Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Partition
“Among Congressmen the greatest supporter of
partition was Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, but even he did not believe that
partition was the best solution of the Indian problem. He threw his weight in
the favour of partition out of irritation and injured vanity. He found himself
frustrated at every step by the veto put on his proposals by Liaqat Ali Khan as FINANCE Minister.
It was therefore sheer anger that he decided that if there was no other
alternative, partition should be accepted. He was also convinced that the new
state of Pakistan was not viable and could not last. He thought that the
acceptance of Pakistan would teach the Muslim League a bitter lesson. Pakistan
would collapse in a short time and provinces which had seceded from India would
have to face untold difficulty and hardship” – Wrote Maulana Abul Kalam Azad in his
autobiography “India Wins Freedom” while reviewing the situation ten years
after Independence in 1957.
There is also an opinion that Azad had blamed Nehru
for sabotaging possibilities of reconciliation between Congress and Muslim
League on two occasions. First in 1937 for not accepting Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s
demand for including two representatives of Muslim League in the UP Ministry
that was formed after the elections. Secondly when Nehru issued a statement
that the Constitution of Free India will be framed by elected representatives
and not to be bound by the scheme agreed upon with the Cabinet Mission.
It is well known that Maulana Azad was an outspoken
opponent of Mohammad Ali Jinnah and Partition and a symbol of collective will
of Muslims to co-exist in a secular India. In a press statement on 15 April
1946 as Congress President Maulana said, “I have considered from every possible
point of view the scheme of Pakistan as formulated by the Muslim League. As an
Indian, I have examined the implication for the future of India as a whole. As
a Muslim I have examined its likely effects upon the futures of Muslims of
India. Considering the scheme in all its aspects I have come to conclusion that
it is harmful not only for India as a whole but for Muslims in particular. And
infact it creates more problems than it solves.”
Maulana Azad as Congress President tried to convince Jinnah to change his rigid
attitude and sent him a confidential telegram: “I have read your statement of 9
July. Delhi resolution is genuine about national government which would mean a
coalition not confined to any single party. But the League not prepared to
agree to any transnational scheme which is not based on Two-Nation scheme.”
Jinnah’s response to this was not only negative but positively insulting. “I do
not want your confidence. You have totally lost confidence of Muslim India.
Don’t you feel that the Congress has made you a show boy President to hoodwink
non –Congress parties and other Countries of the world? You represent neither
Muslims nor Hindus. This Congress is a Hindu organisation and if you have any
self respect you should resign forthwith.”
It is a measure of Maulana Azad’s generosity and commitment to the cause of
unity that inspite of this impudence he did not oppose Mahatma Gandhi’s efforts
to persuade Jinnah. Gandhi could not bring about a change of heart in Jinnah.
His response to Gandhi was no different. Ignoring all pleadings of Gandhi, he
reasserted his Two–Nation theory saying: “we can confidentially affirm that
according to all standards and definitions Muslims and Hindus are two major
nations. We are a nation in terms of all international measures and principles.”
Maulana Azad did his best to convince the Congress leaders to wait till a
correct solution was found, but he was not successful. Maulana attributed it to
“BLINDNESS of
Congress leaders to facts, and their anger and frustration clouding their
vision.”
It seems Jinnah believed that political promises were not meant to be honoured.
After partition, the most ridiculous position was that of the Muslim League
leaders who remained in India. Jinnah left for Karachi with a message to his
followers that now that the country was divided they should be loyal citizens
of India. When these angry and disillusioned leaders met Maulana Azad to
complain that “Jinnah had deceived them and left them in lurch”, Maulana was
amused, he wondered, “I could not at first understand what they meant by saying
that Jinnah had deceived them. He had openly demanded partition of the country
on the basis of Muslim majority provinces”.
That Jinnah was just playing a game and not serious about his theory is evident
from the position he adopted in his first address to the Constituent Assembly
of the newly created nation state of Pakistan .After having defeated the
efforts of Azad and Gandhi, thanks to the cunning of the imperialist rulers he
advocated nationhood for the new country and advised its inhabitants not to
look upon themselves in terms of Hindus and Muslims but as Pakistanis. On the
basis of that one statement some historians have made out that he was really a
secularist. The criticism faced by BJP stalwart L.K. Advani for his statement
on this account on Jinnah is now a part of the history.
However Maulana Azad had exposed the hypocrisy of Jinnah on several counts
including his Two–Nation theory based on religion. Maulana said, “It is one of
the greatest frauds on the people to suggest that religious affinity can unite
areas which are geographically, economically, linguistically and culturally
different. It is true that Islam sought to establish a society which transcends
racial, linguistic, economic and political frontiers. History has however
proved that after the first century, Islam was not able to unite all Muslim
countries into one state on the basis of Islam alone”.
Asserting that “this was the position in the past and this is the position
today,” Maulana predicted in 1958 that “No one can hope that East and West
Pakistan will compose all their differences and form one nation”. As history
showed, East Pakistan seceded from West Pakistan to emerge in 1971 as an
Independent Bangladesh.
How prophetic Maulana Azad was, when he said, “Even within West Pakistan, the
three provinces of Sind, Punjab and the Frontier have internal incompatibility
and are working for separate aims and interests. A year before Pakistan was
created Maulana Azad in an interview to Lahore based Urdu magazine “Chattan”
predicted the darkness that engulfs Pakistan today.
“History alone will decide whether we have acted wisely and correctly in
accepting partition”. Maulana was himself conscious of the fact that not many
people went along with him. He said, “In religion, in literature, in politics
on the path of philosophy, wherever I went I went alone. The Caravans of the
times did not support me on any of my journeys.”
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