Sunday, 27 December 2015

How Jinnah Destroyed Unionists Party of Punjab.

On January 2, 1943, Khizar Hayat Tiwana replaced sir Sikander Hayat and became the President of Sectarianism United Board. On January 23, 1943 a session of the National Unionist Party was conducted in chamber of Assembly, which was presided by Sir Choto Ram. 86 members out of 100 of the party participated in this session. Through a resolution Malik Khaizar Hayat Tiwana was selected the leader of the party, confidence was shown on his ministry and he was being promised by the party for their support. So that he may do his duties as a Prime Minister of the Province. This resolution was favored by Nawab Ifthikhar Hussain Mamdot, Dr, Aslam, Mr.Singab, Sardar Bahadur Goreyan Sing, Sir William Rober Son, Sir Maqbal Mehmod, Shekhkaramat Ali, and by other party members. They all promise to Malik Khizar Hayat for their all kind of support. The appointment of third and new Muslim minister was depending on the will of the Prime Minister. Four untouchable member, Faqeer Chand, Sarder Sing, Mr, Mogal Kishwar, and Master Sirinam also joined the Unionist Party. Thus they got power of 120 members of the party in the senate of 175 members.

After the end of this session a meeting was also conducted in the Prime Minister house of Punjab, it was attended by 69 members in this meeting the same resolution was passed, which was passed on 6 and 8 January in a conference of Muslim League’s leaders. During his speech, Sheikh Sadiq insisted on the unity of Muslim groups, Raja Ghazanfer Ali also paid tribute the services of Sir Sikander Hayat, and promised to the new Prime Minister for the trust and support of the Muslim members. In his speech Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana paid thanks to the provincial member for their support and trust. He said;

‘’ I needed for your support and trust. I can not become a Prime Minister without your support and never keep him without it. If you think, I am eligible for your support and trust, then support me wholeheartedly, so I may serve you.”

All these sessions, 28 conferences and speeches show that Malik Khizar Hayat was also having the support of Muslim league. On February 5, 1945, on the order of Prime Minister, Governor of Punjab appointed Sarder Shokat Hayat Khan (the son of Sir Sikander Hayat Khan) as Minister. At that time Shoket Hayat was 23 years old, and he got the credit of the most young minister of the British Government. The Shoket Hayat khan was appointed as minister of public works and local self government. Which was earlier headed by Khizar Hayat. He took oath of his office on 6 February 1943 and took the charge in the secretariat.

Quaid- i- Azam declared the speech of Sardar Shokat Hayat khan being a minister an insult of democracy. But other that, the application of Sardar Shokat Hayat Khan, which he presented to the central committee of provincial league, to contest the midterm election in the Muslim rural areas, was accepted on April 10, 1943. Thus Shokat Hayat Khan was nominated to this from the Muslim league. This seat of Southern Attock was to be free in case of the appointment of his uncle Muzafar khan as chairman of the provincial public service commission. Before this, Mian Muhammad Mumtaz Doultana, (son of Mian Yar Doultana) was succeeded on the ticket of the Muslim League, on the seat which was freed after the death of Sir Sikander Hayat.

Hamayun Adeeb, wrote about the acceptance of Shokat Hayat’s application by the Muslim league, he stated that Sarder Shokat Hayat Khan send his ministry resign to Quaid- I- Azam and said that if he broke the discipline, his resign should be shown to the press. This news was opened in the annual session of the Muslim League, which held on April 26, 1943, at Dehli.

AT that time it was a common slogan that there should be a ministry of Muslim league in the place of the Unionist Party. It was said from UNIONIST PARTY that all the Muslim members of the party accept the Muslim league and Quaid-e-Azam. Unionist Party is only believed to run the provincial government properly with the cooperation of other nations. It has no controversy with the Muslim league.

On March 9, 1943 Prime Minister Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana, Information Minister Mian Abdul Hahi, President of Provincial Muslim League Iftikhar Mamdu, Raja Ghazanfar Ali, Mian Basheer Ahmad along with the working committee of Muslim league reached at Delhi. They participated in the convention of the Muslim league council. The presented resolution in this session as about the formation of the Muslim League in Punjab. During his speech Malik Khizar Hayat stated that the Muslim league is already in Punjab, and he promised that would try to make it an alive party in the true sense, strong and representative of the Punjabi Muslims.

Following the promise when Malik Khizar wants to prepare the constitution of the party, the Muslim league’s members criticized him. It is because in this case the Muslim league would lose its status and it would become a sub branch of the Unionist Party. Which should have its on policy and objective.

Sikandar, Jinnah pact was began to discuss among the public, which wided the differences between UNIONIST PARTY and Muslim league. Muslim league was thinking that according to the Sikandar Jinnah Pact their party has an overwhelming majority in Punjab’s Ministry and it is a truth that in Punjab assembly including speaker, there are 79 members of Muslim league, 3 of Anglo Indian, 8 of untouchable, 4 Independent Hindus, 12 of Balder Sing group, 2 independent Sikh and 12 of Choto Ram group. Thus the ministry should be nominated to the name of such party, which has 66 members in it. Apart from this Unionist Party is not remained a single party like in 1937, according to the Jinnah Sikandar Pact its Muslim members had joined the Muslim league. While UP’d was having the view point that now the Unionist Party is a collation or combined party between the Muslim League and some Hindu members. According to Sikandar Jinnah Pact it was decided that the name of this collation would remained Unionist. And the ministry should work according to the same economical program of 1937. It was not controversial with program of Muslim League. Muslim members of ministry party say that, the ministry should be known as a Muslim League ministry, because Muslim League have majority in it.

Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana was not having a habit of Public Speech’s. Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan always gave proper time not only to UP and Punjab government, but also to Muslim League. But Khizar Hayat was not habitual for this. In Shimla, Sardar Shokat said to Malik Khizar that if you could not make a visit for the Muslim League then allow me to do this work. Thus, with the permission of Malik Khizar, Sardar Shokat Hayat participated in conventions at Ranbala, Karnal and Shekhopura and delivered speech’s in favor of Muslim League and Pakistan. On this Sir Choto Ram and other Unionist member criticized the behave of Shokat Hayat Khan as a minister of the Unionist Party. After that the governor ordered Shokat Hayat to return in Shimla, when he came in Shimla, he was bound to give a statement in which the discipline and principals of Unionist Party were discussed. And this thing caused the beginning of differences between Shokat Hayat and Malik Khizar.

On May 26, 1947 Sardar Shokat Hayat succeeded in midterm elections at Southern Attock with 3176 majority votes. Due to the differences between Muslim League and Unionist Party, the Muslim League in Punjab Government faced distraction. In order to save the soul of Muslim League in Punjab, Quaid-e-Azam came to Lahore and asked Malik Khizar Hayat to establish a Muslim League party in Punjab. And on the name of Sikandar, Jinnah Pact doesn’t stand obstacles in the way of Muslim League. Moreover, that in a one year no attention has given to organization of Muslim League. Thus, it’s revealed from it that Unionist Party is not wanted the establishment of Muslim League in Punjab. While Muhammad Yar Khan Daultana Chief Parliamentary Secretary of Punjab Government, Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan and Shah Nawaz Mamdut had promised that act cards about the membership of Muslim League would soon published and distributed. After that, Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan after returning from Lucknow convention, the Unionist Party send filled forms of 70 Muslim assembly members, which revealed that they became the members of the Muslim league. After signing the pact of Muslim Leagues there Unionist Party membership was finished. Now why Malik Khizar have any objection on the issue, that the ministry should be nominated on the name of Muslim League? While Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana was disliked this thing due to his Hindu and Sikh members.

Anyhow, a series of dialogue was exchanged between Quaid-e-Azam and Malik Khizar, on the issue of Sikandar Jinnah but was failed. At last Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana was discharged from the membership of Muslim League. It was based on reality that according to the Sikandar Jinnah pact of 1937, all members of Unionist would follow the orders of the leadership of the Muslim League in the whole affairs of India.

The deviation of Malik Khizar from this principle was thanked a rebellion against Quaid-e-Azam so he was being put out from the Muslim League.

In this controversy the Muslim members of Punjab assembly were worried that either they are Unionists or they completely entered in the Muslim League. It was not an easy decision. Because they also have a spirit of loyalty to Unionist Party.

Quad-e-Azam took signature from 10 assembly members that they had separated from Unionist Party, and they set on the opposition benches. Among these ten members Sir Jinnah Khan Laghari and Ibrahim Baraq were nominated. After that these two persons deviated from it.

After the separation of Malik Khizar, all the Muslim League members were pleased. It clears the position of Muslim League and it gave birth to a separate Muslim League in an assembly consisting of real Muslim Leagues. Thus, there were 120 members of the Muslim League in Punjab assembly, which was headed by Nawab Iftikhar Hussain Mamdut. Among other members, Raja Ghazanfar Ali, Sheikh Karamat Ali, Mumtaz Daulatana and Soufi Abdul-Hameed were nominated.

According to some historians separation of Malik Khizar opened a new chapter in the history of Muslim and an important turn in Pakistan movement.

Mian Fazl-i-Husain, Founder of Unionist Party.

Mian Fazl-i-Husain was born on July 14, 1877 in an old, respectable Rajput family. His father Khan Bahadur Hussain Bakhsh started his career with a petty job, but gradually got the rank of District judge.

Mian Fazl-i-Husain got his early education from Government College Lahore where Allama Iqbal was his class fellow and remained his old friend throughout his life. After he failed to qualify for the ICS, he went to England and took a degree of Bar-at-Law. In 1901 he started practicing as a lawyer at Sialkot but in 1905 shifted to Lahore.

At Lahore Mian Fazl-i-Husain became highly interested in the affairs of Anjuman-i-Himayat-i-Islam. In 1905 he was elected a member of the Managing Committee and the following year Secretary of the College Committee. He lifelong contribution towards the Muslims’ only institution for higher education, Islamia College, Lahore cannot be overlooked.

In 1917 he became the General Secretary of the new Punjab Muslim League organized by the progressive group and retained that office till 1920. Earlier, he had been a member of the Congress since 1905 but when it adopted the policy of Non-Cooperation and the boycott of Councils, he immediately resigned.

In 1916 he was also elected to the Punjab Legislative Council. He vigorously worked for an equality of treatment for the Punjab that lagged behind under Minto-Morley Reforms have only 19 % elected members as against 53 % in Bengal and 48 % in Bombay.

He strongly opposed rural-urban division, created by Sir Michael O’ dyer, the Lieutenant Governor of the Punjab.

In 1921 he was given the portfolio of education minister of Punjab. At this position he worked vigorously and made his ministry surpass all others in the subcontinent in terms of out output and performance. He increased literacy rate from 2.42 % to 6.71 % and enhanced the reserve seats for the Muslims in Government College Lahore and King Edwards Medical College Lahore. He allocated Muslims’ quotas for the first time in Provincial Civil Services.

He started an all-out campaign for the replacement of Separate Electorates by joint electorates.

These measures gave a great boost to the Muslims for it became easier for them to compete with Hindu fellow-students and show their intellectual and mental capabilities at the time when the Muslim League was absorbed in Khilafat Movement and other affairs, having no concern with the Indo-Pak subcontinent.

In this atmosphere he revived the Punjab Provincial League. He invited the All-India Muslim League to hold its session in Lahore on 25-26 May 1924. Being presided by Muhammad Ali Jinnah this session passed a comprehensive resolution that marked a far-reaching change in the political goal of the Indian Muslims. Stress was made that “no majority shall be reduced to a minority or even an equality”. This was to ensure that Muslim majorities should remain unaffected in Muslim majority areas. There was also a demand of placing N.W.F.P. in all respects in a position of equality with the other major provinces of India. All the demands were later on elaborated and amalgamated into Jinnah’s fourteen points.

He was an advocate of the idea of the communal harmony in India and to give practical shape to his theory, he founded the Punjab National Unionist Party is commonly known as the Unionist party in 1926. This was a combination of all Indian communities in including Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims, as membership was open for all the communities. Although the party, as critics pointed out, turned out to be the party of landlords in Punjab aiming to defend their interests, with a clear majority of Muslims,

Fazl-i-Husain aimed at dominating the Legislative Council. In 1930 he was certainly one of the ablest brains of India to be elected as Viceroy Executive Councilor. He played an important role in all-India affairs, especially those, which went in favor of the Muslims. At least 25 % of all government vacancies were reserved for Muslims.

According to Coatman, Director of Information, Government of India, Sir Fazl-i-Hussain was ‘a man of inflexible will and immutable purpose, with a mind like a diamond which can cut its way through anything.’

He was, no doubt, the first man who not only bravely faced the vicious propaganda of Hindu press and legislators, but also had a showdown with English bureaucracy and won a good deal of laurels.

Iqbal described him as a true patriot of the Punjab. Even the Quaid had great respect for him and in one of his letters he wrote to him: “We want a man of your caliber and experience.”

His political activism was, indeed, selfless and free from individual favoritism in giving the Muslims a new sense of confidence and pride that in the long run paved the way for an independent sovereign state for the Muslims of the subcontinent.

Mian Fazl-i-Husain was undoubtedly the most talented Muslim, who ever served on the Viceroy’s Executive Council, but due to his deteriorating health, he died on July 09, 1936.

How the British destroyed education in Punjab.

According to British Writer’s Publication in 1882 by G.W. Leitner, Punjab was one of the Most Educated Places in The World Before the British Arrived and took over in 1849.

The notion that with the fall of the Sikhs in 1849 the British East India Company ushered in the modern age in the Punjab, especially in Lahore, is one that we need to revisit. What went wrong, and remained wrong subsequently, is a subject that we all need to reconsider.

When the Lahore Khalsa Darbar collapsed, the EIC, thanks mainly to the Lawrence brothers, set about trying to win over the Punjabis. There was a cogent reason for this. The EIC, after a survey, discovered that education in Lahore, and the Punjab, was far superior to the education the British had introduced all over `conquered India`. In Lahore alone, there were 18 formal schools for girls besides specialist schools for technical training, languages, mathematics and logic, let alone specialized schools for the three major religions, they are being Islam, Hinduism and Sikhism. There were craft schools specializing in miniature painting, sketching, drafting, architecture and calligraphy.

The Company concluded that the Punjabis were years ahead in the field of education than the so-called `enlightened` Europeans. Every village in the Punjab, through the Tehsilar, had an ample supply of the Punjabi `Qaida`, which was compulsory for females. Thus, almost every Punjabi woman was literate in the sense that she could read and write the `lundee` form of Gurmukhi. To overcome this, and yet keep the Punjabis `in line`, a deliberate campaign to burn all Punjabi `Qaida` was planned. The events of 1857 provided them this opportunity, even though it was because of the `loyalty and sacrifices` of the Punjabis that the British regained India.

But how did the British rulers, now formally under the Crown after the EIC was dislodged after becoming bankrupt because of the expense incurred in 1857, gauge the situation? Here we have an amazing book from the legendary G.W. Leitner, the founder of Government College, Lahore, and the Punjab University and undoubtedly one of the world`s greatest ever linguist, who studied `Indigenous Education in the Punjab` in amazing detail in 1882. His conclusions make much better sense today, for they were ignored by the British during the years of their rule. Not that we today care for what the great man said then, yet it seems sensible to bring the matter to our readers` attention.

In the `Introduction` to his original 1882 publication, he starts off by stating: “… in spite of the best intentions, the most public-spirited officers, and a generous Government that had the benefit of the traditions of others provinces, the true education of the Punjab was crippled, checked and nearly destroyed our system stands convicted of worse than official failure”. The Punjab has this tradition whereby the “most unscrupulous chief, the avaricious money-lender, and even the freebooter, vied with the small land-owner in making peace with his conscience by founding schools and rewarding the learned. There is not a mosque, a temple, a dharmsala that had not a school attached to it”.

This network the British set out to destroy. In the carnage of revenge that followed 1857, the British made it a special effort to search every house of a village and to burn every book. Even in the secular schools of Lahore which used Persian or `lundee` as the medium of instruction, books formed the major bonfire than the British troops `cleansed` the area. Leitner claims that before 1857 the Punjab had an estimated computation as he called it, 330,000 pupils learning “all the sciences in Arabic and Sanskrit schools and colleges, as well as Oriental literature, Oriental law, Logic, Philosophy and Medicine were taught to the highest standard”. Leitner claimed that after the events of 1857 the Punjab, by 1880, had, again a computed estimation, just 190,000 pupils. He says an entire tradition, far superior to what Europe had to offer, was destroyed.

To explain his claim, Leitner quotes from the Punjab Administration Report for 1849-51, paragraph 377: “The Musalman schools are nearly all connected with the village mosque, where the land is rent-free, the endowments are secular and religious to support temples, mosques, schools, village-inns more of a monastic character”. An extract of report No. 335, 6th July, 1857, reaches the conclusion: “That elementary, and sometimes higher, oriental classical and vernacular education was more widespread in the Punjab before annexation than it is now”. The report concludes that the events of 1857 destroyed the huge endowments that kept this `magnificent educational system intact`.

Here an amazing table brings the assertions of Dr. Leitner to the fore in his claim that the Punjab, and especially Lahore, was better off educationally in the days of Maharajah Ranjit Singh than in the British days before 1882, when his research was published. It shows that the total revenue collected by Ranjit Singh in his last years, say 1838-9 as equalling 1.85 million pounds. The British managed 1.45 million pounds. Then comes the stunner. “The Sikh ruler, as a percentage, spent more on education than the East India Company from the revenues collected.”

In the Lahore District report of 1860, we see that it had 576 formal schools where 4,225 scholars taught. This being the case, if Lahore had so many scholars (teachers) in the year 2010, it could again become a `first world` educational city and district. Dr. Leitner provides still more statistics. He says 41.3 per cent learn the Quran, 37.0 per cent learn Persian and Urdu, 8 per cent learn Nagri, 6.7 per cent learn Gurmukhi and 7 per cent learn Hindi or debased Nagri. “The teachers are all paid in grain by the local landlords, who also send in daily rations.” Special mention has been made of the extra amounts of grain sent to teachers in Sialkot. This probably explains the qualitative edge that Sialkot education has always maintained. Its manifestations in Iqbal and Faiz can easily be seen.

It would be of interest for us today to understand the schools of Lahore of those days. Schools opened from 7am and closed at midday. In no case was a class allowed to exceed 50 pupils. If any report of this number came forward, the `Subedar` would send soldiers to arrest the teacher for trying to `destroy the future of our children`. Imagine! Can we ever imagine such care and love today.

Inside the walled city all the schools have been described in great detail. For example the Kashmiri Bazaar Mosque School had a teacher by the name of Allah Jewaya who taught the Quran and all subjects in Arabic. The Kucha Chabaksawaran School had a teacher by the name of Muhammad Abdul Aziz who taught in Persian and Arabic. In the nearby mosque of Faizullah, the teacher was Mahmood the Eunuch, who excelled in Persian and Arabic, and taught pupils how to learn the Quran by heart. In the advanced Arabic school in the Anarkali Mosque taught Maulvi Nur Ahmed, who taught grammar, logic, Muslim law and mathematics. In Suttar Mandi School taught Pandit Gauri Shankar, who taught mathematics, logic, medicine and Puran literature.

Punjabi ruler Ranjit Singh battles in Afghanistan.

Not all the armies that invaded Afghanistan were defeated. Around 180 years ago a Punjabi ruler Ranjit Singh (1799-1839) and his brilliant commander Hari Singh Nalwa defeated the Afghans and the tribes of the Khyber Pass area, in the process securing Punjab's northwest border. Had it not been for Ranjit Singh, Peshawar and the northwest frontier provinces of Punjab would have been part of Afghanistan today.

But first a flashback: Eastern Afghanistan had always been a part of Punjab; it was called Gandhar (modern Kandahar), a vibrant province that gave us excellent art, architecture, literature and scientific knowledge – a world far removed from today’s Taliban infested badlands.

It was a Punjab province until 1735 when Nadir Shah of Iran, emboldened by the lack of strong central authority in Punjab, ransacked Delhi and everything on the way. This was a highly opportunistic and reckless act because for the past 25 centuries, Punjab and Iran had respected each other’s borders, and though always a bit nervous of each other, the two empires never tried to subvert each other. Nadir Shah annexed the Eastern Afghanistan and asked the Punjabis to forget about ever getting it back.

However, Ranjit Singh was not prepared to play according to the Persian script. Nadir Shah’s successor, Ahmad Shah Abdali, had been launched repeated raids into Punjab and Delhi. To check this Ranjit Singh decided to build a modern and powerful army with the employment of Frenchmen, Italians, Greeks, Russians, Germans and Austrians. Two of the foreign officers who entered the Maharaja’s service, Ventura and Allard, had served under Napoleon. Says historian Shiv Kumar Gupta: “All these officers were basically engaged by Ranjit Singh for modernization of his troops. He never put them in supreme command.”

After conquering Multan, Punjab, in 1818 and Kashmir in 1819, Ranjit Singh led his legions across the Indus and took the Afghan strongholds of Dera Ghazi Khan in 1820 and Dera Ismail Khan in 1821. Alarmed, the Afghans called for a jihad under the leadership of Azim Khan Burkazi, the ruler of Kabul. A big Afghan army collected on the banks of the Kabul River but Ranjit Singh won a decisive victory in 1823. Peshawar was subdued in 1834.

The Afghans, especially the Pathans, considered themselves superior to the Punjabis. They even looked down upon Punjabi Muslims and contemptuously referred to them as Hindko. According to historian Kirpal Singh, the reason for this was that the pride of the Afghans and Pathans was pricked for the first time as they had been defeated by people whom they considered infidels.

So how did Ranjit Singh manage to conquer such fierce mountain people? Mainly by using a blend of sustained aggression latter smoothened by Punjabi magnanimity. His biggest weapon was the scourge of the Afghans – Nalwa, who in one battle defeated 20,000 Pathans. To defeat the cunning and fierce Pathans on their treacherous home terrain was no small feat, but to do that with only 7000 men was the stuff of legend.

Indeed, Nalwa had become a legend. He realized that to dominate the warlike tribes, the Punjabis had to give them the same treatment the Afghans had given the Punjabis in the past. Says Kirpal Singh, “Nalwa set up a very strong administration in the Peshawar valley. Because the Yusafzais were the most violent tribe, he levied a cess on every Yusafzai household. This cess was to be collected in cash or in kind. For its realization, personal household property could be appropriated. There was scarcely a village that was not burnt. Part of the city of Peshawar was burnt and the residence of the governor near Kabul was razed to the ground. In such awe were his visitations held that Nalwa’s name was used by Afghan mothers as a term of fright to hush their unruly children.”

Though the spell of Afghan supremacy was broken, the region predominantly populated by turbulent Pathan tribes could not be securely held unless a large army was permanently stationed there. A force of 12,000 men was posted with Nalwa to quell any sign of turbulence and to realize the revenue.

Ranjit Singh ensured that the Afghans never again became a threat to Punjab. The wild tribes of Swat and Khyber were also tamed.

Foreign Minister of Mahārājā Raṇjīt Siṅgh Fakir Aziz.

Fakir Azizuddin was a Muslim chief minister in Maharaja Ranjit Singh's government dealing with primarily with the "foreign ministry" although he had over time dealt with other departments like revenue collection, etc.

Fakir Azizuddin was a prominent and a senior member of Maharaja Ranjit Singh's team and he served in government with his two other brothers. It is recorded that he was a Punjabi Muslim and was one of the Maharaja's most favorite ministers; they often took afternoon walks together through Lahore.

He was the eldest son of Hakīm Ghulām Mohy ud-Dīn and had two brothers, Nūr ud-Dīn and Imām ud-Dīn. Both had senior military posts in the empire. He was apprenticed as a physician, and was originally known by the title Hakīm (physician). Later in life he adopted the title Fakir (beggar), as a mark of humility, that title appearing in British correspondence after 1826.

His first contact with Maharaja Ranjit Singh was as a physician. The Maharaja was impressed by his medical skill and proficiency in languages – Arabic, Persian and English – and granted him a jagir and a position at court. His first major assignment was to assist the Maharaja in the negotiations with the British which led to the Treaty of Amritsar, 1809. Between 1810 and 1838 there followed a great number of diplomatic assignments and tasks as an interpreter. The Maharaja had complete trust in him and rewarded him with honours and jagirs.

Aziz ud-Din continued in the service of the Sikh Empire after the death of Ranjit Singh. In December 1839 he represented Maharaja Kharak Singh on a mission to the British Governor-General, Lord Auckland. In 1842, on behalf of Maharaja Sher Singh, he welcomed the new Governor-General, Lord Ellenborough, at Firozpur. He remained scrupulously aloof from the factional intrigues which had overtaken the Empire after Ranjit Singh`s death.

Saddened at the turn events had taken and by the death of two of his sons, he died in Lahore on 3 December 1845.

Political Players of Top 10 Communities of Punjab.

Punjab ki national assembly mein 150 seats hain Jin mein say approximately;

80 seats Jat, Rajput aur Arain communities k political players hasil kartay hain.

19 seats Awan, Kashmiri aur Sheikh communities k political players hasil kartay hain.

19 seats Syed aur Qureshi communities k political players hasil kartay hain.

17 seats Baloch aur Pathan communities k political players hasil kartay hain.

80+19+19+17=135 seats Punjab ki 10 communities k political players hasil kartay hain.

Jub k 15 seats Punjab ki 9 communities; Gujjar, Abbasi, Ansari, Dogar, Mughal, Kakkezai, Mayo, Khatter, Lahr communities k political players hasil kartay hain.

2008 k election k motabaq;

1. Jat community k 36% political players ki support PPP ko, 36% political players ki support PMLQ ko, 17% political players ki support PMLN ko hasil thi. Jub k 11% independent elect hoay.

2. Rajput community k 75% political players ki support PMLN ko, 15% political players ki support PPP ko, 5% political players ki support PMLQ ko hasil thi. Jub k 5% independent elect hoay.

3. Arain community k 63% political players ki support PMLN ko, 25% political players ki support PPP ko, 6% political players ki support PMLQ ko hasil thi. Jub k 6% independent elect hoay.

4. Syed community k 38% political players ki support PMLN ko, 38% political players ki support PPP ko, 24% political players ki support PMLQ ko hasil thi.

5. Baloch community k 46% political players ki support PPP ko, 27% political players ki support PMLQ ko, 18% political players ki support PMLN ko hasil thi. Jub k 9% independent elect hoay.

6. Qureshi community k 66% political players ki support PPP ko, 17% political players ki support PMLQ ko, 17% political players ki support PMLN ko hasil thi.

7. Awan community k 50% political players ki support PMLN ko, 25% political players ki support PMLQ ko, 12.5% political players ki support PPP ko hasil thi. Jub k 12.5% independent elect hoay.

8. Kashmiri community k 100% political players ki support PMLN ko, 0% political players ki support PPP ko, 0% political players ki support PMLQ ko hasil thi.

9. Pathan community k 34% political players ki support PPP ko, 16% political players ki support PMLQ ko, 16% political players ki support PMLF ko, 0% political players ki support PMLN ko hasil thi. 34% independent elect hoay.

10. Sheikh community k 60% political players ki support PMLN ko, 20% political players ki support PPP ko, 20% political players ki support PMLQ ko hasil thi.

Note:- Political players jo communities hain, in communities k political players nay he political players rehna hy.

Pehlay PMLN, PPP aur PMLQ Punjab mein Top 3 political parties thein laykun ab PTI k aanay k baad;

a. Punjab mein Top 3 political parties PMLN. PTI, PPP hon gey.

b. PTI kon kon c communities k political players ko apnay sath laynay mein kaamyaab hogi?

c. PMLN ka leader Kashmiri background Punjabi hy. PTI ka leader Pathan background Punjabi hy. PPP ka leader Sindhi hy.

c. PTI k Punjab ki Top 10 politically potential communities mein say political players engage kar laynay say kiss political party ko nuqsaan hoga?

d. Kya 2018 k election mein kissi Jat, Rajput ya Arain ki leadership mein nai political party saamnay aa sakti hy?

Wednesday, 9 December 2015

How Muslim League Defeated Unionist in Punjab?

The elections in Britain in July 1945 brought the Labour party into power. Congress circles expected quick action from the new government, but the Labour's desire to settle the Indian problem did not necessarily mean that they were in any hurry to end the empire. It did, however, accept the recommendation of a Governor's Conference held in Delhi on 1-2 August that elections to the provincial and central legislatures should be held in the coming winter: the Governors agreed unanimously that an official government could not solve post-war problems.

On 21 August Wavell announced that the elections would take place. What gave the elections immense significance was Attlee's statement in Parliament on 11 September; that the 'broad definition of British policy contained in the Declaration of 1942. . . stands in all its fullness and purpose'. Wavell would undertake discussions with new representatives in the provincial legislatures to ascertain whether it was acceptable or whether some alternative or modified scheme would be preferable. Their election would be followed by positive steps to set up a constituent assembly which would frame a new constitution. Obviously, the imminence of the British departure was clear to all parties and sections of public opinion, though the British government had not fixed a date for it, or even declared it to be an immediate aim of policy.

If the Cripps offer stood as the basis of British policy, it meant that the right of provinces to opt out of an Indian Union stood with it. For Jinnah, it was necessary, if he had any hope of achieving a sovereign Pakistan, to get a majority in the legislatures in the Muslim majority provinces. Wavell knew that Jinnah attached 'more importance to the number of seats the League can win both in the Central Assembly and in the Provincial Assemblies than to the ability of the League to form Ministries in the Muslim majority provinces.' The League must also win the support of the Muslim masses, especially in the Punjab and Bengal, where a plebiscite might eventually be necessary to decide the case for Pakistan. Thus, the 'immediate and paramount issues' before Jinnah were Pakistan and to make good the League's claim to represent the Muslims of India.

Jinnah's task was not easy. The League organization in most places was poor; the leaders were mostly men of some social standing and did not bother themselves with mass contacts and local committees. Mamdot, for example, had not allowed mass contact committees on his estate. In the NWFP, the League was divided and lacked funds. Aurangzeb stood discredited because of the corrupt methods he had used to retain himself in power. In Sind, the provincial League was riven by factions. In Bengal, the tussle between Nazimuddin and Suhrawardy culminated in the former not being given the League ticket for the elections.

Nevertheless, Jinnah appears to have been able to assert his authority over the provincial Leagues. The Central Parliamentary Board of the League had the final say in the selection of candidates for the provincial and central legislatures. In Sind, G.M. Syed's group were not given any tickets, which stirred them to put up their own candidates against Jinnah's in every constituency. [Statesman 3, 5 and 9 January 1946 and 1 February 1946. That the majority of Syed's candidates were defeated was a personal triumph for Jinnah.] Jinnah got his way in Punjab as well. The provincial League was divided; and most provincial Leaguers did not want Firoz Khan Noon, who had resigned from the Viceroy's executive in October to contest the elections in the Punjab, to stand as the League's candidate for Rawalpindi. They regarded him as an outsider and were afraid that he would take the credit for the League's success in the Punjab. That he was nevertheless allowed to contest from Rawalpindi at Jinnah's bidding points to the increasing authority Jinnah had come to exercise over the provincial League since the break with Khizar Hayat in June 1944.

That the AIML was able for the first time to have the final say in the selection of candidates suggests that it was expanding its own organization instead of relying entirely on provincial Muslim Leagues or parties; and that it also had its own provincial machinery. In the Punjab, for example, the League's Committee of Action had started propaganda to popularize the party even before Khizar's expulsion from it. Permanent paid workers were employed to carry out propaganda in the rural area, and a center was set up in Lahore to train volunteers and to employ members of the Punjab Muslim Students Federation during their vacations. The Committee of Action moved its office to Lahore in May 1944 and Liaqat Ali Khan, then General Secretary of the League, supervised the organization of propaganda, which included preaching in mosques. The stake the AIML had in the province is illustrated by the fact that it donated half the money for the party's activities in the Punjab; the rest was raised by the provincial League. It was when Jinnah had his own machinery in the provinces, that "Pakistan" was popularized. It could be used to brand provincial Muslim politicians who were lukewarm or opposed to it as traitors to Islam, and it could suggest that the League was the only party offering a guarantee of political security and opportunity at the all-India level; where decisions on the political future of India would be taken.

In the Punjab, the brunt of the League's attack was directed against the Unionists. The party had ruled the province since 1920, and had successfully countered the influence of both the Congress and the Muslim League. It was not easy for the League to fight through the maze of power and influence that the Unionists had built up over the last twenty odd years. Writing in Dawn on 2 September, a League sympathizer observed that Panchayat officers in most cases were nominees or relatives of Unionist MLAs. The Unionists represented the jagirdars, honorary magistrates and government grantees. Therefore, the bureaucracy and aristocracy were dependent on each other, and their influence over the peasants had been demonstrated in the elections of 1937. The success of the League would not come from working in the top strata of the Punjab Muslims alone. The League should work from the bottom upwards. The villager must be contracted(sic) by mass propaganda. The Congress was successful in the U.P. Not because it won over the landlords but, because it made the peasantry class conscious.'

It was in this tactic that the cry of Pakistan could be made most effective. The Punjab League's election manifesto was believed to have been drawn up by G. Adhikari, a Communist leader, and touched up by Jinnah. [FR for Punjab for the second half of November 1944, HP file no. 18/11/44 and Civil and Military Gazette, 8 November 1944]. 

In December 1944, Muslim Leaguers in the province were being told to associate with Communists to draw on their supporters. [FR for Punjab for first half of December 1944, HP file no. 18/12/44]. 

Since 1944, the Communists themselves had decided to infiltrate the Congress, the League and the Akalis and were working among the Muslim masses with "Pakistan" as their slogan, which may be taken as an indication of its popular appeal. 

The Communist contribution to the League's victory in the elections cannot yet be ascertained from the material available. Not that their part in drawing up the League's manifesto implies any significant Communist or radical influence within the League. Landlords were the largest single group within the province and all India Leagues, though a struggle between them and more radical elements may have been taking place in the party. But if the manifesto was drawn up by them with Jinnah's knowledge, it shows the lengths to which he was prepared to go to win the majority of Muslim votes in the Punjab and to out the Unionists.

The Unionists-and their British supporters-were attacked on any pretext which presented itself. The Unionist decision not to contest any seat for the Central Assembly gave rise to the League's argument that if the central elections were beyond their scope of work, their demand for a seat in the Viceroy's executive was also not within their sphere of action. Dawn editorialized about the disreputable caucus known as the Unionist Ministry of the Punjab. That reactionary junta who has long fattened on the ignorance of the Punjab masses and traded on the latter's dread of the bureaucracy.  Most shamefully servile of all Indian Ministries, the Khizar Hayat Cabinet had learned to depend upon the support of permanent officials through whom it bestowed patronage for its own nefarious political and personal ends.

Wavell's favorable reference to the Unionists even induced Jinnah to proclaim: 'When we fight for Pakistan we are fighting against the British and not against the Hindus.' Muslim League alleged official interference in favour of the Unionists and the provincial League passed a resolution demanding the dismissal of the ministry and the 'liquidation' of bureaucratic machinery. Glancy declined a demand by the provincial League to issue a communiqué assuring voters that the provincial election would be entirely free from official interference. This only intensified attacks on the Unionists and the British by the Muslim League.

Evidence of official interference and pressure comes from both League and British sources. Campaigning in Mamdot's constituency, a League worker asked Jinnah for one lakh rupees from the League's central fund as official pressure was 'too much'. The British Deputy Commissioner in Attock wrote to his parents that Khizar Hayat was sympathetic to his application for leave.

'Actually, certain interested parties-which I think includes the premier-want me to get out of Attock as I am not prepared to swing the Elections for the Unionist Party (which is the party in power).'

Again, the Deputy Commissioner of Lyallpur reported that 'nearly 80 per cent' of the subordinate Muslim staff, both revenue and District Board had active League sympathies and a large number of them had been used as instruments by the League for submitting false and forged applications of Muslim League voters. Official interference inspite of Government instructions regarding neutrality in the matter 'is largely on the side of the League rather than the Unionist Party.' As it turned out, the League achieved its greatest victories in constituencies where it had made the strongest allegations of official interference. Earlier, Glancy expressed the view that the Unionists suffered 'at least as much' as any other party from the activities of officials who were not impartial.

The defection of 30 Muslim Unionists to the League since 1944 made the League's task easier, but it did not imply a walkover for the League in the provincial elections. The ex-Unionists included Daultana, Mamdot, and Ghazanfar Ali, all big landlords. At the beginning of October 1945, Major Mumtaz Tiwana, the biggest Tiwana landowner and one of the pillars of the Tiwana tribe, joined the League. He was followed by Firoz Khan Noon, who resigned from the Viceroy's Council to work for the League and to counter the influence of Khizar, who was his cousin. Families were divided-would Muslims vote for Khizar or Mumtaz? And who would win when two candidates of great social and religious influence were pitted against each other-for example, Mustafa Shah Jilani and his Unionist opponent, Makhdum Murid Husain Qureshi? The Qureshis claimed descent from the Muslim saint Bahauddin, the hereditary guardian of the shrines of Bahauddin, who was said to have descended lineally from Hasham, the grandfather of the Prophet. One of his brothers was a Sajjad[Sajjda] Nashin; Murid Husain himself was President of the Zamindara League. The Jilanis came from Jilan in Persia, had enjoyed a grant of Rs. 12,5000 from the Mughals, and were regarded as one of the most influential families in Multan. Mamdot was opposed by Mohammed Ghulam Sarwar, who belonged to an important landowning family of Ferozepur district, and was also a pir. The influence of Daultana in Multan was offset by Major Ashiq Husain, regarded by his followers as a hereditary saint.

With many men of influence pitted as candidates against each other, social influence could not have been the decisive factor in the League's win in the Punjab in 1946. It may have counted where a candidate of influence was set up against one with less influence or a political unknown. But it must also be remembered that the Punjab was not a province of many big landlords-most of the landed classes in the province comprised of small peasant proprietors. It was to them the League had addressed its appeal since November 1944. But it was not before November 1945 that the provincial League set up branches in tehsils. The League's entry into the villages, then, occurred at a very late stage; only three months before the polling for the provincial elections took place in the Punjab.

Even so, the organization of the League was very much better than that of the Unionists. The calm in the Unionist headquarters in Lahore was explained by the secretary of the Unionist Party thus:

'We are a rural party. . . . We do not believe in public meetings. . . . Our men go to villages and talk to local notables who wield influence over voters. They explain to them the work we have done and the benefits our legislation has conferred on peasants. Villagers, we know, will follow them.'

His remarks accounted for the difference in the propaganda technique of the two parties. The League held forty to fifty meetings a day all over the province. The Unionist Party's average was 'not even one a day'. Almost a statement a day was issued from the League office in Lahore, criticizing the government or explaining their stand on one thing to another. Ghazanfar Ali used to preside over a daily round table conference with a European cartoonist and a number of journalists working for the League.

It was in the countryside that the issue was to be decided, for only 12 of the 85 Muslim seats were allotted to the urban areas. The game was tough; at the beginning of February 1946, the League and the Unionists were reportedly running neck and neck in the villages. In some constituencies a voter was alleged to be richer by almost half a year's income if he pledged his vote. It was estimated that over 15 crores had changed hands during the elections, which were certainly not a poor man's show. In some constituencies they cost 7 to 10 lakhs of rupees. There was cases of whole villages pledging themselves to the highest bidder.[Civil and Military Gazette, 8 February 1946]. Paper, petrol and transport played an exceptionally important part in the Punjab elections, and prices of buses soared. Most of the 100 trucks ordered by the League in December 1945 were used in the Punjab to cart their potential voters from distant villages to polling booths. The Statesman commented that the success or failure of a candidate could depend on the ability to provide transport. 'This is particularly true of rural areas where promise of a joyride is all the price one need pay for a voter.'

Students, politicians, and ulema carried out religious propaganda for the League. Politicians would often preach in mosques after the Friday prayers. Students had earlier campaigned against Unionists who had cooperated with the National Defence Council in 1941. Aligarh Muslim University started a special election training camp for students in August 1945, and more than one thousand students worked for the League in the Punjab and Sind alone. Student leaders were in constant touch with Jinnah. Their youthful idealism may have made them more reliable than some party politicians as propagandists for the League. Ali Ahmad Faziel, a League worker writing in Dawn, was especially keen that college students be trained as party workers in different areas. The League would provide at least one trained worker for every 1000 voters; therefore at least 800 chief workers would have to be trained, and every constituency was to have 'at least' 12 such workers. A minimum of six of these workers should belong to the constituency in which they would campaign for the League, and in addition an equal number of outside workers. The headquarters of the constituency would act as the link between the provincial committees and individual field workers. They would be assisted in everyday affairs by the League's National Guard. Muslim League newspapers put students in the 'vanguard' of the League's election campaign in the Punjab. Daultana declared that in many districts in Multan division, student workers had been able to turn the tide in favour of the League.

Now that the League was expanding its organization into the countryside, it was able to exploit the religious appeal of Pakistan effectively, and its propaganda was based on the identification of Pakistan with Islam. For example, Firoz Khan Noon openly preached that a vote cast for the League was a vote in favour of the Prophet.[Glancy to Wavell, 27 December 1945, L/P&J/5/248]. Omar Ali Siddiqi, leader of the Aligarh Election Delegation to the Punjab declared that 'the battle of the Karbala is going to be fought again in this land of the five rivers.' A poster issued in Urdu over the signature of Raja Khair Mehdi Khan, the League candidate in Jhelum district, asked Muslims to choose between 'Din' and 'Dunya'; in the 'battle of righteousness and falsehood.'
  
Din Dunya
On one side is your belief in On the other side you are 
the Almighty and your con- offered squares and jagirs
science
Righteousness and faithful- The other side has to offer
nes are on one side Lambardaris and Zaildaris
One side is the rightful On the other side is Sufedposhi
cause
One side has Pakistan for The other has Kufristan
you (reign of infidels)
On the one side is the prob- As opposed to this there is
lem of saving Muslims from only consideration of per-
slavery of Hindus sonal prestige of one man
On one side you have to On the other is Baldev
bring together all those who Singh and Khizar Hyat
recide the Kalima(the basis
of Islam)
On the one side is the con- On the other side is the
sideration of the unity and Danda(big stick) of
brotherhood of all Muslims bureaucracy and terror of
officialdom
One the one side are the lov- On the other are the admir-
ers of Muslim League and ers of Congress and Union-
Pakistan ists
On the one side is the hon- On the other is the Gover-
our of the Green Banner ment of Khizar Ministry

For the sake of your religion, you have now to decide in the light of your strength of faith, to vote for ..'[Translation enclosed in Glancy to Wavell, 28 February 1946, L/P&J/5/249, italics of non-English words by author]

Ulema from UP, Punjab, Bengal and Sind and local pirs threatened Muslims with excommunication which included a refusal to allow their dead to be buried in Muslim graveyards and a threat to debar them from joining in mass Muslim prayers, if they did not vote for the League. Those who opposed the League were denounced as infidels, and copies of the Holy Quran were carried around 'as an emblem peculiar to the Muslim league.'

The religious appeal of Pakistan was admitted by Khizar Hayat when he declared that the Unionists were for Pakistan; that Muslims would be voting for Pakistan whether they voted for a Muslim League candidate or a Muslim Unionist. The banner flown on the election camps of the Unionists and League were an identical green, bearing the Muslim legend of the Crescent. Khizar Hayat was on the defensive and lacked conviction in adding that intercommunal cooperation was necessary in Punjab. The Unionists argued that the crucial electoral issue for voters was not Pakistan, to which the Unionists were already committed; the choice was between chaos, disorder and communal bitterness on the one side, which is the only prospect held out by the Muslim League group, and a stable and efficient administration offered by the Unionists in the interests of the masses to which the majority of the Muslims of the province belong.'

The election manifesto of the Unionist Party stressed the economic achievements of the ministry, including the reduction of the agriculturist debt by two crores of rupees. Provincial autonomy, complete independence, free and compulsory primary education for the poor, a reduction in military expenditure were the party's aims. But the economic achievements of the Unionists seem to have had little influence on the Punjabi Muslim voter in 1946.

That Khizar's Pakistan, implying intercommunal cooperation, was rejected so decisively by the Muslim voter points to the success of the communal propaganda of the League and to the appeal of a communal Pakistan for Muslims. But though the cry for Pakistan had now become the most successful means of politicizing the Muslim masses, it is by no means clear what they understood by it. Statements by the Punjab Leaguers based precisely on Jinnah's definition of Pakistan as a sovereign state[See, for example, Jinnah's reply to Patel in Statesman, 19 November 1945] are hard to find, as are statements opposed to it or even a discussion on Pakistan as a part of a federation. To most Leaguers in 1945-6, Pakistan appears to have stood for some sort of general salvation from Hindu domination and symbolized and[sic] Islamic revival in India.

What counted most in the League's victory in the Punjab in 1945-6? The great effort it made; the fact that for the first time the League's organization had reached down to contact the Muslim voter, partly accounted for its win. The appeal was essentially religious and attempted to convince Muslims of the benefits of Pakistan. Propagandists were directed when they visited a village to: 'Find out its social problems and difficulties to tell them [the villagers] that the main cause of their problems was the Unionists[and] give them the solution-Pakistan'. Soldiers were told that the Unionists had not done anything for them after the war. 

For the students who campaigned for the League, Pakistan held out the promise of the resurgence of Islam-'our aim is essentially to reorient Islam in the modern world, purge our ranks of the reactionary Muslim Church and to free ourselves from economic and political bondage'.[Translation of pamphlet issued by the election board of the Punjab Muslim Students Federation, quoted by Talbot, 'The 1946 Punjab Elections'. Modern Asian Studies, 14,1, 1980, p. 75]. 

These seemed a far cry from the assurance given by Jinnah to the Pir of Manki Sharif in November 1945 that Pakistan would be based on the laws of the Quran in which shariat would be established,[Sayeed, Pakistan:The formative Phase, p. 208] but it showed that Pakistan could mean, as it was intended to mean, all things to all men. S.E.Abbott, then Secretary to Khizar, attributed the League's victory to the Muslim belief in the inevitability of Pakistan. 

The League had presented the elections as a plebiscite for Pakistan. The claim had not been contradicted by the British, who would actually transfer or confer power. To that extent, their silence on the subject also contributed to the League's victory.

In Bengal, the League's influence in urban areas had been rising since its coalition with Huq in 1937. After provincial Leaguers fell out with Huq in 1941, they had organized demonstrations against him in several towns of the province. The popularity of the League in urban Bengal was evident by 1944, when Huq's Muslim candidates lost every seat in the elections to the Calcutta Corporation to the League. Radical Leaguers like Suhrawardy built up a base among Muslim labour during the League's tenure in power from 1943-5. Involved in ministerial politicking, Huq had gradually lost the rural base which had swept him into power in 1937. In 1946, Bengal League candidates were personally selected by Suhrawardy and approved of by Jinnah. "Pakistan" as Bengal Leaguers presented it to their voters lead to prosperity for backward Muslims. At a Bengal League conference, Liaqat Ali Khan promised the abolition of zamindari without compensation-a promise which could have only won the League support of the poor Muslim peasantry of Bengal. But were Bengal Leaguers, thinking of the sovereign Pakistan of Jinnah's conception? It seems unlikely. Ispahani, one of Jinnah's most loyal lieutenants in Bengal, told the Governor in January 1946 that Muslims needed opportunities for self-advancement, administratively and otherwise, and Casey's 'definite impression' was that adequate safeguards would be acceptable to the Muslims. Ispahani said he realized very well that the day of small states was past, and that if the British imposed an interim government of India, which had adequate safeguards for the Muslims, it would be accepted.

The League's success in Bengal and Sind can be partly accounted for by the fact that it did not face any serious, organized opposition in these provinces. Huq's party was in disarray; in Sind, no Muslim stood on the Congress ticket as this would have been fatal for any chances of victory. The Congress lacked the money and organization required to contest Muslim seats in every province. The release of Congress prisoners less than three months before the elections added to their difficulties and large amounts of money were needed in the Muslim majority provinces, especially in the Punjab and Bengal, which, for the Congress, 'held the key position' in the election. But it was in these two provinces that the provincial Congress groups were riven by factions, and organizational work never really got under way. [Azad to Patel, 21 October 1945, Patel to Prafulla Ghosh, 26 October 1945.]

Congress strategy in Muslim constituencies sometimes confounded its own supporters. For example, in Sind the Congress negotiated with the League for a coalition, even as it was fighting the League in other provinces. Azad's offer to the League of a coalition in Sind 'came as a great surprise' to Congressmen in Punjab. Anti-League Muslims 'cannot understand these things, nor can the rest of us'.[B.S.Gilani to Patel, 10 February 1946] The Congress allied with Nationalist Muslims, Ahrars, Momins-indeed with any anti-League Muslim party. It carried out propaganda for Nationalist Muslims, and the League and the Congress vied with each other in the virulence of their appeals to religious loyalty. The Congress used Muslim divines in the UP and Bengal. League ministries during the war were condemned as the stronghold of the British. In Bengal, Nationalist Muslims alleged that one of the 'wonders' of the League ministry during the war was the 'man-made famine' of 1943. To this the League reported that Hindus, who were in a majority in the Viceroy's executive council, had refused to send food to Bengal and were therefore responsible for the famine. League newspapers published reports of Hindu volunteers donning Turkish caps while campaigning for Nationalist Muslims.

The League, however, had the whip-hand in Muslim religious propaganda against the Congress. The Morning News in Calcutta claimed that the Jamiat-ul-ulema-i-Hind, which campaigned for the Congress was working for Hindiat, while the Jammat-i-Islami, which supported the League, stood for Islamiat.[Morning News, 25 October 1945]. The Jammat-i-Islami accused the Jamiat-ul-ulema-i-Hind of making a distinction between religious and secular matters.

'They remembered the prayer, but they forgot the chain of armour donned by the Prophet Muhammed when he went forth to fight the unequal battle with the infidels... They misled the Muslims to the unworthy tenets of ahimsa.'

Its attempts to outdo the League in religious propaganda, without having a widespread popular base among Muslims, profited Congress little, and only contributed to the atmosphere of communal bitterness.

Only in the NWFP was the Congress successful in both Hindu and Muslim constituencies. Here, in spite of defection from the Congress to the League before the elections, the Congress was the better organized party. Aurangzeb stood discredited because of the undignified method he had used to remain in power and was not even given a League ticket. Although the Congress and their Red Shirt allies used the religious appeal(the tri-colour was marked with the Kalima), it was not this alone that won the election for the Congress. The Congress was successful in representing the League as a catspaw of the British. It appealed to the less well-to-do, over whom the Khans were losing their hold. Moreover, the provincial League was disorganized, and it was only on 10 December that a Committee of Action was set up. The fact that Mamdot was appointed as its convener suggest that the League found it difficult to get a reliable man from the province to head the committee.

All candidates in the NWFP attached importance to personal contacts with voters and visited individual houses or mohallas. Election officials reported a growing sense of political discipline in canvassing, addressing and organizing mass meetings. Appeals to tribal and sectional loyalties were made, but they may not have made much difference in a province where a Khan only had to declare his loyalty to the League, and his relatives would support the Congress. They would also give their tenants a free running, and it was 'a tenantry which had been primed that they would be allowed to take over the Land belonging to the Khan if the Congress came to power'. The election saw a fight more on ideological than on personal grounds. The League's charge that the Congress was using office to win votes was balanced by the fact that most Muslim officials had League sympathies, and even some British officers and their wives campaigned for the League. Pakistan did not have much appeal for the Pathans, because, according to Cunningham, they did not think they would be dominated by the Hindus or anyone else!

Nevertheless, the League did not fare so badly in the province, contesting all 33 Muslim seats and winning 15. It also won the special seats reserved for landholders, none of which was contested by the Congress. The Congress won 19 Muslim seats and lost 8. Anti-League parties secured 58.75 per cent of the total Muslim vote. The extent of the League's success in Muslim constituencies in 1945-6 can be gauged from the fact that it won 76 per cent of the total Muslim vote in India- a very far cry indeed from the 4.8 per cent it had obtained in 1937! Its achievements in the Punjab were remarkable; it defeated, and unseated, 57 Unionists in Muhammedan rural constituencies; the Congress in 9 rural constituencies and swept the Ahrars from 5 urban seats. The Unionists defeated the League in only 11 rural constituencies. With a total of 62 wins in rural areas, all 9 urban seats and both the women's seats, the League chalked up 73 seats in the Punjab legislature, and polled 65.10 per cent of the votes polled in Muslim constituencies.

In Bengal, it did even better, obtaining 83.6 per cent of the Muslim votes polled. The Krishak Praja party secured only 5.3 per cent, and the Jamiat-ul-ulema and Nationalist Muslims, both supported by the Congress, won 1.2 and 0.2 per cent of the Muslim votes polled.

The NWFP was the only province where the League failed to secure a majority of Muslim votes: anti-League parties obtained more than 58 per cent of the votes polled. Nevertheless, of the extent of the League's victory, and its appeal to Muslims, there was no doubt. The gains of the League clearly represented a turning of many Muslims from the essentially provincial concerns to rally behind the only Muslim party which would take care of their interests at the all-India level, in the bargaining for the spoils of the transfer of power. The League's success also represented a solidification and politicization of the Muslim religious community, a rallying to "Pakistan", but whether that meant the victory of Jinnah's conception of a sovereign state can perhaps be questioned.

With the election results out, there arose the question of the formation of governments in the provinces. In Bengal and Sind, the League had enough seats to form ministries, but in the Punjab it needed the support of 10 more members to obtain a majority in the legislature. Here the League offered 3 portfolios to the Sikhs if they would enter a Muslim League coalition.[Statesman, 26 February 1946] But Pakistan was the stumbling-block. The Sikhs objected to the League's insistence on Pakistan, to which the Muslim League leaders replies that the ministry came under the Act of 1935 and that all India issues did not come into question. The Sikhs retorted that there was no all India issue for them.[Civil and Military Gazette, 28 February 1946]. Negotiations between the League and the Congress failed because the League refused to enter into a coalition with any non-League Muslim groups.[Statesman, 6 and 9 March 1946]. This was in contrast to the years before 1945, when the AIML had not always been able to prevent provincial Leagues from coalescing with non-League Muslim parties. Jinnah's authority was now apparently sufficient to prevent such coalitions. Every candidate for the elections had been selected with his approval; their victory was therefore a personal triumph for him.

On 7 March, the Congress, Akalis, and the Unionists formed the Punjab Coalition Party, under the leadership of Khizar. The strength of the Coalition worked out to at least 10 more than that of the League. Glancy accordingly called on Khizar as leader of the coalition to form a ministry, despite the contention of Muslim League leaders that they represented the largest individual party.

Deprived of constitutional power, the League organized demonstrations against the Ministry. Muslim students were directed by provincial League leaders to demonstrate before Khizar's residence in Lahore. Communal feeling had been strengthened by an election fought on the slogan of Pakistan; and the Congress leaders advised Hindu students not to start counter-demonstrations; while the League demanded Glancy's dismissal. Local Muslim Leaguers were directed 'to organize the Muslim masses to prepare them for the determined will of the Mussalmans and a blot on the fair name of this Province'. The Congress was condemned for joining the coalition whom it had formerly derided as reactionaries. A coalition which included so small a percentage of Muslims was a strange anomaly in the Province, especially when the party which commanded a majority of the Muslim votes found no place in the government. It did not augur well for the future.