2017/08/india-pakistan-partition-borders-
drawn-170817124309858.html
25
Novel:
Forster, E.M. (1924). A passage to India.
Sources for personality stakeholders
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Jewish Virtual Library - Biography of Clement Attlee
Spartacus Educational - Biography of Clement Attlee
The British Empire - Biography of Clement Attlee
British Broadcasting Corporation - Biography of Lord Louis Mountbatten
How Stuff Works - History - Biography of Earl Mountbatten of Burma
The British Empire - Biography of Louis Mountbatten
University of Cambridge - C.U.H.&G.S. -- Earl Mountbatten of Burma
British Library - Indian Independence: Partition Source 9
MapsofIndia.com - 17th August 1947: The Radcliffe Line, the border between the Union
of India and the Dominion of Pakistan is revealed
National Institute of Historic and Cultural Research - Pakistan - The British Plan of the
Partition of the Punjab in 1947
The Sikh Encyclopedia - Punjab Boundary Commission
Cultural India - Leaders - Biography of Jawaharlal Nehru
History Learning Site - Biography of Jawaharlal Nehru
MapsofIndia.com - Personalities of India - Biography of Jawaharlal Nehru
Cultural India - History of India - Biography of Mahatma Gandhi
Nobelprize.org - Biography of Mahatma Gandhi
South African History Online - Biography of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Maps of India - Biography of Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel
Ministry of Information and Broadcasting India - Biography of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
Cultural India - Biography of B. R. Ambedkar
Cultural India - Leaders - Biography of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
Indian Child - Biography of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
26
MapsofIndia.com - History of India - Biography of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
British Broadcasting Corporation - Biography of Mohammad Ali Jinnah
Cyber City Online - Biography of Liaqat Ali Khan
Story of Pakistan - Biography of Liaquat Ali Khan
Story of Pakistan - Biography of Aga Khan III
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