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Calcutta Hindu-Muslim Riot of August 1946 and its Impact on East Bengal

Md Akmal

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Calcutta Riot (1946) a dreadful event (16 August 1946) with its tremendous negative impact on Hindu-Muslim relations. The violence, highly organised in character, resulted from the hatred and distrust between the two major communities.

16th August 1946 was selected as the direct action day when Muslims throughout the subcontinent were to 'suspend all business' to support the Muslim League demand for Pakistan. On the other hand, the Hindu popular opinion rallied round the anti-Pakistan slogan. Bengal's Congress leaders were not necessarily Hindu communalists. But since most of the party's support came from the Hindus, a section of Congressmen developed a strong sense of Hindu identity in view of the perceived threat from the Pakistan movement. Their campaign certainly served to inflame the Hindu mind against the Direct Action Day, which was likely to be particularly successful in Bengal, since it had a League ministry in power.

Troubles started on the morning of the 16th August when League volunteers forced Hindu shopkeepers in North Calcutta to close their shops and Hindus retaliated by obstructing the passage of League's processions. The League's rally at Ochterloney Monument on that day was considered as the 'largest ever Muslim assembly'. The Muslim League Chief Minister in his address reportedly assured the audience that the military and police had been 'restrained'. This was interpreted by the gathering as an open invitation to commit violence on its rival community. The region most affected by the violence was the densely populated sector of the metropolis bounded by Bowbazar Street on the south, Upper Circular Road on the east, Vivekananda Road on the north and Strand Road on the west. Official estimate put the casualties at 4,000 dead and 100,000 injured in the riot. Only on the 22nd Calcutta became quiet except for some isolated killings.

The 1946 outbreak was unequivocally communal. During Calcutta's earlier Hindu-Muslim clashes - notably in 1918 and 1926 - the targets of collective violence were essentially symbols of class and colonial oppression. But the 1946 crowd hardly demonstrated hostility against the government, police or Europeans. While in earlier riots shops dealing with immediate consumer goods or items whose price had just risen were mostly looted, in the riot of 1946 any shop was an object of attack, the only discriminatory feature being Muslims exclusively pillaging Hindu shops and vice versa. Religious symbols of the rival community were another victim of crowd violence. Unlike preceding riots, the women faced assaults in 1946. Another novelty of the 1946 killing was attacks and murders committed by small groups. The emphasis here was on revenge and control over the physical body of the enemy; the aim was to cause the greatest possible humiliation, pain and suffering.

What most distinguished the 1946 riot from previous outbreaks was its highly organised nature. The League mobilised all its frontal organisations to make the 'Day' a success. Special coupons for gallons of petrol were issued in the names of League ministers to be used by their party functionaries. One month's food ration for 10,000 people was allegedly drawn in advance to feed the League activists. Once the riot began the Chief Minister huseyn shaheed suhrawardy, accompanied by his political aids, spent considerable time in the Police Control Room to allegedly shield Muslims from police operations. On the other hand, Marwari merchants reportedly purchased arms and ammunitions from American soldiers, which were later used during the riot. Acid bombs were manufactured and stored in Hindu-owned factories long before the outbreak. Calcutta's Hindu blacksmiths were mobilised to prepare spearheads and other weapons.

Collective violence on either side also displayed features of organisation. The looted booty was carried to waiting lorries for transportation to a central place, shops were marked carefully with signs so that the crowd left untouched the establishments of their co-religionists. Houses of a particular community were attacked simultaneously. Both League and Congress volunteers used Red Cross badges to evade police detection. Perhaps at the height of antagonism the Hindu and Muslim crowd were impregnated with cross-fertilisation of ideas on collective conduct wherein one was copying the acts of others - a trend noticeable during the 16th century Catholic-Protestant riots in France.

Anatomy of the crowd Predominance of upcountrymen amongst the 1946 rioting crowd represented a broad pattern of similarity with Calcutta's preceding communal outbreaks. Amongst the Muslims the butchers, factory workers, masons, dock workers and other inhabitants of slums of central Calcutta were active. Muslim students, including females, joined the 16th August rally. Within the Hindus the volatile section included milkmen, sweepers, rickshawpullers, darwans (guards) of government offices and business establishments and personal retainers of the city's prominent persons. However, in the history of Calcutta's communal riots the Bengalis - Hindus and Muslims - joined the rioting crowd for the first time in 1946. They included potters, scavengers, petty shopkeepers, goldsmiths and Kalwars (artisans dealing with scrap metals), students and other middle-class groups.

In the1946 riot contemporary accounts also emphasise the prominence of Hindu and Muslim gundas (a term denoting a broad spectrum of social groups ranging from various marginalised elements to habitual criminals). Linkage of these gundas with the world of organised politics was clear and the riot witnessed communal solidarity across class lines.

Provocation While the Congress and Hindu Mahasabha put the entire blame on the League, the Muslim League argued that the Congress fomented the trouble to create a situation which would force the dismissal of the League government and imposition of Governor's rule. But what needs to be emphasised is the role of British officials during the 1946 riot. The Bengal Governor's ratification of the League ministry's decision to declare a public holiday for the 16th contradicted sharply with his counterpart's action in Sind, the only other province where the League held political power. Again, in sharp contrast to the anti-imperialist disturbances of November 1945 and February 1946, the army was not summoned until 24 hours after the outbreak of the hooliganism. Curfew orders were not strictly enforced on the first few nights. The conduct of the Bengal Governor and European officials was 'culpable' in so far as a timely intervention might have averted the violence.

Aftermath The riots completely disorganised the city's life. Food was scarce, hyperinflation prevailed, and epidemics threatened the metropolis. Calcutta came to be divided into 'communal zones', Hindus and Muslims avoiding each other's areas. For one whole year Calcutta remained a scene of constant communal clashes. Indeed a nexus could rightly be traced between communal outbreaks in Calcutta and Bihar. The circle was completed when the Punjab exploded in March 1947.

Communalism at the popular level provided a new turn to India's institutional politics. The Muslim League warned that civil wars on the Calcutta scale would occur in other parts of the country unless its brief for the Partition was accepted and the Congress suffered a setback and its leadership, except Gandhi and Badshah Khan, accepted Partition of the country along religious lines as the 'only alternative'. The turn that events had taken afterwards made a peaceful solution through an agreement between the Congress and the Muslim League a far cry. [Suranjan Das]

Bibliography Harun-or Rashid, The Foreshadowing of Bangladesh: Bengal Muslim League and Muslim Politics, 1936-1947, Dhaka, 1987; Suranjan Das, Communal Riots in Bengal 1905 - 1947, Delhi, 1991 & 1993.
 
Marked the start of Communal violence in Undivided India. With Direct Action day, it took the first major step towards Partition!
 
HUSSAIN SHAHEED SUHRAWARDY AND THE VIOLENCE AT
CALCUTTA, 1946
:
HIS SISTER’S TESTIMONY


[Suhrawardy was Bengal’s Chief Minister at the time that the Muslim League called for direct action against the continuation of British rule in India.] He was accused of planning and organizing the [Calcutta] riots with the view of forcing the British to yield to the Muslim League demands[;] he was accused of neglect in putting down the disturbances once they started[;] and he was accused of not providing adequate and sufficient attention for the Hindu areas. The Calcutta riots of August 1946 were not caused by Shaheed. No one person or organization can be held responsible for them[.] t was the result of the mounting tension of years. The atmosphere of August
1946 was so charged with hatred that it was inevitable that it would
explode into violence. What added to the tension was that the Viceroy
who had not gone ahead with the formation of the interim government when the Muslim League had accepted the Cabinet Mission Plan, now did so, and to add insult to injury it included Muslims whom the League did not accept as its representatives. All this added fuel to an already smouldering fire and a flare-up was inevitable … The riot in all its frenzy lasted three days, though its aftermath continued for weeks. In fact, life and property ceased to be safe in Calcutta from then onwards. The Hindus had an initial advantage of several hours for the Muslim men were away from their homes and so the slaughter of the women and children took place without any hindrance. That the Muslims retaliated I do not deny, for I do not belong to that school of thought which thinks that its own nation is incapable of cruelty and brutality.

Unfortunately, history has too many proofs to the contrary. Once animal passions of hatred and cruelty are aroused there is nothing to choose between nations and peoples. All I want to say is that the riot was not diabolically planned by [my brother] Shaheed Bhai.

… He had spent day and night round the clock doing whatever was humanly possible to stop the carnage. He had moved to the Lal Bazaar 2 and Police Headquarters to be able to get information and direct operations better. He had a map of Calcutta spread before him on which he followed the course of the riots in the ill-fated city. As the phone calls came in, he rushed to where it [i.e. help] was needed. Shaheed went to the worst afflicted areas himself and tried to get the crowd under control by sheer force of personality. I belief he engaged in hand-to-hand fights more than once, pulling bloodstained swords from the hands of half-crazed individuals. Even his worst enemies have given him credit for complete fearlessness. This quality somehow
had a salutary effect in calming a violent crowd … That Shaheed worked like a tiger to quell the riots is well known. There are enough people still alive, both Hindus and Muslims, who can bear testimony to it, but for one of the greatest proofs was to look on his face during those days. It was a look of anguish and suffering. No man who looked as stricken as Shaheed did could have deliberately planned the riots.

No one who knew Shaheed could believe it, for he was a most compassionate man and violence was abhorrent to him. Each time, the turning point in his career came after violence. In 1926 he left the Congress after the first Calcutta riots, and twenty years afterwards, in 1946, the carnage of the second Calcutta riots led him to seek Gandhi’s help in preventing a repetition of it and this eventually cost him his future in the state which he helped create [i.e. East Pakistan, later Bangladesh].
[Accuses Congress of a systematic propaganda campaign against her brother through its control of the press.] …These charges reverberated throughout the length and breadth of India. Though there had been riots before the Calcutta riots and there were riots later, which were as terrible – [such] as that of Garmukteshwar and as devastating, [such] as the Bihar riots, which were virtually genocide – they are not remembered. But the Calcutta riots are stamped on the minds of people as the Great Calcutta Killings. Such is the power of propaganda.


Shaista Suhrawardy Ikramullah, Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy: a Biography (Karachi: Oxford University Press, 1991), 54-57. Quoted by Habibul Haque Khondker, ‘Partition of Bengal or Creation of a “Nation”?’, The Partition Motif in Contemporary Conflicts, ed. Smita Tewari Jessal and Eyal Ben-Ari (New Delhi: Sage, 2007), 253-255. For a contrasting (circumstantial) interpretation, without evidence adduced: Pranab Kumar Chatterjee, Struggle and Strife in Urban Bengal, 1933-47. A study of Calcutta-Based Urban Politics in Bengal (Calcutta: Das Gupta, 1991), 184: ‘It was on record that when Calcutta was burning, the Chief Minister was fiddling in the control roof of the police headquarters. Suhrawardy became the target of attack for his 3
partisan role. The law and order machinery for combating acts of violence lost its grip in the situation with Suhrawardy’s unnecessary interference. It was even reported that the police commissioner felt so much exasperated that he tendered his resignation.’
 
Calcutta Riot (1946) Official estimate put the casualties at 4,000 dead and 100,000 injured in the riot. Only on the 22nd Calcutta became quiet except for some isolated killings.

@ What a height ! Once initially I read in the same article in Banglapedia the casualties were shown that the number of Muslims killed were around 10,000 ? Is these figures changes with the change of Govt ?

@ What I read in the article that all the Muslims workers and "Sharens" of Calcutta were killed and only for this reason the repurcation took place in the District of Noakhali. Noakhali was the only place where Hindu-Muslim riot took place. It was learnt that all most all Bengali Muslims who were killed in the Calcutta Port and Port colony belongs to Noakhali and Comilla.
 
@ What a height ! Once initially I read in the same article in Banglapedia the casualties were shown that the number of Muslims killed were around 10,000 ? Is these figures changes with the change of Govt ?

@ What I read in the article that all the Muslims workers and "Sharens" of Calcutta were killed and only for this reason the repurcation took place in the District of Noakhali. Noakhali was the only place where Hindu-Muslim riot took place. It was learnt that all most all Bengali Muslims who were killed in the Calcutta Port and Port colony belongs to Noakhali and Comilla.

The riots were started by party workers of Muslim League who attacked Hindu neighbourhood after a hate-infested rally and speeches by Muslim League in Calcutta.

Marked the start of Communal violence in Undivided India. With Direct Action day, it took the first major step towards Partition!

Main intension of direct action day was to force Congress to accept partition.
 
The riots were started by party workers of Muslim League who attacked Hindu neighbourhood after a hate-infested rally and speeches by Muslim League in Calcutta.

@ No ! My dear Indian Bengali friend, riot was not started by the Muslim Leaquers as all the young lots went to attend the meeting of Chief Minister at the great "maidan" and the old people says that it was more than a lacs of people. While the meeting was going on, the riot started and it is learnt that initially the main victims were the Muslim children and women who were in their houses.

@ After the central Muslim Leaque gathering was finished and once the people started moving to their homes the Hindu Militants started killing the people. The Muslims were caught unaware. MOst of the firearms which were used by the Hindu militants were bought by the Hindu Marwaries from the American soldiers after the Second World War.

@ Evident shows that it was a planned killing of Muslims by the Hindus long time before. Immediately after the riot of 16 August 1946, the Muslim Leaque Govt was dismissed on 22 August 1946. That was the great achiecement of the Hindus of Calcutta.
 
@ No ! My dear Indian Bengali friend, riot was not started by the Muslim Leaquers as all the young lots went to attend the meeting of Chief Minister at the great "maidan" and the old people says that it was more than a lacs of people. While the meeting was going on, the riot started and it is learnt that initially the main vitims were the Muslim children and women who were in their houses.

@ After the central Muslim Leaque gathering was finished and once the people started moving to their homes the Hindu Militants started killing the people. The Muslims were caught unaware. MOst of the firearms which were used by the Hindu militants were bought by the Hindu Marwaries from the American soldiers after the Second World War.

@ Evident shows that it was a planned killing of Muslims by the Hindus long time before. Immediately after the riot of 16 August 1946, the Muslim Leaque Govt was dismissed on 22 August 1946. That was the great achiecement of the Hindus of Calcutta.

Your narrative is false. You can watch neutral sources by BBC that party workers of Muslim League attacked the Hindu neighbourhood after listening to the hate infested speech on that day.
 
@ No ! My dear Indian Bengali friend, riot was not started by the Muslim Leaquers as all the young lots went to attend the meeting of Chief Minister at the great "maidan" and the old people says that it was more than a lacs of people. While the meeting was going on, the riot started and it is learnt that initially the main victims were the Muslim children and women who were in their houses.

@ After the central Muslim Leaque gathering was finished and once the people started moving to their homes the Hindu Militants started killing the people. The Muslims were caught unaware. MOst of the firearms which were used by the Hindu militants were bought by the Hindu Marwaries from the American soldiers after the Second World War.

@ Evident shows that it was a planned killing of Muslims by the Hindus long time before. Immediately after the riot of 16 August 1946, the Muslim Leaque Govt was dismissed on 22 August 1946. That was the great achiecement of the Hindus of Calcutta.

Direct Action Day was called by Muslims (Muslim League), and they primarily started the rioting, not only in Kolkata, but throughout Inida in places like UP/Bihar/Punjab/Delhi etc. BBC did a neutral documentary on this that supports this, you are free to look it up. Hindu groups also responded in kind for the violence.

Also, why just focus on Kolkata? Why not talk about the thousands of Hindus that were killed in Noakhali if we are talking about Bengal? What about the Hindus and Sikhs that disappeared completely from West Pakistan due to muslim militants?

The rioting and killing was mainly done by Muslims, for their selfish need of a separate nation, not thinking once about the fate of them minorities in those areas they wanted to make a islamic republic.Even though it was a backstabbing move, you guys achioeved it. Now we are happy you have your state and we have our own state, so lets just live in the present.
 
Your narrative is false. You can watch neutral sources by BBC that party workers of Muslim League attacked the Hindu neighbourhood after listening to the hate infested speech on that day.

@ " hate infested speech on that day". Political parties always gave such kinds of speech, moreso when Muslim Leaque was on "Direct Action Day". But my question is the "Hate infested speech" given by Shurwarrdy was never varified. It was a one sided claim of Congress and other Hindu oriented Political Parties. No govt prove was found ?
 
Everyone was trying to get over the Brits and get the independence of their country India, and some hate infested and religiously misguided were working to get the partition of their own country. I have never seen such stupidity in the history of mankind.
 
@ " hate infested speech on that day". Political parties always gave such kinds of speech, moreso when Muslim Leaque was on "Direct Action Day". But my question is the "Hate infested speech" given by Shurwarrdy was never varified. It was a one sided claim of Congress and other Hindu oriented Political Parties. No govt prove was found ?

I will believe neutral source BBC instead of your false narrative.

Everyone was trying to get over the Brits and get the independence of their country India, and some hate infested and religiously misguided were working to get the partition of their own country. I have never seen such stupidity in the history of mankind.

Freedom fighter Lal Mohan Sen who took part in Chittagong uprising was also murdered during Noakhali genocide.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lalmohan_Sen
 
I don't think Huseyn Shahed Suhrawardy was communal...If he was he wouldn't put forward the idea of a United Bengal or Greater Independent Bengal together with Sarat Chandra Bose,Kiran Shankar Roy,Abul Hashim and Satya Ranjan Bakshi.The idea was opposed by Congress,Muslim League and Hindu Mahasabha.He was one of the very few politicians pushing for a three state solution!Pakistan for Muslims,India for Hindu and GIB made up of Bengal,Assam and parts of Bihar!
 
Direct Action Day was called by Muslims (Muslim League), and they primarily started the rioting, not only in Kolkata, but throughout Inida in places like UP/Bihar/Punjab/Delhi etc. BBC did a neutral documentary on this that supports this, you are free to look it up. Hindu groups also responded in kind for the violence.

Also, why just focus on Kolkata? Why not talk about the thousands of Hindus that were killed in Noakhali if we are talking about Bengal? What about the Hindus and Sikhs that disappeared completely from West Pakistan due to muslim militants?

The rioting and killing was mainly done by Muslims, for their selfish need of a separate nation, not thinking once about the fate of them minorities in those areas they wanted to make a islamic republic.Even though it was a backstabbing move, you guys achioeved it. Now we are happy you have your state and we have our own state, so lets just live in the present.

@ I am still in Calcutta 16-22 August 1946 ????

@ I am focussing on Calcutta as because I am a Muslim Bengali .
 
@ I am still in Calcutta 16-22 August 1946 ????

@ I am focussing on Calcutta as because I am a Muslim Bengali .

And I am telling you, had ou Muslim militants not started riots, not a single muslim would have been hurt.

Just like muslims killed hindus elsewhere, hindus killed muslims in retalitation.

You know what they say, revenge is one of the most primal instincts...
 

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