Joe Shearer
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Creating a new Medina
The Hindu ArchivesHISTORIC MEETING: The only solution to India’s problem, Jinnah asserted, was ‘to partition India so that both Hindus and Muslims could develop freely and fully according to their own genius.’ (From left) Picture shows Jawaharlal Nehru, the Adviser to the Viceroy, Lord Ismay, Lord Mountbatten, and Muhammad Ali Jinnah at the historic conference in New Delhi in 1947 in which Lord Mountbatten disclosed Britain’s partition plan for India.
The only solution to India’s problem, he asserted, was ‘to partition India so that both the communities could develop freely and fully according to their own genius.’
(Venkat Dhulipala’s book , Creating a New Medina: State Power, Islam, and the Quest for Pakistan in Late Colonial North India, will be published by Cambridge University Press.)
I saw this interesting article in "The Hindu",
Thank you very much for this fascinating extract from The Hindu.
The issue of the events behind Partition, and the motives of Jinnah, of Gandhi, or of the other Congress leaders such as Nehru and Patel and Rajaji at one level, and regional leaders such as Sarat Bose or Suhrawardy at another level, is a vast subject, and has created its own cottage industry of historians and others who earn their professional earnings from the event. When we comment on it, it is best to be aware of much that has gone before. This, too, is part of that discourse. So let us see it in context.
What did Indians want? Quite clearly, from the 80s of the 19th century, there was increasing pressure for autonomy. Quite clearly, this movement, initially restricted to the elite, was enlarged and magnified into a mass movement by Gandhi in the 20s of the 20th century. That enlargement and magnification took out a large number of Congress leaders, such as Gokhale and Jinnah, who were very important up until that time. Suffice it to say that the vast body of Indian opinion which had been mobilised (an even vaster body was not mobilised) wanted greater self-rule, until the day came when the demand became independence.
Was that all? No, not so. There were dissenting opinions. There was opposition on the right and on the left. On the right, Savarkar articulated the Two Nation Theory and introduced the concept of India belonging to the Indic, those who culturally were rooted in India. This was a thin disguise for his religious orientation, and his dislike for a particular religion (he himself was reportedly and purportedly an atheist). The Hindu Mahasabha opposed any concessions made to the Muslims, and a small but toxic fringe element was built up over the decades that saw the more central Congress as enemies of the independent state to be.
On the other hand, still on the right, there was the opinion first articulated by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan of a similar nature, that Hindus and Muslims could not live together peacefully, hence that Muslims should seek separate and independent development. However, both this and the Hindu Mahasabha opinions were fringe elements to the main fabric of the movement and really didn't matter.
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