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You could add the vast irrigation canals in your part of the Punjab , the formation of Waqf board , the recognition of the Aligarh Muslim University as an independent university , the separate electorates , the kid gloves treatment to the Muslim League also to that list.
Btw - not a single Muslim League leader spent a single night in jail in the cause of Indian independence .
One can see why you feel so grateful to the British .
There are many good things which are legacy of British rule. I have mentioned few.
As far as the bold colored part in your comment PLEASE keep aside your Muslim phobia at least in this thread. It is very sad that extremist Hindus in India divide the freedom struggle on the basis of religion.
The role of Muslims in freedoms struggle is an important part and going to jails is not the only vital contribution. There are many things which narrow minded Indians like you skip.
Let me mention few names (most of whom Indians like you may not be knowing which a very bad history BTW).
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- Abul Kalam Azad - he needs no introduction, does he?
- Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, also known as "Frontier Gandhi", almost single-handedly led the independence movement in the north-western corners of India. He was referred to as the "one man frontier army" by Lord Mountbatten. He had initiated the Khudai Khidmatgar movement that indulged in non-violent struggle against the British empire on Gandhian principles. He also staunchly opposed the creation of Pakistan.
- Asaf Ali, a noted lawyer, defended Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt in court in their last trial and was also a part of the defence team in the INA trials. He was elected to the Central Legislative Assembly in 1935 and after independence he became India's first ambassador to the US.
- Ashfaqulla Khan planned and executed the Kakori conspiracy along with Ram Prasad Bismil. He was sentenced to death along with his accomplices for the same.
- Saifuddin Kitchlew was a nationalist leader from Punjab. He is mostly remembered for leading the protest against the draconian Rowlatt Act and it was his arrest that led to the protesters gathering at Jallianwala Bagh and ultimately the Jallianwala Bagh massacre.
- Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi was a noted Urdu poet, writer and orator. He vehemently opposed Jinnah's Two-nation theory and the creation of Pakistan. He founded the All-India Jamhur Muslim League to counter Jinnah's Muslim League, and served as its first general secretary. He formed the 'Ajazi Troop' to promote and train youngsters for freedom struggle. He started the mutthia drive to collect funds for nationalist activities. Under this drive, Ajazi and his followers went door to door urging people to contribute one mutthi (fistful) of donation towards India's freedom struggle.
- Maulana Mazharul Haque organised the Home Rule movement in Bihar and was its president in 1916. He actively participated in the Champaran Satyagraha along with fellow eminent nationalists Rajendra Prasad, Anugrah Narayan Sinha and Brajkishore Prasad for which he was sentenced to 3 months imprisonment. Subsequently, when the Non Cooperation and Khilafat Movements were launched, Mazharul Haque gave up his lucrative legal practice and his elected post as member of the Imperial Legislative Council as a mark of protest against the infamous Rowlat Act of 1919. He also started "The Motherland" an English weekly journal (later bi-weekly) which was used to propagate thoughts and ideals of the Non Cooperation Movement.
- Mahmud al-Hasan, also known as Shaykh-ul-Hind, was a Deobandi scholar who organised efforts to start an armed revolution against British rule from both within and outside India. He launched a programme to train volunteers from among his disciples in India and abroad who joined this movement in a large number. He, along with Maulana Ubaidullah Sindhi, planned the Silk Letter Movement that aimed at freeing India from the British rule by allying with Ottoman Turkey, Imperial Germany, and Afghanistan. However, the plot was uncovered by the police midway and its planners imprisoned.
- Abdul Hafiz Mohamed Barakatullah was one of the founders of the revolutionary Ghadar Party. Later he became the first prime minister of the Provisional Government of India established on 1 December 1915 in Kabul with Raja Mahendra Pratap as its president. Barkatullah went to several countries of the world with a mission to rouse politically the Indian community and to seek support for the freedom of India from the famous leaders of the time in those countries.
- Badruddin Tyabji was the first Muslim president of the Indian National Congress. He worked actively for the emancipation of women and co-founded the Bombay Presidency Association on 1885.
- Rafi Ahmed Kidwai was a prominent leader of the Khilafat Movement and a social reformer. He became the Home Minister of UP after the formation of the provincial governments for the first time in 1937. He also became India's first Minister for Communications after independence.
- Hakim Ajmal Khan was a Unani physician who participated in the Non-co-operation movement, led the Khilafat Movement, and became the fifth Muslim President of the Indian National Congress in 1921. He also founded the Jamia Millia Islamia University along with several other educational institutions.
- Syed Hasan Imam, hailed by many as the finest Indian barrister in British India, led the Khilafat Movement and the Civil Disobedience Movement in Bihar. Among other things, he was a social reformer who worked for the amelioration of the position of women and the depressed classes.]
As far as me grateful to British empire well you need to use words carefully, BUT anyway Some good things brits did should be praised.