Joe Shearer
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We live in a world where simple things are made complicated to address one's interests with out taking into consideration justice and rules.
One very simple question though would be what was the guiding rule to divide subcontinent ?
Was it done on the basis of Muslim and Hind majority areas or was there some other parameter ?
As far as world knows its two nation theory and all muslim majority areas were to be part of Pakistan and Kashmir always was and still is a muslim majority state witk 90 plus % muslims.
I'm glad you asked. Could you please accept this as a personal assessment?
The key was Jinnah's struggle to create a consociationalist country (think Quebec within Canada, the most-quoted example). There are those who believe that he sought that, there are those who disagree. Assuming for a moment that the Ayesha Jalal thesis updated by Yasser Latif Hamdani were to be the most accurate, he was trying to balance the legislative power of the brute majority of Hindus by creating different legislatures; within those, majority would prevail, among those, again, majority would prevail. So he proposed two Muslim homelands and one Hindu homeland within the same Dominion of India. The Muslim homelands, the north-west and Bengal, would crystallise Muslim opinion, the Hindu homeland would crystallise Hindu opinion. The Hindu majority would be counter-acted by there being a Hindu majority balanced by two Muslim majorities, and within the Muslim majorities, Hindu brute force would be blunted.
This view found its expression in the Cabinet Mission Plan of 1946. All parties agreed to it, by May/June of that year.
Unfortunately, this broke down on the 10th of June 1946, when Nehru inexplicably suggested during a press conference that the legislators to the Constituent Assembly from the Muslim heartlands would be practising a great leap over faith by being given the liberty to vote on any matter according to their conscience. This was in sharp contrast to the position taken by the Muslim League, which wanted delegates to be strictly bound by the wishes of their responsible homelands. At that point, Plan B, Partition, became inevitable.
Partition was done on the basis of the same homeland structure as the Cabinet Mission. Provinces were the primary units of evaluation. Muslim majority provinces were grouped into Pakistan. The others remained India. Thereafter, smaller sub-divisions took place; Gurdaspur is the one that Pakistanis talk about with barely-restrained indignation, and the Chittagong Hill Tracts causes similar teeth-grinding on the Indian side. There were adjustments almost everywhere, but the basic picture was that Muslim majority provinces were put into Pakistan.
The 561 Indian States were different. The technical view of some constitutional experts was that these states, subordinate to the Crown directly, would not be subordinate to the two new Dominions. Instead, they would have to 'accede' to one or the other, depending on the wishes of its ruler, moderated by the principle of continguity; some little hamlet in Orissa could not be taken to join the Pakistani bandwagon. What followed is best absorbed from V. P. Menon's brilliant book on the integration of the Indian states. No point reading other accounts when this exists.
Does this cover the background? Could I have your reactions, @Albatross ? before proceeding further?