These thoughts crystallised at Allahabad Session
(December, 1930) of the All India Muslim League, when Iqbal in the
Presidential Address, forwarded the idea of a Muslim State in India:
I would like to see the Punjab, North-West
Frontier Provinces, Sind and Baluchistan into a single State.
Self-Government within the British Empire or without the British
Empire. The formation of the consolidated North-West Indian Muslim
State appears to be the final destiny of the Muslims, at least of
the North-West India.
The seed sown, the idea began to evolve and take
root. It soon assumed the shape of Muslim state or states in the
western and eastern Muslim majority zones as is obvious from the
following lines of Iqbal's letter, of June 21, 1937, to the Quaid-i
Azam, only ten months before the former's death:
A separate federation of Muslim Provinces,
reformed on the lines I have suggested above, is the only course
by which we can secure a peaceful India and save Muslims from the
domination of Non-Muslims. Why should not the Muslims of
North-West India and Bengal be considered as nations entitled to
self-determination just as other nations in India and outside
India are.
There are some critics of Allama Iqbal who assume
that after delivering the Allahbad Address he had slept over the
idea of a Muslim State. Nothing is farther from the truth. The idea
remained always alive in his mind. It had naturally to mature and
hence, had to take time. He was sure that the Muslims of
sub-continent were going to achieve an independent homeland for
themselves. On 21st March, 1932, Allama Iqbal delivered the
Presidential address at Lahore at the annual session of the
All-India Muslim Conference. In that address too he stressed his
view regarding nationalism in India and commented on the plight of
the Muslims under the circumstances prevailing in the sub-continent.
Having attended the Second Round Table Conference in September, 1931
in London, he was keenly aware of the deep-seated Hindu and Sikh
prejudice and unaccommodating attitude. He had observed the mind of
the British Government. Hence he reiterated his apprehensions and
suggested safeguards in respect of the Indian Muslims:
In so far then as the fundamentals of our policy
are concerned, I have got nothing fresh to offer. Regarding these
I have already expressed my views in my address to the All India
Muslim League. In the present address I propose, among other
things, to help you, in the first place, in arriving at a correct
view of the situation as it emerged from a rather hesitating
behavior of our delegation the final stages of the Round-Table
Conference. In the second place, I shall try, according to my
lights to show how far it is desirable to construct a fresh policy
now that the Premier's announcement at the last London Conference
has again necessitated a careful survey of the whole situation.
It must be kept in mind that since Maulana Muhammad
Ali had died in Jan. 1931 and Quaid-i Azam had stayed behind in
London, the responsibility of providing a proper lead to the Indian
Muslims had fallen on him alone. He had to assume the role of a
jealous guardian of his nation till Quaid-i Azam returned to the
sub-continent in 1935.
The League and the Muslim Conference had become
the play-thing of petty leaders, who would not resign office, even
after a vote of non-confidence! And, of course, they had no
organization in the provinces and no influence with the masses.
During the Third Round-Table Conference, Iqbal was
invited by the London National League where he addressed an audience
which included among others, foreign diplomats, members of the House
of Commons, Members of the House of Lords and Muslim members of the
R.T.C. delegation. In that gathering he dilated upon the situation
of the Indian Muslims. He explained why he wanted the communal
settlement first and then the constitutional reforms. He stressed
the need for provincial autonomy because autonomy gave the Muslim
majority provinces some power to safeguard their rights, cultural
traditions and religion. Under the central Government the Muslims
were bound to lose their cultural and religious entity at the hands
of the overwhelming Hindu majority. He referred to what he had said
at Allahabad in 1930 and reiterated his belief that before long
people were bound to come round to his viewpoint based on cogent
reason.
In his dialogue with Dr. Ambedkar Allama Iqbal
expressed his desire to see Indian provinces as autonomous units
under the direct control of the British Government and with no
central Indian Government. He envisaged autonomous Muslim Provinces
in India. Under one Indian union he feared for Muslims, who would
suffer in many respects especially with regard to their
existentially separate entity as Muslims.
Allama Iqbal's statement explaining the attitude of
Muslim delegates to the Round-Table Conference issued in December,
1933 was a rejoinder to Jawahar Lal Nehru's statement. Nehru had
said that the attitude of the Muslim delegation was based on "reactionarism."
Iqbal concluded his rejoinder with:
In conclusion I must put a straight question to
punadi Jawhar Lal, how is India's problem to be solved if the
majority community will neither concede the minimum safeguards
necessary for the protection of a minority of 80 million people,
nor accept the award of a third party; but continue to talk of a
kind of nationalism which works out only to its own benefit? This
position can admit of only two alternatives. Either the Indian
majority community will have to accept for itself the permanent
position of an agent of British imperialism in the East, or the
country will have to be redistributed on a basis of religious,
historical and cultural affinities so as to do away with the
question of electorates and the communal problem in its present
form.
Allama Iqbal's apprehensions were borne out by the
Hindu Congress ministries established in Hindu majority province
under the Act of 1935. Muslims in those provinces were given
dastardly treatment. This deplorable phenomenon added to Allama
Iqbal's misgivings regarding the future of Indian Muslims in case
India remained united. In his letters to the Quaid-i Azam written in
1936 and in 1937 he referred to an independent Muslim State
comprising North-Western and Eastern Muslim majority zones. Now it
was not only the North-Western zones alluded to in the Allahabad
Address.
There are some within Pakistan and without, who
insist that Allama Iqbal never meant a sovereign Muslim country
outside India. Rather he desired a Muslim State within the Indian
Union. A State within a State. This is absolutely wrong. What he
meant was understood very vividly by his Muslim compatriots as well
as the non-Muslims. Why Nehru and others had then tried to show that
the idea of Muslim nationalism had no basis at all. Nehru stated:
This idea of a Muslim nation is the figment of a
few imaginations only, and, but for the publicity given to it by
the Press few people would have heard of it. And even if many
people believed in it, it would still vanish at the touch of
reality.
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