Hi Joe Sir,
I will try to answer some of these questions you raised and hopfully clarify a few things
Dear Sir,
I am in harmony with most of your post, except for minor divergences and small questions that are still unanswered.
I understood that the Muslim League was largely supported and led by the AMU generation of westernised salary-drawing government servant, or professional (doctor or lawyer). The Mullahs were opposed to this 'salariat' as much as they are opposed to reformers like Asghar Ali Engineer or others.
It is true that it was largely supported by the salariat as Alavi says,but in the 40s there was a new emerging section that came about due to the need to gain more votes. At the same time, there were many "salariat" class muslims who were with the Congress as well.
You must remember that the Indian literacy rate was 9%, for Muslims even lower. Starting with the 1940s, deals were cut with the landlords in Punjab and Bengal to join with ML while at the same time the British paid mullas to do propaganda for the Muslim league. Where else did the slogans like vote for ML if you are Muslim came to fore?
It is a myth that no "mullas" supported Pakistan. There was the JUI and a number of mullas particularly in the NWFP region that were paid mainly by the ML but at times by the British intelligence to preach in favor of Muslim league or against the Congress. The Hindu equivalent like the Hindu Mahasabha were also given the same treatment although they were not quite as successful. A recent article on Daily Times talks about this.
Daily Times - Pakistan and the case for Islam.
In a way although there were some who actually believed in Pakistan, many were just opportunist who knew that in a Pakistan they would have the monopoly over the politics in the name of Islam. In fact, if you read some of their texts they seem to expect a sort of position that the mullas in Iran would get post 1979.
So Muslim League in its final years did use Islam for a political purpose and utilized these pirs and maulvis by paying them for propaganda purposes. There was nothing "Islamic" about it. It was pure politics and politics is dirty. More time is spent on denigrating the opponent than explaining to the electorate what you stand for.
I would request you to clarify the issue with Asghar Ali Engineer as well as I'm not sure what you mean by mullas oppose him. As far as I know , he is well respected among the ulema community although they may have difference of opinion on some aspects of what he says. This is a natural product of discussion and freedom of expression. Just because the maulanas might disagree with what he says would not equate them to say the mullas in Pakistan that froth at the mouth shouting Ahmedis are
wajibul qatl(to be killed)
Perhaps it would have been better to do without either the Quran or the Gita. It was this introduction of religion into public affairs that was one of Jinnah's objections to Gandhi's methods, and it resulted in negative consequences for India. We landed up with a version of secularism, not the secularism of the Treaty of Westphalia, but a peculiar warped version wherein we give every religion equal respect. This never happens; either we open functions with a kuthuvilakku being lighted, inaugurate buildings with a bhoomi-puja, and do an Ayutha Puja and smear our work-place with sandalwood paste and vibhuti, or we cosy up to the Muslim community at government level by making concessions to them not of the sort that the community wants, but of the sort that government thinks will please the Mullahs.
After a lifetime of opposing the Sangh Parivar tooth and nail, I find myself defensive when they raise their eyebrows and speak about pseudo-secularism. It is a pseudo-secularism that the Congress, oriented in that direction by Gandhi, brought into India.
It is better to keep religion safely at a distance from public affairs, otherwise we will see unseemly scenes like we are seeing on PTH recently, on the Ahmedi issue most of all.
I maintain that religion should be a personal affair, but that does not mean that the elected parliamentarians can't be devout. That a devout Hindu or Muslim is unfit to be in the PM or a minister. Although I don't want to go into a deep discussion on what secularism is I would like to discuss the "negative" consequence of such a policy you mentioned.
What is the solution of "pseudo-secularism"? The simplest answer is education - but in particular a hindu-muslim dialogue or an inter-faith dialogue at all levels.
The govt. does not need to interfere in say muslim personal law, but as the muslim community gets educated and their women gets empowered, the demand for change will come from within that community that will force the mullas to re-interpret in the light of changing circumstances. I follow these issues closely and I can tell you that in the last 10 years there is a sea change in many archaic issues and this is because of the demand of the Muslim community mostly led by the Maulanas and Mullas themselves without any interference from the GoI. What is urgently needed is to increase the literacy and employment levels among the Muslim community to bring them on par with the national average.
Similarly institutionalized interfaith dialogue at state, district and village levels with reduce suspicion and allow moderate elements in various faiths to champion reforms in their own communities.
Remember enforcing a community to change from outside will never work and will be rejected. The best way to reform a community is from within.
Don't you count Maudoodi among those who have most 'Islamicised' Pakistan? Wasn't he among those who opposed Pakistan, called it Paleedistan, and called Jinnah Kufr-e-Azam?
Is it not true that immediately after partition, he migrated to Pakistan, and started projecting himself and his line of thinking as the key to Pakistan? Is there anything good that came out of him, except for Ghamidi?
It is interesting that you bring up Maududi. I'm not sure if you know but he was not a Mulla per se. He never graduated from any madrassa or Dar-ul-uloom and did not hold a completed degree. Still by some he is referred as a Mulla or Maulana which is not accurate. He studied for two years in a Hyderabad Dar-ul-uloom, fell sick and never returned and turned to journalism as a profession. He was more of a journalist than a mulla.
But most important of all he propagated and in fact laid the foundation of the political Islamic ideology that is the bane of Muslims today. This ideology was in complete opposition to what traditional Islamic scholars - the mullas and the maulanas - stood for. They were against the idea of establishing an Islamic state where sharia laws would be enforced top down while the journalist Maududi proposed the same as a remedy for Muslims.
But as with politics, the political Islamic ideology or infact any political religious ideology will be murky. Maududi then changed his stand and found greater capital in going to Pakistan which he did and started preaching his philosophy there. But even there the traditional scholars gave no impetus to this.
It was only under Ayub Khan, Bhutto and mainly under Zia that JI became what it became today.
Infact, it was under Qari Hussain and not Maududi that it became what it did today. A supporter of Jihadi groups from KAshmir to Afghanistan
You may be surprised to know this by
Maududi OPPOSED the "Jihad" in Kashmir and said that it was not correct under Islamic light to say that Jihad is valid in Kashmir. Moreover, he was completely against the "covert" nature of this saying that having a treaty with a country and then covertly funding fighters is against the Islamic principles of adhering to treaties and being honest. So what we see here is that even a political Islamic ideologue - who actually believed in what he said- was no advocate of the fanatic terrorists that we see today. IT was only under opportunist politicians like Qazi Hussain that such a turnaround in JI came into being.
So its not the Mullas; but the Pakistani Army and ruling elite that is responsible for making this fringe ideology that was opposed by the traditional Islamic scholars into a "powerful" force as it is today.
Jamaat Islami and Maududi is an interesting topic that deserves its own thread as I have been personally involved with this. Maybe that discussion will be for a different time. IMO there is no commonality with Jamaat Islami on one hand and the traditional Islamic scholars of for example Deoband on the other.
I agree that it may be argued that this line of persecution was pernicious, and that much ground was lost in NWFP and FATA thanks to such silliness. But was it silliness? Aren't the present day fundamentalists in KP the descendants of these earlier conservatives, turned fundamentalist, turned extremist, and allied to the Taliban?
Liberal Pakistanis call both of them, the earlier religious leadership and the present-day Swat-based, Waziristan-based fundamentalists lackeys of India, hirelings of R&W. Why? The hirelings of R&W can be taken with a large double-handful of salt, but why did these people oppose Pakistan tooth and nail? Why did they bring in extreme versions of Shariah whenever they were able to back down the existing administration?
The Jamaat were fundamentalist and backed the military; these people were fundamentalist and landed up backing the Taliban, created in the first place by the military. How does the shade of meaning matter to the ordinary Pakistani getting blown up, or the ordinary Indian getting killed?
The Ahrars were based in Punjab and although predominantly devout muslim had welcomed non-Muslim into their fold. The Red Shirts of NWFP had a number of Hindu and Sikhs. These two examples showed that being devout Muslims did not mean bigotry and hatred to non-muslims. To blame these groups for what happened is gross injustice and in fact outright false.
The Ahrar leadership was jailed and many killed. The same is what happened with the Red Shirts. There was a section of FATA people who did launch a campaign of Pashtoonistan but that was not led by Bacha Khan as he had asked his followers to even boycott the referendum to not create a hostile environment by confronting the pro-ML Pathans.
But the crux of the matter is that Jinnah himself had stoked the political Islamic feelings among a section of the pirs and maulavis by promising sharia law once PAkistan is created. My link from the Daily Times above says how the Pir of Manki had promised to support the Muslim League in the referendum provided Jinnah agreed to establish an "Islamic state". It is this feeling of "betrayal" that the political religious ideologues cite when they say that Pakistan is not a "Islamic state" as promised.
The present day Taliban are a direct outcome of military and intelligence policies of Pakistan. There is no connection with Bacha Khan or the Red Shirts/ Khudai Khtimatagars. If there is an organisation that has any remote connection with them, it is the ANP but the current leadership is just a bunch of politicians and fails to adhere to the lofty principles of Bacha Khan. Although I must say that before the PA went in to do operations it was the ANP that sacrificed the largest number of its workers than any other party or institution in Pakistan. If anything, the ANP is the anti-dote to Taliban and its various forms.
You might also want to learn about Faqir of Ipi who had no connection with Bacha Khan but was brutally suppressed by first the British govt. and then the Pakistani govt. 500lb bombs of high explosives were dropped in the valleys and mountains of Waziristan to quell the rebellion. It is their progeny that provides much of the manpower of the Taliban.
If Bacha Khan was allowed a free hand in politics and FATA was integrated into NWFP, most likely these people would have been educated and well off instead of illiterate and being blown to smithereens by CIA drones on one side and PAF bombing runs on the other.
Which frankly is where the TNT came from. It is a popular mistake to think that it stood for a physical partition of British India. If we go through the history of political reforms and administrative reforms in British India, we soon find that on the one hand, the British were devolving powers to Indians, through the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms and Dyarchy in 1919, then through the Government of India Act in 1935; on the other, various minorities were increasingly nervous about the huge central mass, the Hindi-speaking, Hindu bloc in the Gangetic plain, and reacting to it with various degrees of political sophistication.
It is this problem that the whole paper of Shanta Rajagopalan touches upon and analyses so deftly. My only complaint about her paper is that she considers the peninsular states and regions as peripheral, and completely forgets the alienation of the hills and the forests.
The TNT is given as a core argument of WHY the partition was necessary, hence the volumes of literature by muslim scholars as well as academics pre-independence and post to show that this was wrong. Similarly in Pakistan, particularly the Zia era, this was again brandished as the primary reason why partition was not only necessary but mandatory. Gone was the perception that partition was actually a plan B, not only that according to some it was only a bargaining tactic and not something that was to be actually attempted at.
You would be surprised at some of the literature particularly in Urdu written by Mullas and Maulanas on negating the TNT and explaining from the Quran and Hadis why loyalty to this land is actually a part of their religious observance. That even if a Muslim country invades India, according to their religion, Muslims will stand shoulder to shoulder with their non-Muslim country men to defend their land.
Some interesting reading that has been translated to English are here
India Our Land and Its Virtues, part I
India our land & its virtues, part II
Hindu-Muslim unity: a historical speech by a leading Deobandi maulvi | TwoCircles.net
As noted all these were from traditional Islamic scholars- the much maligned mullas and maulanas that some "liberal Pakistanis" that you indicated denigrate. The point being that many salariat muslims as well as the majority of the traditional Islamic scholars aka maulanas felt confident enough to fight for their rights and develop their culture even if there was a hindu majority because they were looking forward to universal adult franchise were the average Indian would decide the policies of the state.
The ML leadership on the other hand post 1940s on the other hand came to be dominated by the landlords and nawabs, the salariat loyals were shunned aside and it was their interests that at the end ML protected. Some say that it was a temporary alliance to achieve Pakistan. But this alliance continues to this day.
Yes there was a legitimate concern of muslims about "Hindu" domination but this was for the muslims in the minority provinces not in the majority ones. Here they would easily dominate a universal franchise legislature and hence the appeal of ML was also much less.
At core, yes, but limited in scope and outlook, and in applicability by its exclusive emphasis on religion as an identifier; there were linguistic, ethnic and caste based identifiers, which came up for attention almost immediately after partition.
Both in India, which rejected religion as a discriminant, and Pakistan, which had it at its core, other factors mentioned, ethnicity and linguistic identity came up as seeking - demanding - urgent attention. The TNT was not complete, it was partial, that is why we do not have a multi-valent model which would help our political decision-making as these issues bubbled up.
This makes sense if we consider the basic paradigm, rather than those seeking to implement it. This was not a Muslim League or an INC problem, it was a TNT problem.
I don't see it as a TNT problem but more with regards to the rights each community has and the safeguards it should posses. By late 1940s, the safeguards provided were more than adequate for muslims. A few anomalies could have been easily negotiated after independence when the new constitution would be promulgated. The main facet that Centre will grant autonomy to the provinces and not interfere has been upheld in India with a few exceptions but has been completely trashed in Pakistan. It was not a TNT problem because had it been so, the provision fo safeguards would have solved it. It was a political power play issue and hence a more sentimental issue.
This is what happened when religion is invoked in politics, logic is the first victim.
Hence what we should be aware of is not devout Hindu or a devout muslim in a position of power. But the use of religion in electoral politics. This should be banned. There should be no party that says
"vote for me if you are a muslim" or "If you want to protect Hindus vote for me". Electoral politics should be based on development of communities and people alone.
Second, many of the fears that you express have come true already, and some more may. For instance, we are now three countries instead of two. How much more of a failure would the May 16 plan have been?
Sincerely,
'Joe'
I think the creation of Bangladesh was a direct blow to the TNT, it was because of this that Zia took up the teacing of TNT as an ideology of Pakistan which was never the case before. Three countries is still much better than what could have happened. British India consisted of 500+ kingdoms across India. The acceptance of Congress for the partition of India was directly linked by the British to weather these kingdoms would be forced to join India or not. In other words if Congress does not agree to the partition of India, these kingdoms would be given the option of Independence and the British crown will not interfere in this. However, if Congress agreed to the partition, the Crown will support and force the Maharjaas, Nawabs and other kings to choose either India or Pakistan which would result in two unified dominions. Just imagine the situation where you had 100s of kingdoms each forming alliances and fighting other kingdoms across the subcontinent. We would have witnessed Europe in the middle ages happening in India.
As I keep saying not understanding the role of the British and the emerging cold war scenario will not give you adequate answers. Yes there was some problems between the Hindu and Muslim communities but these problems that would be negotiated and resolved in a parliamentary debate in one country was turned in a a constitutional and sovereign conflict by the creation of Pakistan as said by Maulana Azad. The resolution of this problem has since then become more difficult.
Wouldn't we be kidding ourselves if we don't see how the India Pakistan conflict is time and again converted into a Hindu-Muslim conflict particularly in Pakistan but also in India by the right wing Hindu groups? Hence what Maulana Azad said in this regard makes sense.
The creation of Pakistan continues to be a strategic achievement of the British and US later. It helped them to be a superpower by defeating the USSR and continued to provide a foothold in S. and Central Asia. I would differentiate between what the PAkistani people want because they are ofcourse certainly opposed to it. But the ruling elite both military and civilian have perpetuated the strong US "relationship".