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Partitioning A Subcontinent

Partitioning A Subcontinent. Hindus, Muslims, and A British Empire. One of the main reasons why the British granted independence was, of course, the growing violence and nationalistic feeling in India

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Partitioning A Subcontinent

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  1. Partitioning A Subcontinent Hindus, Muslims, and A British Empire

  2. One of the main reasons why the British granted independence was, of course, the growing violence and nationalistic feeling in India • It was also quite apparent that Britain could no longer rule India without holding it by military force and producing a great deal of hard feeling internationally

  3. Britain could ill afford this after a world war of survival, World War II • The changing feeling at home was certainly a part of the decision to grant freedom • The most destructive of all wars had been fought to preserve the liberal and democratic world, and it seemed inconsistent for England to champion freedom in Europe and rule India by force of arms

  4. Hope that Hindus and Muslims might find a way of living together was doomed as early as 1937 when local governments formed by the Congress Party shut out Muslims in some of the provinces • At this time Muhammad Ali Jinnah (Muslim League president after 1934) became committed to the concept of a Muslim nation of Pakistan

  5. In March 1946, the government of Great Britain dispatched a three-man mission to bring about an immediate transfer of power in India, but the question of partition slowed down the process • That year rioting took place, in which Bengal and Bihar provinces alone suffered nearly 10,000 fatalities in six months • Finally the Congress Party agreed that no one group should be compelled to accept a constitution against its will and as expected, the Muslim majority voted for partition

  6. On August 15, 1947, India was granted independence and divided into two separate nations

  7. Pakistan consisted of two sections a thousand miles apart: West Pakistan (the Sind, the northwest frontier, Baluchistan, and the western part of the Punjab) and East Pakistan (the eastern part of Bengal plus the Sylhet district of Assam)

  8. National assets were divided on a ration of 82.5 to 17.5 in favor of India • Everything (from railroad equipment and the national debt to criminals, lunatics, and office furniture) had to be divided, and Pakistan received its share only after Gandhi insisted

  9. The transfer of people who were located in split areas caused the most trouble • Rioting and religious wars broke out in the Punjab, which had been divided right down the middle

  10. Approximately 12 million people moved (often fled) from one country to another, and estimates place the number of deaths through violence at 200,000 and others due to dislocation at 300,000

  11. Economic dislocation was another result of partition • East Pakistan grew 70 percent of the world’s jute, but all the mills were in India

  12. Pakistan received the better food- and cotton-growing areas and India the coal, metals, and industrial resources of the peninsula

  13. India received 82 percent of the population but only 69 percent of the irrigated lands

  14. The status of 562 princely states also caused problems • All the princely states joined either India or Pakistan, but trouble arose in Jammu, Kashmir, Hyderabad, Junagadh, and Manavadar • The small states of Junagadh and Manavadar were predominantly Hindu and surrounded by Indian territory • They had, however, Muslim rulers, who joined Pakistan in 1947

  15. The Indian government sent in forces and occupied the countries, granting a plebiscite that resulted in an overwhelming vote to join India • Hyderabad, the largest state in the Deccan and completely surrounded by Indian territory, was also Hindu with a Muslim ruler, and the Nizam felt powerful enough to hold out for independence • Armed Muslim forces terrorized the population, and Communists took control of many of the villages

  16. After first trying an economic blockade, the Indian army took over the state in 1948

  17. Pakistan had an excellent precedent in Indian action in Junagadh, Manavadar, and Hyderabad for taking over control of this area, which was predominantly Muslim (three-quarters) with a Hindu maharajah • In 1947 Pakistan invaded the area, and the maharaja quickly joined India

  18. Indian troops arrived by airlift barely in time to save Srinagar, the capital • Nehru referred the case to the UN demanding a plebiscite and the condemnation of Pakistan as an aggressor • The two countries were at war for fourteen months until a cease-fire was arranged by the UN in January 1949

  19. Kashmir is valuable, for it has rich agricultural land and a lucrative tourist trade; it controls the headwaters of important rivers; and it is situated in a position strategic to both Pakistan and India

  20. Nothing was settled and war again broke out in 1965 • The UN again sponsored a cease-fire, and China’s involvement so worried the USSR that the Russians attempted to mediate the dispute, but the problem was not resolved

  21. Another result of the partition was the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi on January 30, 1948

  22. Fortunately for relations between India and Pakistan, he was killed not by a Muslim but by a fanatic Hindu who was confused and frustrated by Gandhi’s attempt to stop violence among Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs

  23. In January 1948 Gandhi had begun a fast for the “reunion of hearts”

  24. At independence, India became a constitutional federal state • The sixteen states themselves were granted little power, for, unlike the United States, the residual powers were given specifically to the central government which has the power to seize and assume the functions of state governments in case of emergency • This was done in 1959 in the Communist-controlled state of Kerala

  25. The constitution established a bicameral government, with executive power resting in a prime minister who is leader of the majority party in the House of the People • At independence the Congress Party was the only large and important political organization • This party, which led India to independence and of which Jawaharlal Nehru became the head after Gandhi’s death, was socialist and secular, favoring government control of basic industry (but not secondary industry) and democracy in its political creed and organization

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