The
British had emerged as the dominant
force in South Asia. Their rise to
power was gradual extending over a
period of nearly one hundred years.
They replaced the Shariah by what they
termed as he Anglo-Muhammadan law.
English became the official language.
Thes and other developments had great
social, economic and political impact
especially on the Muslims of South
Asia.
The failure of the 1857 War of
Independence had disastrous
consequences for the Muslims.
Determined to stop such a recurrence
in future, they followed deliberately
a repressive policy against the
Muslims. Properties and estates of
those even remotely associated with
the freedom fighters were confiscated
and conscious efforts were made to
close all avenues of honest living for
the Muslims.
The Muslims kept themselves aloof from
western education as well as
government service. But their
compatriots, the Hindus, did not do
so. They accepted the new rulers
without reservation. They acquired
western education, imbibed the new
culture and captured positions
hitherto filled in by the Muslims. If
this situation had prolonged, it would
have done the Muslims an irrepairable
loss. The man to realise the impending
peril was Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
(1817-1898), a witness to the tragic
events of 1857. His assessment was
that the Muslims' safety lay in the
acquisition of western education and
knowledge. He took several positive
steps to achieve this objective. He
founded a college at Aligarh to impart
education on western lines. Of equal
importance was the Anglo-Muhammadan
Education Conference, which he
sponsored in 1886, to provide an
intellectual forum to the Muslims for
the dissemination of views in support
of western education and social
reform. Similar were the objectives of
the Muhammadan Literary Society,
founded by Nawab Abdul Latif
(1828-93), but its activities were
confined to Bengal.
Sir Syed Ahmed Khan was averse to the
idea of Muslims participation in any
organised political activity which, he
feared, might revive British hostility
towards the Muslims. He also disliked
Hindu-Muslim collaboration in any
joint venture. His disillusionment in
this regard primarily stemmed from the
Urdu-Hindi controversy of the late
1860s when the Hindu enthusiasts
vehemently championed the cause of
Hindi in place of Urdu. He, therefore,
opposed the Indian National Congress,
when it was founded in 1885, and
advised his community to abstain from
its activities. His contemporary and a
great scholar of Islam, Syed Ameer Ali
(1849-1928), shared his views about
the Congress, but he was not opposed
to Muslims organizing themselves
politically. In fact, he organized the
first significant and purely communal
political body, the Central National
Muhammadan Association. Although its
membership was limited, it had above
fifty branches in different parts of
the subcontinent and it accomplished
some solid work for the educational
and political uplift of the Muslims.
But its activities waned towards the
end of the 19th century.

At the dawn of the 20th century, a
number of factors convinced the
Muslims of the need to have an
effective political organization. One
of the factors was the replacement of
Urdu by Hindi in the United Provinces.
The creation of a Muslim province by
partitioning the Province of Bengal
and the violent resistance put up the
Hindus against this decision was
another. But the most important factor
was the proposed consititutional
reforms. The Muslims apprehended that
under such a system they would not get
due representation. Therefore, in
October 1906, a deputation comprising
35 Muslim leaders met the Viceroy at
Simla and demanded separate
electorates. Three months later, the
All-India Muslim League was founded at
Dhaka mainly with the object of
looking after the political rights and
interests of the Muslims. The British
conceded separate electorates in the
Government of India Act of 1909 which
confirmed League's position as an
All-India Party.

The
visible trend of the two major
communities going in opposite
directions caused deep concern to
leaders of all-India stature. They
struggled to bring the Congress and
the Muslim League on one platform.
Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah
(1876-1948) was the leading figure
among them. After the annulment of the
partition of Bengal and the European
powers' aggresive designs against the
Ottoman empire and North Africa, the
Muslims were receptive to the idea of
collaboration with the Hindus. The
Congress-Muslim League rapporchement
was achieved at the Lucknow session of
the two parties in 1916 and a joint
scheme of reforms was adopted. In the
Lucknow Pact, the Congress accepted
the principle of separate electorates
and the Muslims in return for 'weightage'
to the Muslims of the Muslim minority
provinces agreed to surrender their
slim majorities in the Punjab and
Bengal. The post-Lucknow Pact period
witnessed Hindu-Muslim amity and the
two parties came to hold their annual
sessions in the same city and passed
resolutions of similar content.
The Hindu-Muslim unity reached its
climax during the Khilafat and the
Non-cooperation Movements. The Muslims
of South Asia, under the leadership of
Ali Brothers, Maulana Muhammad Ali and
Maulana Shaukat Ali, launched the
historic Khilafat Movement after the
First World War to protect the Ottoman
empire from dismemberment. Mohandas
Karamchand Ghandhi (1869-1948) linked
the issue of swaraj (or
self-government) with the Khilafat
issue to associate the Hindus with the
Movement. The ensuing Movement was the
first country-wide popular movement.
Although the movement failed in its
objectives, it had far-reaching impact
on the Muslims of South Asia. After a
long time they forged a united action
on a purely Islamic issue which
created momentarily solidarity among
them. It also produced a class of
Muslim leaders experienced in
organizing and mobilizing the public.
This experience was of immense value
to the Muslims during the Pakistan
Movement.
The collapse of the Khilafat Movement
was followed by the period of bitter
Hindu-Muslim antagonism. The Hindus
organized two highly anti-Muslim
movements, the Shudhi and the
Sangathan. The former movement was
designed to convert Muslims to Hiduism
and the latter was meant to create
solidarity among the Hidus in the
event of communal conflict. In
retaliation, the Muslims sponsored the
Tabligh and Tanzim organizations.

In the 1920s the frequency of communal
riots was unprecedented. In the light
of this situation, the Muslims revised
their constitutional demands. They now
wanted preservation of their numerical
majorities in the Punjab and Bengal;
separation of Sind from Bombay;
constitution of Baluchistan as a
separate province and introduction of
constitutional reforms in the
North-West Frontier Province. It was
partly to press these demands that one
section of the All-India Muslim League
cooperated with the Statutory
Commission sent by the British
Government, under the chairmanship of
Sir John Simon in 1927. The other
section of the League boycotted the
Simon Commission for its all-white
character and cooperated with the
Nehru Committee to draft a
constitution for India. The Nehru
Report had an extremely anti-Muslim
bias and the Congress leadership's
refusal to amend it disillusioned even
the moderate Muslims.
Several leaders and thinkers having
insight into the Hindu-Muslim question
proposed separation of Muslim India.
However, the most lucid exposition of
the inner feelings of the Muslim
community was given by Allama Muhammad
Iqbal (1877-1938) in his presidential
address to the All-India Muslim League
at Allahabad in 1930. He proposed a
separate Muslim state at least in the
Muslim majority regions of the
north-west. Later on, in his
correspondence with Quaid-i-Azam
Mohammad Ali Jinnah, he included the
Muslim majority areas in the
north-east also in his proposed Muslim
state. Three years after his Allahabad
address, a group of Muslim students at
Cambridge, headed by Chaudhry Rahmat
Ali, issued a pamphlet Now or Never in
which, drawing letters from the names
of the Muslim majority regions they
gave the nomenclature of Pakistan to
the proposed state.

Meanwhile, three Round Table
Conferences was convened in London
during the period 1930-32, to resolve
the Indian constitutional problem. The
Hindu and Muslim leaders could not
draw up an agreed formula and the
British Government had to announce a
'Communal Award' which was
incorporated in the Government of
India Act of 1935. Before the
elections under this Act, the
All-India Muslin League, which had
remained dormant for some time, was
reorganised by Muhammad Ali Junnah,
who had returned to India in 1935
after a self imposed exile of nearly
five years in England. The Muslim
League could not win a majority of
Muslims seats since it had not yet
been effectively reorganised. However,
it had the satisfaction that the
performance of the Indian National
Congress in the Muslim constituencies
was bad. After the elections, the
attitude of the Congress leadership
was arrogant and domineering. The
classic example was its refusal to
form a coalition government with the
Muslim League in the United Provinces.
Instead it asked the League leaders to
dissolve their parliamentary party in
the Provincial Assembly and join the
Congress. Another important Congress
move after the 1937 elections was its
Muslim mass contact movement to
persuade the Muslims to join the
Congress and not the Muslim League.
One of its leaders, Jawaharlal Nehru,
even declared that there was only two
forces in India, the British and the
Congress. All this did not go
unchallenged. Quaid-i-Azam countered
that there was a third force in South
Asia constituting the Muslims. The
All-India Muslim League, under his
gifted leadership, gradually and
skilfully started to consolidate the
Muslims on one platform. It did not
miss to exploit even small Congress
mistakes in its favour.

The 1930s saw realization among the
Muslims of their separate identity and
their anxiety to preserve it within
separate territorial boundaries. An
important element that brought this
simmering Muslim nationalism in the
open was the charater of the Congress
rule in the Muslim minority provinces
during 1937-39. The Congress policies
in these provinces hurt Muslim
susceptibilities. These were
calculated aims to obliterate the
Muslims as a separate cultural unity.
The Muslims now abandoned to think in
terms of seeking safegaurds and began
to consider seriously the demand for a
separate Muslim state. During
1937-1939, several Muslim leaders and
thinkers inspired by Allama Iqbal's
ideas, presented elaborate schemes of
partitioning the sub-continet on
cummonal lines. The All-India Muslim
League on March 23, 1940, in a
resolution at its Lahore session,
demanded separate homeland for the
Muslims in the Muslim majority regions
of the subcontinent. The resolution
was commonly reffered to as the
Pakistan Resolution.
The British Government recognized the
genuineness of the Pakistan deman
indirectly in the proposals for the
transfer of power which Sir Stafford
Cripps brought to India in 1942. Both
the Congress and the All-India Muslim
League rejected these proposals for
different reasons. The principle of
secession of Muslim India as a
separate dominion was, however,
conceded in these proposals. After the
failure, a prominent Congress leader,
C. Rajagopalachari, suggested a
formula for a separate Muslim state in
the Working Committee of the Indian
National Congress, which was rejected
at the time but later on, in 1944,
formed the basis of the Gandhi-Jinnah
talks.
The Pakistan demand was popularised
during the Second World War. Every
section of the Muslim community -
women, students, Ulema and businessmen
- was organised under the banner of
the All-India Muslim League. Branches
of the party were opened in the remote
corners on the subcontinent.
Literature in the form of phamphlets,
books, magazines and newspapers was
produced to explain the Pakistan
demand and distributed largely.

The support gained by the All-India
Muslim League and its demand for
Pakistan was tested after the failure
of the Simla Conference 1945.
Elections were called to determine the
respective strength of the political
parties. The Muslim League swept all
the thirty seats in the central
legislature and in the provincial
elections also its victorywas
outstanding. After the elections, on
April 8-9, 1946, the All-India Muslim
League called a convention of the
newly elected League members in the
central and provincial legislatures at
Dehli. This convention which
constituted virtually a representative
assembly of the Muslims of South Asia,
on a motion by the Chief Minister of
Bengal, Hussein Shaheed Suhrawardy,
reiterated the Pakistan demand in
clearer terms.

In early 1946, the British Government
sent a Cabinet Misiion to the
subcontinet to resolve the
constitutional deadlock. The Mission
conducted negotiations with various
political parties but failed to evolve
an agreed formula. Finally, Cabinet
Mission announced its own plan which,
among other provisions, envisaged
three federal groupings, two of them
comprising the Muslim majority
provinces, linked at the Center in a
loose federation with three subjects.
The Muslim League accepted the Plan,
as a strategic move, expecting to
achieve its objective in a
not-too-distant future. The Congress
also agreed to the Plan but soon
realising its implications to the
Congress, its leaders began to
interpret in a way not visualised by
the authors of the Plan. This provided
the All-India Muslim League an excuse
to withdraw its acceptance of the Plan
and the party observed August 16 as a
'Direct Action Day' to show Muslim
solidarity in support of the Pakistan
demand.
In October 1946, an Interim Government
was formed. The Muslim League sent its
representatives under the leadership
of its General Secretary, Mr. Liaquat
Ali Khan, with the aim to fight for
the party objective from within the
Interim Government. After a short time
the situation inside the Interim
Government and outside convinced the
Congress leadership to accept Pakistan
as the only solution of the communal
problem.

The British Government, after a last
attempt to save the Cabinet Mission
Plan in December 1946, also moved
toward a plan for the partition of
India. The last British Viceroy, Lord
Louis Mountbatten, came with a clear
mandate to draft a plan for the
transfer of power. After holding talks
with political leaders and parties, he
prepared a Partition Plan for the
transfer of power which, after its
approval by the British Government,
was announced on June 3, 1947. Both
the Congress and the Muslim League
accepted the plan. Two largest Muslim
Majority provinces, Bengal and Punjab
was partitioned. The assemblies of
west Punjab, East Bengal, and Sind;
and in Baluchistan, the Quetta
Municipality and the Shahi Jirga voted
for Pakistan. Referenda were held in
the North-West Frontier Province and
the District of Sylhet in Assam which
resulted in an overwhelming vote for
Pakistan. On August 14, 1947, the new
state of Pakistan came into existance.
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