BAB-E- Pakistan Foundation 1916 -1940
BAB-E- Pakistan Foundation 1916 -1940
1919 - Khalifate Movement
After World War I, the
Ottoman Empire faced dismemberment. Under the leadership of Ali Brothers,
Maulana Muhammad Ali and Maulana Shaukat Ali, the Muslims of South Asia
launched historic Khalifate Movement to try and save it. Mohandas Karma Chand
Gandhi linked the issue of Swaraj with the Khalifate issue to associate Hindus
with the movement.
The general impression among Muslims of India was that the western powers were
waging a war against Islam throughout the world in order to rob it of all its
power and influence. The Ottoman Empire was the only Muslim power that had
maintained a semblance of authority and Muslims of India wanted to save Islamic
political power from extinction.
1927 - Simon Commission
The British Government announced constitution of a commission
under the supervision of Sir John Simon in November 1927. The commission having
no Indian members was sent to investigate India's constitutional problems and
make recommendations to the Government on future constitution of India.
Congress boycotted the Commission and there was a clear split in Muslim League
over this issue.
1928 - Nehru Report
After the failure of Simon Commission, there was no alternative
for British Government but to ask the local people to frame a constitution for
themselves. They knew that Congress and Muslim League were the two main parties
and that they both had serious difference of opinions. When All Parties
Conference met for the third time in Bombay on May 19, 1928, there was hardly
any prospect of an agreed constitution. It was then decided that a small
committee should be appointed to work out the details of the constitution.
Motilal Nehru headed this committee.
The committee worked for three months at Allahabad and its memorandum was
called the "Nehru Report". The chairman joined hands with Hindu
Mahasabha and unceremoniously quashed recent Congress acceptance of the Delhi
Proposals. The Nehru Report recommended that a Declaration of Rights should be
inserted in the constitution assuring the fullest liberty of conscience and
religion.
The recommendations of Nehru Report went against the interests of the Muslim
community. It was an attempt to serve Hindu predominance over Muslims. The
Nehru Committee's greatest blow was the rejection of separate electorates. If
the report had taken into account the Delhi Proposals, the Muslims might have
accepted it. But the Nehru Committee did not consider the Delhi Proposals
the Muslims were asking for one third representation in the center while Nehru
Committee gave them only one fourth representation. It is true that two demands
of Muslims were considered in Nehru Report but both of them were incomplete. It
was said that Sindh should be separated from Bombay but the condition of
self-economy was also put forward. It demanded constitutional reforms in
N.W.F.P, but Baluchistan was overlooked in the report.
1929 - Fourteen Points
A positive aspect of Nehru
Report was that it resulted in the unity of divided Muslim groups. In a meeting
of the council of All India Muslim League on March 28, 1929 members of both the
Shafi League and Jinnah League participated. Quaid-e-Azam termed Nehru Report
as a Hindu document, but considered simply rejecting the report as
insufficient. He decided to give an alternative Muslim agenda. It was in this
meeting that Quaid-e-Azam presented his famous "Fourteen Points". The
council of All India Muslim League accepted fourteen points of Quaid. A
resolution was passed according to which no scheme for the future constitution
of Government of India would acceptable to Muslims be unless and until it
included the demands of Quaid presented in the fourteen points.
1930 - Allahabad Muslim League Annual Conference
1930 to 1933 - Round Table Conferences
The first session of the
conference opened in London on November 12, 1930. All parties were present
except for Congress, whose leaders were in jail due to Civil Disobedience
Movement. Congress leaders stated that they would have nothing to do with
further constitutional discussion unless Nehru Report was enforced in its
entirety as the constitution of India.
The Muslim-Hindu differences overcast the conference as Hindus were pushing for
a powerful central government while Muslims stood for a loose federation of
completely autonomous provinces. The Muslims demanded maintenance of weightage
and separate electorates, Hindus their abolition. The Muslims claimed statutory
majority in Punjab and Bengal, while Hindus resisted their imposition. In
Punjab, the situation was complicated by inflated Sikh claims.
The conference broke up on January 19, 1931 and what emerged from it was a
general agreement to write safeguards for minorities into constitution and a
vague desire to devise a federal system for the country.
Gandhi - Irwin Pact
After the conclusion of the First
Round Table Conference, British Government realized that cooperation of the
Indian National Congress was necessary for further advancement in making of
Indian constitution. Thus, Lord Irwin, the Viceroy, extended an invitation to
Gandhi for talks. Gandhi agreed to end the Civil Disobedience Movement without
laying down any preconditions.
The agreement between Gandhi and Irwin was signed on March 5, 1931. Following
are the salient points of this agreement:
- The
Congress would discontinue the Civil Disobedience Movement
- The
Congress would participate in the Round Table Conference
- The
Government would withdraw all ordinances issued to curb the Congress
- The
Government would withdraw all prosecutions relating to offenses not
involving ....violence
- The
Government would release all persons undergoing sentences of imprisonment
for their activities in the civil disobedience movement. The second
session of the conference opened in London on September 7, 1931. The main
task of the conference was done through two committees on federal
structure and minorities. Gandhi was a member of both but he adopted a
very unreasonable attitude. He claimed that he represented all India and
dismissed all other Indian delegates as non-representative because they
did not belong to Congress.
The
communal problem represented the most difficult issue for the delegates. Gandhi
again tabled Congress scheme for a settlement, a mere reproduction of Nehru
Report, but all the minorities rejected it. On the concluding day, British
Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald appealed to Indian leaders to reach a communal
settlement. Failing to do so, he said, would force the British Government would
take a unilateral decision.
Quaid-e-Azam did not participate in the session of the Second Round Table
Conference as he had decided to keep himself aloof from Indian politics and to
practice as a professional lawyer in England.
On his return to India, Gandhi once again started Civil Disobedience Movement
and was duly arrested. The third session began on November 17, 1932. It was
short and unimportant. Congress was once again absent, so was Labor opposition
in the British Parliament. Reports of the various committees were scrutinized.
The conference ended on December 25, 1932.
The recommendations of the Round Table Conferences were embodied in a White
Paper. It was published in March 1933 and debated in parliament directly
afterwards, analyzed by the Joint Select Committee and after the final reading
and loyal assent, the bill reached the Statute Book on July 24, 1935.
1938 - Death of Allama
Iqbal
Allama Iqbal died in 1938 and was buried in front of Badshahi
Mosque Lahore.
1939 - Day of Deliverance
Muslim League celebrated Day of Deliverance (Yum-i-Nijat) on
December 22, 1939.
1940 - Pakistan
Resolution
The twenty seventh session of All India Muslim League was held
at Lahore under presidentship of Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah. The historic
"Lahore Resolution, also known as "Pakistan Resolution", was
presented by Moulvi Abul Kasim Fazlul Haq, Premier of Bengal. The resolution
demanded that Muslim majority areas as in north-western and eastern zones of
India should be grouped to constitute independent states in which the
constituent units should be autonomous and sovereign.
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