Lecture 3 Different Political Movements Before Pakistan-Part I

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Different political Movements

before Pakistan-Part I
Lecture 3
Learning objectives
• Indian National congress
• All India Muslim League 1906
• Lucknow pact 1916
• Rowlett act 1919
• Khilafat Movement 1919_24
• Dehli Muslim proposal 1927.
Establishment of All India Muslim League [1906]

• On December 30 1906, the annual meeting of Muhammadan


Educational Conference was held at Dhaka under the chairmanship of
Nawab Viqar-ul-Mulk. Almost 3,000 delegates attended the session
making it the largest-ever representative gathering of Muslim India.
For the first time the conference lifted its ban on political discussion,
when Nawab Salim Ullah Khan presented a proposal for establish a
political party to safeguard the interests of the Muslims; the All India
Muslim League.
• The headquarters of the All India Muslim League was established in
Lucknow, and Sir Aga Khan was elected as its first president. Also
elected were six vice-presidents, a secretary and two joint secretaries
for a term of three years. The initial membership was 400, with
members hailing proportionately from all provinces. Maulana
Muhammad Ali Jouhar wrote the constitution of the League, known
as the "Green Book". Branches were also setup in other provinces.
Syed Ameer Ali established a branch of the League in London in 1908,
supporting the same objectives.
Following were the objectives of the Muslim League:

• 1. To inculcate among Muslims a feeling of loyalty to the government


and to disabuse their minds of misunderstandings and
misconceptions of its actions and intentions.
• 2. To protect and advance the political rights and interests of the
Muslims of India and to represent their needs and aspirations to the
government from time to time.
• 3. To prevent the growth of ill will between Muslims and other
nationalities without compromising to it's own purposes.
Lucknow Pact:

• Lucknow Pact refers to an agreement between the


Indian National Congress and the Muslim League. In 1916,
Muhammed Ali Jinnah, a member of the Muslim League, negotiated with
the Indian National Congress to reach an agreement to pressure the
British government to adopt a more liberal approach to India and give
Indians more authority to run their country. This was a considerable
change of policy for the Muslim League, as its position had been that to
preserve Muslim interests in India, it needed to support British rule. After
the unpopular partition of Bengal, the Muslim League was confused
about its stand and it was at that time that Jinnah approached the
League. Jinnah was the mastermind and architect of the pact.
Reasons for the pact

• When the All-India Muslim League came into existence, it was a moderate
organization with its basic aim to establish friendly relations with the Crown.
However, due to the decision of the British government to annul the
partition of Bengal, the Muslim leadership decided to change its stance. In
1913, a new group of Muslim leaders entered the folds of the Muslim
League with the aim of bridging the gulf between Muslims and Hindus. The
most prominent among them was Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who was already a
member of Indian National Congress. The Muslim League changed its major
objective and decided to join hands with the Congress in order to put
pressure on the British government. Lord Chelmsford's invitation for
suggestions from the Indian politicians for post World War I reforms further
helped in the development of the situation.
• Main clauses
• The same method should be adopted for the Executive Councils of Governors.
• The India Council must be abolished.
• The salaries of the Secretary of State for Indian Affairs should be paid by the British government
and not from Indian funds.
• Of the two Under Secretaries, one should be Indian.
• The executive should be separated from the judiciary.
• The number of Muslims in the provincial legislatures would be laid down province by province.
• Achievements
• Complete approval of separate electorate.
• Security of Muslim rights and interest.
• Muslim League's separate status.
• Increased the fame of Quaid-e-Azam.
• Hindu–Muslim unity first and last time.
• Indian council must be abolished
Rowlatt Act of 1919:

• In the year 1919, the British Government passed a new rule called
Rowlatt Act, under which the Government had the authority and
power to arrest people and keep them in prisons without any trial if
they are suspected with the charge of terrorism. The government also
earned the power to refrain the newspapers from reporting and
printing news. The Act was ill famed as `Black Act` by the people and
Indians revolt in protest against the Rowlatt Act.
Khilafat Movement 1919-1924

• The Lucknow pact showed that it was possible for middle-class, English-
educated Muslims and Hindus to arrive at an amicable settlement on
Hindu-Muslim constitutional and political problems. This unity reached
its climax during the Khilafat and the Non-Cooperation Movements.
• After World War I, the Ottoman Empire faced dismemberment. Under
the leadership of the Ali Brothers, Maulana Muhammad Ali and
Maulana Shaukat Ali, the Muslims of South Asia launched the historic
Khilafat Movement to try and save it. Mohandas Karam Chand Gandhi
linked the issue of Swaraj with the Khilafat issue to associate Hindus
with the movement. The ensuing movement was the first countrywide
popular movement.
The objectives of the movement were as follows:
1. To maintain the Turkish Caliphate.
2. To protect the holy places of the Muslims.
3. To maintain the unity of the Ottoman Empire.
• Although the Khilafat Movement failed to achieve its declared
objectives, it carried political awakening to large masses of Muslims. It
was during the Khilafat days that representatives of Indian Muslims
came into contact with eminent personages from other Muslims
countries to save the semblance of unity in the world of Islam.
• The Khilafat Movement was an asset for the struggle of Pakistan. It
made clear to the Indian Muslims to trust neither the British nor the
Hindus, but to look to their own strengths for self-preservation.
Delhi Muslim Proposals [1927]

Considering that separate electorates posed the main hindrance to improving Hindu-Muslim
relations, Quaid-i-Azam proposed that if the Hindus agreed to providing certain safeguards, the
Muslims would give up this demand. Consequently, the proposals were formally approved at a
conference held by the Muslims in 1927 at Delhi, and are now called "The Delhi Proposals":
1. The formation of a separate province of Sind.
2. Introduction of reforms in the NWFP and in Baluchistan on the same footing as in other
provinces.
3. Unless and until the above proposals were implemented, the Muslims would never
surrender the right of their representation through separate electorates. Muslims would be
willing to abandon separate electorates in favor of joint electorates with reservation of seats
fixed in proportion to the population of different communities, if the above two proposals were
implemented to the full satisfaction of Muslims and also if the following proposals were
accepted:
4. Hindu minorities in Sind, Baluchistan and the NWFP would be accorded the same
concessions in the form of reservation of seats over and above the proportion of their
population as Muslims would get in Hindu majority provinces.
5. Muslim representation in the Central Legislature would not be less than one third.
6. In addition to provisions like religious freedom, there was to be a further guarantee
in the constitution that on communal matters no bill or resolution would be considered
or passed if a three-fourths majority of the members of the community concerned
were opposed to it.
These proposals were to be accepted or rejected in toto. So, in effect, the Muslims
agreed to give up the separate electorates in form of the reservation of seats.
Unfortunately, the Congress first accepted but later rejected the proposals.
 

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