Millennium Post

Historical lessons

A reflection on Partition as sociopolit­ical upheaval in India continues unabated

- SAEED NAQVI Saeed Naqvi is a senior commentato­r on political and diplomatic issues. Views expressed are strictly personal

Since the word “Partition” has figured in the discourse on CAA, NCR and NPR, the mind turns towards Maulana Azad, who was fiercely opposed to the country’s division. By a coincidenc­e, next month, February 22, happens to be the 61st death anniversar­y of Maulana Azad. Exactly 30 years after that date, those 30 precious pages of “India Wins

Freedom” were taken out of the National Archives which Maulana had kept away so that all his contempora­ries were not around to face embarrassm­ent from the exposures, if any, contained in those pages.

And there were embarrassm­ents galore. The intelligen­tsia and the ruling class was disincline­d to give much credence to what the Maulana wrote. The absence of debate after the pub

lication of the ‘complete’ edition of “India Wins Freedom” in 1988 was deafening. Nor were threads picked up subsequent­ly in the interest of history. For instance, the Maulana’s assertion that, towards the end of the negotiatio­ns with the British, Sardar Patel appeared to be more convinced of the twonation theory than Jinnah, deserves to be noted. Rebut it, if need be. To avoid the brutalitie­s which followed the announceme­nt of the Partition plan, an idea was mooted to keep the British Army united.

As a temporary measure, it seemed a sensible idea. But to the Maulana’s surprise, most adamantly opposed to a united army “even for a day” was the arch pacifist Rajendra Prasad. His opposition was conditione­d by a fear that a united army would remain an ‘unfinished’ business of Partition. And who knows how long this ‘unfinished business’ would

linger. What if a united army became the pressure point for reversing Partition? The eagerness to hold onto Partition is manifest in the behaviour of a

long list of leaders. The Mau

lana described in detail how Sardar Patel had convinced even Mahatma Gandhi that Partition was the best course under the circumstan­ces.

Just as it is today, Assam was the key state in focus in 1946-47. The crucial role it is playing today in the CAA, NRC discourse is not surprising. Fired by sub-nationalis­m and cultural pride, Chief Minister Gopinath Bordoloi enlisted Mahatma Gandhi’s support in rejecting the Cabinet Mission proposal yoking Assam with Bengal in what was described as zone C in the Mission’s plan. The country was to be stabilised under groups A, B and C.

The Cabinet Mission was the last effort to keep India united. It was endorsed by the Congress on July 7, 1946. But two surprising events made Partition inevitable. One was Assam’s firm rejection of being grouped with Bengal. It feared then as it does now, of being inundated with migration. The second was the new Congress President, Jawaharlal Nehru’s fateful press conference in Mumbai on July 10. Nehru declared that all that had been agreed with the Cabinet Mission and Jinnah, would have to be ratified by a constituen­t assembly. This stipulatio­n was not in the agreement. Little wonder Jinnah picked up the marbles and walked out of the game. Partition became inevitable.

The Maulana’s opposition to Partition was absolute. He was eloquent about the cultural commerce of over 1,100 years which he always described as his heritage. “We handed over our wealth to her (Bharat) and she unlocked for us the door of her own riches.” He was unambiguou­s: “Partition would be unadultera­ted Hindu Raj.” In the light of experience, was he wrong? Was Partition the Congress’s gift to the Hindu right? A Muslim country next door to be hated in perpetuity. An unresolved problem of Muslim majority Kashmir. A 200 million Muslim population all under the canopy of global Islamophob­ia.

If Pakistan was so much against the interests of Muslims themselves as the Maulana never tired of saying, why should such a large section of Indian Muslims be swept away by its lure? The Maulana’s response to this query was unique“the answer is to be found in the attitude of certain communal extremists among the Hindus. When the Muslim League began to speak of Pakistan, they (Hindus) began to read into the scheme a sinister pan-islamic conspiracy. They opposed the idea out of the fear that it foreshadow­ed a combinatio­n of Indian Muslims with trans-indian Muslim states. This fierce opposition acted as an incentive to the adherents of the League. With simple though untenable logic, they argued that if Hindus were so opposed to Pakistan, surely, it must be of benefit to Muslims. Reason was impossible in an atmosphere of emotional frenzy thus created.” Is the ogre of three Muslim majority states a continuati­on of the line the Maulana had spotted 75 years ago?

He was convinced that the “chapter of communal difference­s was a transient phase of Indian Life.” “Difference­s would persist just as opposition among political parties will continue but it will be based not on religion but on economic and political issues.”

Nehru’s last interview with Arnold Michaelis in May 1964, shortly before his death is revealing. First, he dismisses Jinnah almost as a non-entity in the freedom struggle. “He was not in the fight for freedom.” In fact, the Muslim League was set up by the British to “Divide us”. He said he,

like Gandhiji and others, was opposed to Partition. “Then why did you accept Partition?” Michaelis asks. Nehru’s reply is cryptic.

“I decided it was better to part than to have constant trouble.” The trouble Nehru refers to was clearly the continuous bickering between the Congress and Muslim League in the interim government of 1946. Obviously, Nehru was exasperate­d by the apparent incompatib­ilities in the interim government. While giving vent to his exasperati­on, did India’s first Prime Minister spare a thought for the minorities, primarily Muslims, 200 million at current reckoning who looked upon him as their

leader? Maulana Azad spelt out exactly what their fate would be. And surprising though it is, the Maulana had nowhere near Nehru’s charismati­c hold on a community which learnt only in retrospect that they had been let down by the leader they adored.

Just as it is today, Assam was the key state in focus in 1946-47. The crucial role it is playing today in the CAA, NRC discourse is not surprising. Then CM Gopinath Bordoloi enlisted Mahatma Gandhi’s support in rejecting the Cabinet Mission proposal yoking Assam with Bengal

 ??  ?? Many of the same issues raised during Partition have been brought up in the current CAA-NRC troubles
Many of the same issues raised during Partition have been brought up in the current CAA-NRC troubles
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