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 .
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