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The 1940s Triumph and Tragedy
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Triumph and Tragedy * On 3 September, 1939, Viceroy Lord Linlithgow declares that as Britain is at war against Germany, so too is India. * In protest to this British “high-handedness”, the Congress ministries in the Indian provinces resign * Taking advantage of an absence of Congress influence, the Muslim League enact the Pakistan Resolution (1940) – an ill-defined demand for a separate Muslim state
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Triumph and Tragedy * The unilateral declaration of war was a political blunder in terms of its governance over India * The war also comes closer to sub-continent after 1941, as Japan enters the war. * The Indian Army increases tenfold in size and fights in the Middle East and South-East Asia * As Britain struggles to pay for its war, it becomes India’s debtor. * India now has ₤1, 000 million of sterling silver in reserve in Britain
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Negotiation and the August ‘Rising’
* As a contrast to 1914, the INC did not give unquestioning support for the war in * The INC did also fragment at this time. Gandhi abstained from dialogue with the British due to his non-violence beliefs * Some INC members even entered into dialogue with the fascist powers over Indian independence * By 1942, the British war in Asia is not going well. They offer India independence, but only after the war is over and no province is coerced to join the Indian state
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Indian Troops World War Two
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Negotiation and August ‘Rising’
* During World War Two, British promises of an “Indian Cabinet” began to seem distant * By 1942, Winston Churchill's derision for Indian independence was more pronounced – he was an ardent imperialist. He insisted he was not elected to “preside over the liquidation of the British Empire.”
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1942 – Quit India Movement * As dissatisfaction grew over British reticence to transfer power (and because most of the INC leaders were in jail), uncoordinated violence broke out * In jail, Gandhi was unable to stop the violence (the worst uprising since 1857) * Though he did suggest that violence was preferable to cowardice
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Women’s procession during the Quit India Movement
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1942 – Quit India Movement * There were massive attacks on Government property and communications * In Bihar Province, 170 police stations and government buildings were incinerated * The British were brutal in their response and the rebellion was supressed in six weeks * Congress leaders were kept in prison for three more years
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Jinnah and the Pakistan Idea
* As the INC alienated themselves from the British, the Muslim League were able to gain more leverage from them * In 1940, the goal of Pakistan becomes the primary focus of the Muslim League * “Pakistan” – an amalgam of “Punjab, Afghan Regions, Sind and Baluchistan” – it also means “the land of the pure”
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Simla Conference to the Cabinet Mission
* June 1945, Viceroy Wavell, Gandhi, Nehru and Jinnah meet in Simla to discuss an interim government * The talks break down as Jinnah asserts that only he can be the spokesman for India’s Muslims and that only the League can select Muslim leaders * The British let Jinnah “wreck” the Simla Conference * As the Allies defeat Germany in May and Japan in August, Britain is exhausted and has neither the will, nor the power, to control India. *
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Simla Conference to the Cabinet Mission
* The beginning of the “endgame” for the British Raj is the elections of 1945/6 *India is polarised into Congress and Muslim League supporters * The INC wins 90% of the vote *The League wins all 30 of its allocated “Muslim” seats
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March 1946 Cabinet Mission * Realising the polarised state of Indian politics, a British Cabinet delegation arrives to propose a 3-tiered “Federal” government (like Australia) * They hoped that “Muslim” provinces in India would placate Jinnah and the League’s hope for “Pakistan” * Jinnah wanted “Pakistan” to have political parity with Hindu India * Nehru and the INC also reject the model, fearing a loss of power to the central “Congress” government
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Massacre and Partition
* Jinnah’s call for “direct action” sparks violence in a number of provinces * Religious bands roam the streets of Calcutta, Bihar and Bengal kill and maim people of the other religion * 4,000 people are killed in Calcutta; 7,000 are killed in Bihar * Gandhi’s calls for calm and non-violence fall on deaf ears * Inter-religious violence spreads to the Punjab, where Sikhs fear Muslim control in “Pakistan”
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Lord Mountbatten * In February, 1947, Lord Mountbatten is announced as Britain’s last viceroy * His task is a difficult one – to transfer power to the Indians by August * London, exhausted and poor, wants to disassociate itself from the chaos and violence of India as quickly as possible
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Lord Mountbatten
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Lord Mountbatten * By the time Mountbatten arrives, a united India is out of the question * On 14 August, 1947, Pakistan declares its independence * On 15 August India declares its independence
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Pakistan and India 1947
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Indian Independence Day
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Mass Migration and Violence
* Fear and Violence reminded both groups that they would only be safe in one state * People were forced to chose whether they were loyal to India or Pakistan * In three months in 1947, 5 million move from the West Punjab into India * 5.5 million Muslims move the other way into Pakistan *Those of the opposite religion that remained were treated with hostility and fear for months
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Mass Migration
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The Indian Princes * Now without British support, the Indian Princely States are now very isolated * Both India and Pakistan want to avoid further “splitting” of their states * Most princes peacefully gave up their power and territory in * The Nizam of Hyderabad holds out until September, 1948, when Indian troops march on his fort. * His family’s 200 year rule is peacefully extinguished
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The Maharaja of Kashmir
* Kashmir is a mountainous, isolated province in the north-west * The Hindu Maharaja, ruling a majority Muslim population, decides to side with India in October, * Pakistan, citing corruption of the Hindu leaders and the subversion of the Muslim population, claim Kashmir as part of Pakistan and it is still one of the world’s flashpoint areas.
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Kashmir
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Kashmir * India would fight 3 wars with Pakistan over Kashmir in twenty-five years
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India and Pakistan * Jinnah becomes Pakistan’s first Governor General * Nehru was vehement that India is not “Hindustan” and claimed, in India, a secular, inclusive state for Hindu, Muslim and Sikh * Millions of Muslims, for many reasons, decide to remain in India * Pakistan asks the (newly formed) UN for a ceasefire border in Kashmir * In 1947, Nehru promised that Kashmiris would vote for which state they wanted to join (this has never happened).
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The 1940s * An emotionally charged time * Kashmir, violence, as well as inter-religious rape and gang-rape incensed both groups * Estimates suggest that 50, 000 women were abducted or abused * Many were sold or forcibly married/converted * The governments of India and Pakistan worked hard after independence to locate and “rescue” these abducted women – many were then abandoned and “shamed” by their families and husbands
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Gandhi’s Assassination
* Gandhi is assassinated by a Hindu extremist as he was leading prayer in New Delhi in January, * Nehru said to the nation, “The light has gone out of our lives.” * Realistically, Gandhi hadn’t been a political force since * He never agreed to partition and helplessly condemned the violence surrounding independence * His last political act was to compel the Indian Government to give ₤40 million sterling to Pakistan – its share of pre-Partition Indian wealth
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Gandhi’s Funeral Procession 1948
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