text
stringlengths 25
2.05k
| text_pr
stringlengths 41
2.06k
|
---|---|
state power for their benefit.
The responsibility was, of course, tremendous. H owever,
there were limitations on the Congress Ministries’ power and
financial resources. They could obviously not change the
basically imperialist character of the administration; they could
not introduce a radical era. But, within the narrow limits of th eir | <s>[INST]state power for their benefit.
The responsibility was, of course, tremendous. H owever,
there were limitations on the Congress Ministries’ power and
financial resources. They could obviously not change the
basically imperialist character of the administration; they could
not introduce a radical era. But, within the narrow limits of th eir[/INST] |
321 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
powers, and the time available to them (their tenure lasted only
two years and four months), they did try to introduce some
reforms, take some ameliorative measures, and make some
improvement in the condition of the people — to give the people a
glimps e of the future Swaraj.
The Congress Ministers set an example in plain living. They
reduced their own salaries drastically from Rs. 2000 to Rs. 500
per month. They were easily accessible to the common people.
And in a very short time, they did pass a very large amount of
ameliorative legislation, trying to fulfil many of the promises
made in the Congress election manifesto.
*
The commitment of the Congress to the defence and
extension of civil liberties was as old as the Congress itself, and it
is hardly surprising, therefore, that the Congress Ministries
registered major achievements in this sphere. All emergency
powers acquired by the provincial governments during 1932,
through Public Safety Acts and the like, were repealed; bans on
illegal political org anizations such as the Hindustan Seva Dal and
Youth Leagues and on political books and journals were lifted.
Though the ban on the Communist Party remained, since it was
imposed by the Central Government and could only be lifted on
its orders, the Communis ts could in effect now function freely
and openly in the Congress provinces. All restrictions on the
press were removed. Securities taken from newspapers and
presses were refunded and pending prosecutions were
withdrawn. The blacklisting of newspapers for purposes of
government advertising was given up. Confiscated arms were
returned and forfeited arms licenses were restored.
Of all the British functionaries, the ones the people were
most afraid of, as also hated, were the police. On 21 August
1937, after the formation of the Ministries, Gandhiji wrote,
‘Indeed, the triumph of the Congress will be measured by the
success it achieves in rendering the police and military | <s>[INST]321 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
powers, and the time available to them (their tenure lasted only
two years and four months), they did try to introduce some
reforms, take some ameliorative measures, and make some
improvement in the condition of the people — to give the people a
glimps e of the future Swaraj.
The Congress Ministers set an example in plain living. They
reduced their own salaries drastically from Rs. 2000 to Rs. 500
per month. They were easily accessible to the common people.
And in a very short time, they did pass a very large amount of
ameliorative legislation, trying to fulfil many of the promises
made in the Congress election manifesto.
*
The commitment of the Congress to the defence and
extension of civil liberties was as old as the Congress itself, and it
is hardly surprising, therefore, that the Congress Ministries
registered major achievements in this sphere. All emergency
powers acquired by the provincial governments during 1932,
through Public Safety Acts and the like, were repealed; bans on
illegal political org anizations such as the Hindustan Seva Dal and
Youth Leagues and on political books and journals were lifted.
Though the ban on the Communist Party remained, since it was
imposed by the Central Government and could only be lifted on
its orders, the Communis ts could in effect now function freely
and openly in the Congress provinces. All restrictions on the
press were removed. Securities taken from newspapers and
presses were refunded and pending prosecutions were
withdrawn. The blacklisting of newspapers for purposes of
government advertising was given up. Confiscated arms were
returned and forfeited arms licenses were restored.
Of all the British functionaries, the ones the people were
most afraid of, as also hated, were the police. On 21 August
1937, after the formation of the Ministries, Gandhiji wrote,
‘Indeed, the triumph of the Congress will be measured by the
success it achieves in rendering the police and military[/INST] |
success it achieves in rendering the police and military
practically idle. . . The best and the only effective way to wreck
the existing Constitut ion is for the Congress to prove conclusively
that it can rule without the aid of military and with the least | <s>[INST]success it achieves in rendering the police and military
practically idle. . . The best and the only effective way to wreck
the existing Constitut ion is for the Congress to prove conclusively
that it can rule without the aid of military and with the least[/INST] |
322 | India’s Struggle For Independence
possible assistance of the police . . .‘ In the Congress provinces,
police powers were curbed and the reporting of public speeches
and the shadowi ng of political workers by CID (Central
Investigation Department) agents stopped.
One of the first acts of the Congress Government was to
release thousands of political prisoners and detenus and to
cancel internment and deportation orders on political wor kers.
Many of the revolutionaries involved in the Kakori and other
conspiracy cases were released. But pro blems remained in U.P.
and Bihar where several revolutionaries convicted of crimes
involving violence remained in jails. Most of these prisoners had
earlier been sent to kala pani (Cellular Jail in Andamans) from
where they had been transferred to their respective provinces
after they had gone on a prolonged hunger strike during July
1937. In February 19 38, there were fifteen such prisoners in U.P.
and twenty -three in Bihar. Their release required consent by the
Governors which was refused. But the Congress Ministries were
determined to release them. The Ministries of U.P. and Bihar
resigned on this issue on 15 February. The problem was finally
resolved through negotiations. All the prisoners in both provinces
were released by the end of March.
The difference between the Congress provinces and the non -
Congress pro vinces of Bengal and Punjab was most apparent in
this realm. In the latter, especially in Be ngal, civil liberties
continued to be curbed and rev olutionary prisoners and detenus,
kept for years in prison without trial, were not released despite
repeated hunger strikes by the prisoners and popular movements
demanding their release.
In Bombay, the Government also took steps to restore to the
original owners lands which had been confiscated by the
Government as a result of the no -tax campaign during the Civil
Disobedience Movement in 1930. It, too, had to threaten | <s>[INST]322 | India’s Struggle For Independence
possible assistance of the police . . .‘ In the Congress provinces,
police powers were curbed and the reporting of public speeches
and the shadowi ng of political workers by CID (Central
Investigation Department) agents stopped.
One of the first acts of the Congress Government was to
release thousands of political prisoners and detenus and to
cancel internment and deportation orders on political wor kers.
Many of the revolutionaries involved in the Kakori and other
conspiracy cases were released. But pro blems remained in U.P.
and Bihar where several revolutionaries convicted of crimes
involving violence remained in jails. Most of these prisoners had
earlier been sent to kala pani (Cellular Jail in Andamans) from
where they had been transferred to their respective provinces
after they had gone on a prolonged hunger strike during July
1937. In February 19 38, there were fifteen such prisoners in U.P.
and twenty -three in Bihar. Their release required consent by the
Governors which was refused. But the Congress Ministries were
determined to release them. The Ministries of U.P. and Bihar
resigned on this issue on 15 February. The problem was finally
resolved through negotiations. All the prisoners in both provinces
were released by the end of March.
The difference between the Congress provinces and the non -
Congress pro vinces of Bengal and Punjab was most apparent in
this realm. In the latter, especially in Be ngal, civil liberties
continued to be curbed and rev olutionary prisoners and detenus,
kept for years in prison without trial, were not released despite
repeated hunger strikes by the prisoners and popular movements
demanding their release.
In Bombay, the Government also took steps to restore to the
original owners lands which had been confiscated by the
Government as a result of the no -tax campaign during the Civil
Disobedience Movement in 1930. It, too, had to threaten[/INST] |
Disobedience Movement in 1930. It, too, had to threaten
resignation before it could persuade the Governor to agree. The
pensions of officials dismissed during 1930 and 1932 for
sympathizing with the movement were also restored. There were,
however, certain blemishes on the Congress ministerial record in
this res pect. In July 1937, Yusuf Meher ally, a Socialist leader,
was prosecuted by the Madras Government for making an
inflammatory speech in Malabar, though he was soon let off. In | <s>[INST]Disobedience Movement in 1930. It, too, had to threaten
resignation before it could persuade the Governor to agree. The
pensions of officials dismissed during 1930 and 1932 for
sympathizing with the movement were also restored. There were,
however, certain blemishes on the Congress ministerial record in
this res pect. In July 1937, Yusuf Meher ally, a Socialist leader,
was prosecuted by the Madras Government for making an
inflammatory speech in Malabar, though he was soon let off. In[/INST] |
323 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
October 1937, the Madras Government prosecuted S.S.
Batliwala, another Congress Social leader, for making a seditiou s
speech and sentenced him to six months’ imprisonment. There
was a furore in the Congress ranks led by Jawaharlal Nehru, for
this action went against the well -known Congress position that
nobody should be prosecuted for making a speech and least of all
for a speech against colonial rule. During the discussion on the
subject in the Congress Working Committee, Nehru, reportedly,
asked C. Rajagopalachari, the Premier of Madras (the head of the
Provincial ministry was then known as Premier and not Chief
Minist er as now is the case): ‘Do you mean to say that if I come to
Madras and make a similar speech you would arrest me?’ ‘I
would,’ the latter is said to have replied. In the end Batliwala was
released and went around Madras Presidency making similar
speeches. The affair proved to be an exception; but it bred a
certain suspicion regarding the future attitude of the Congress
Right wing.
Much worse was the mentality of a few of the right -wing
Congress ministers. For instance, K.M. Munshi, the Home
Minister of Bo mbay, and a light -weight within the Congress
leadership, used the C1D to watch the Communists and other
left-wing Congressmen, earning a rebuke from Jawaharlal Nehru:
‘You have already become a police officer.’7 The Madras
Government, too, used the police to shadow radical
Congressmen. These blemishes have, however, to be seen in the
larger context of the vast expansion of civil liberties even in
Bombay and Madras. Moreover, the mass of Congressmen were
vigilant on this question. Led by the left -wing, they exerted
intense pressure on the right -wing Congress ministers to avoid
tampering with civil liberties.
*
The Congress Ministries tried to give economic relief to the
peasants and the workers as quickly as possible. The Congress
had succeeded, in the past, in acquiring massive support among | <s>[INST]323 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
October 1937, the Madras Government prosecuted S.S.
Batliwala, another Congress Social leader, for making a seditiou s
speech and sentenced him to six months’ imprisonment. There
was a furore in the Congress ranks led by Jawaharlal Nehru, for
this action went against the well -known Congress position that
nobody should be prosecuted for making a speech and least of all
for a speech against colonial rule. During the discussion on the
subject in the Congress Working Committee, Nehru, reportedly,
asked C. Rajagopalachari, the Premier of Madras (the head of the
Provincial ministry was then known as Premier and not Chief
Minist er as now is the case): ‘Do you mean to say that if I come to
Madras and make a similar speech you would arrest me?’ ‘I
would,’ the latter is said to have replied. In the end Batliwala was
released and went around Madras Presidency making similar
speeches. The affair proved to be an exception; but it bred a
certain suspicion regarding the future attitude of the Congress
Right wing.
Much worse was the mentality of a few of the right -wing
Congress ministers. For instance, K.M. Munshi, the Home
Minister of Bo mbay, and a light -weight within the Congress
leadership, used the C1D to watch the Communists and other
left-wing Congressmen, earning a rebuke from Jawaharlal Nehru:
‘You have already become a police officer.’7 The Madras
Government, too, used the police to shadow radical
Congressmen. These blemishes have, however, to be seen in the
larger context of the vast expansion of civil liberties even in
Bombay and Madras. Moreover, the mass of Congressmen were
vigilant on this question. Led by the left -wing, they exerted
intense pressure on the right -wing Congress ministers to avoid
tampering with civil liberties.
*
The Congress Ministries tried to give economic relief to the
peasants and the workers as quickly as possible. The Congress
had succeeded, in the past, in acquiring massive support among[/INST] |
them by exposing the roots of their poverty in colonial structure
and policy, appealing to their nationalism, leading them in anti -
imperialist struggles, and organizing and supporting their
struggles around their economi c demands. Now that the | <s>[INST]them by exposing the roots of their poverty in colonial structure
and policy, appealing to their nationalism, leading them in anti -
imperialist struggles, and organizing and supporting their
struggles around their economi c demands. Now that the[/INST] |
324 | India’s Struggle For Independence
Congress had acquired some elements of state and administrative
power, it was necessary to use these powers to improve their
economic condition, and, thus, consolidate Congress support.
The strategy of Congress agrarian legislation was worked
out within certain broad parameters. First, the Congress was
committed by its election manifesto and the election campaign to
a policy of agrarian reform through reform of the system of land
tenures and the reduction of rent, land revenue and t he burden
of debt. The Congress had asked rural voters to vote for its
candidates by making large promises in this respect. The voters
had taken them seriously; for example, according to government
reports from Pratapgarh in U.P., on election day ‘a very l arge
number of voters had brought with them pieces of dried cow
dung to the various polling stations where these were lighted
and, according to the tenants, “bedakhl is”, i.e., ejectment orders,
were burnt once for all.
The Congress could not attempt a comp lete overhaul of the
agrarian structure by completely eliminating the zamindari
system. This, for two reasons , According to the constitutional
structure of the 1935 Act, the provincial Ministries did not have
enough powers to do so. They also suffered from an extreme lack
of financial resources, for the lion’s share of India’s revenues was
appropriated by the Government of India. The Congress
Ministries could also not touch the existing administrative
structure, whose sanctity was guarded by the Viceroy’s a nd
Governor’s powers. What is more important, the strategy of class
adjustment also forbade it. A multi -class movement could
develop only by balancing or adjusting various, mutually clashing
class interests. To unite all the Indian people in their struggle
against colonialism, the main enemy of the time, it was necessary
to make such an adjustment. The policy had to be that of
winning over or at least neutralizing as large a part of the | <s>[INST]324 | India’s Struggle For Independence
Congress had acquired some elements of state and administrative
power, it was necessary to use these powers to improve their
economic condition, and, thus, consolidate Congress support.
The strategy of Congress agrarian legislation was worked
out within certain broad parameters. First, the Congress was
committed by its election manifesto and the election campaign to
a policy of agrarian reform through reform of the system of land
tenures and the reduction of rent, land revenue and t he burden
of debt. The Congress had asked rural voters to vote for its
candidates by making large promises in this respect. The voters
had taken them seriously; for example, according to government
reports from Pratapgarh in U.P., on election day ‘a very l arge
number of voters had brought with them pieces of dried cow
dung to the various polling stations where these were lighted
and, according to the tenants, “bedakhl is”, i.e., ejectment orders,
were burnt once for all.
The Congress could not attempt a comp lete overhaul of the
agrarian structure by completely eliminating the zamindari
system. This, for two reasons , According to the constitutional
structure of the 1935 Act, the provincial Ministries did not have
enough powers to do so. They also suffered from an extreme lack
of financial resources, for the lion’s share of India’s revenues was
appropriated by the Government of India. The Congress
Ministries could also not touch the existing administrative
structure, whose sanctity was guarded by the Viceroy’s a nd
Governor’s powers. What is more important, the strategy of class
adjustment also forbade it. A multi -class movement could
develop only by balancing or adjusting various, mutually clashing
class interests. To unite all the Indian people in their struggle
against colonialism, the main enemy of the time, it was necessary
to make such an adjustment. The policy had to be that of
winning over or at least neutralizing as large a part of the[/INST] |
winning over or at least neutralizing as large a part of the
landlord classes as possible so as to isolate the enemy and
deprive him of all social support within India. This was even more
necessary because, in large parts of the country, the smaller
landlords were active participants in the national movement. This
was recognized by most of the leaders of the time. Swami
Sahajanand, the militant peasant leader of Bihar, for example,
wrote in his memoirs: ‘As a national organization, the Congress is
the forum of all classes. All the classes are a part of the | <s>[INST]winning over or at least neutralizing as large a part of the
landlord classes as possible so as to isolate the enemy and
deprive him of all social support within India. This was even more
necessary because, in large parts of the country, the smaller
landlords were active participants in the national movement. This
was recognized by most of the leaders of the time. Swami
Sahajanand, the militant peasant leader of Bihar, for example,
wrote in his memoirs: ‘As a national organization, the Congress is
the forum of all classes. All the classes are a part of the[/INST] |
325 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
Congress. It represents all sections and classes. This is the claim
of the Congre ss and this is desirable also . . . The major function
of the Congress is to maintain harmony between different classes
and to further its struggle while doing so.
There was also the constraint of time. The Congress
leadership knew that their Ministries wo uld not last long and
would have to quit soon as the logic of their politics was to
confront imperialism and not cooperate with it. As Nehru put it
later in his Discovery of India, a ‘sense of impending crisis was
always present; it was inherent in the situation. ’ Even when the
Congress had accepted office, the usual figure given for longevity
of the policy was two years. The time constraint became even
more apparent as war clouds gathered in Europe from 1938
onwards. The Congress Ministries had, therefore, to act rapidly
and achieve as much as possible in the short time available to
them.
Further, nearly all the Congress -run states (that is, U.P.,
Bihar, Bombay, Madras and Assam) had reactionary second
chambers in the form of legislative councils, which we re elected
on a very narrow franchise — while the number of voters for the
assemblies in these states was over 17.5 million, it was less than
70 thousand for the second chambers. These were, therefore,
dominated by landlords, capitalists and moneylenders, with the
Congress forming a small minority. As a majority in the lower
house was not enough, in order to get any legislation passed
through the second chamber, the Congress had to
simultaneously pressu re their upper class elements and
conciliate them. Thus the Bihar Government negotiated a
compromise with the zamindars on its tenancy bills while the
U.P. Government conciliated the moneylender and merchant
members of its upper house by going slow on debt legislation so
that their support could be secured for tenancy legislation. | <s>[INST]325 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
Congress. It represents all sections and classes. This is the claim
of the Congre ss and this is desirable also . . . The major function
of the Congress is to maintain harmony between different classes
and to further its struggle while doing so.
There was also the constraint of time. The Congress
leadership knew that their Ministries wo uld not last long and
would have to quit soon as the logic of their politics was to
confront imperialism and not cooperate with it. As Nehru put it
later in his Discovery of India, a ‘sense of impending crisis was
always present; it was inherent in the situation. ’ Even when the
Congress had accepted office, the usual figure given for longevity
of the policy was two years. The time constraint became even
more apparent as war clouds gathered in Europe from 1938
onwards. The Congress Ministries had, therefore, to act rapidly
and achieve as much as possible in the short time available to
them.
Further, nearly all the Congress -run states (that is, U.P.,
Bihar, Bombay, Madras and Assam) had reactionary second
chambers in the form of legislative councils, which we re elected
on a very narrow franchise — while the number of voters for the
assemblies in these states was over 17.5 million, it was less than
70 thousand for the second chambers. These were, therefore,
dominated by landlords, capitalists and moneylenders, with the
Congress forming a small minority. As a majority in the lower
house was not enough, in order to get any legislation passed
through the second chamber, the Congress had to
simultaneously pressu re their upper class elements and
conciliate them. Thus the Bihar Government negotiated a
compromise with the zamindars on its tenancy bills while the
U.P. Government conciliated the moneylender and merchant
members of its upper house by going slow on debt legislation so
that their support could be secured for tenancy legislation.[/INST] |
that their support could be secured for tenancy legislation.
Finally, the agrarian structure of various parts of India had
developed over the centuries and was extremely complex and
complicated.. There was not even enough information about its
various components — land rights, for instance. Th e problem of
debt and money lending was also integrated with peasant
production and livelihood in too complex a manner to be tackled
by an easy one -shot solution. Consequently, any effort at | <s>[INST]that their support could be secured for tenancy legislation.
Finally, the agrarian structure of various parts of India had
developed over the centuries and was extremely complex and
complicated.. There was not even enough information about its
various components — land rights, for instance. Th e problem of
debt and money lending was also integrated with peasant
production and livelihood in too complex a manner to be tackled
by an easy one -shot solution. Consequently, any effort at[/INST] |
326 | India’s Struggle For Independence
structural reform was bound to be an extremely formidable and
time-consuming operation, as was to be revealed later after
independence when the Congress and the Communists
attempted to transform the agrarian structure in different states
of the Indian union.
Within these constraints, the agrarian policy of the
Congress Ministries went a long way towards promoting the
interests of the peasantry. Agrarian legislation by these Ministries
differed from province to province depending on differing agrarian
relations, the mass base of the Congress, the class composition
and th e outlook of the provincial Congress organization and
leadership and the nature and extent of peasant mobilization. In
general, it dealt with questions of tenancy rights, security of
tenure and rents of the tenants a nd the problem of rural
indebtedness.
To enumerate the achiev ements of the Ministries, in this
regard, briefly: In U.P. a tenancy act was passed in October 1939
which gave all statutory tenants both in Agra and Oudh full
hereditary rights in their holdings while taking away the
landlord’s right to prevent the growth of occupancy. The rents of
hereditary tenants could be changed only after ten years, while
restrictions were placed on the rights of landlords to enhance
rents even after this period. A tenant could no longer be arrested
or imprisone d for non -payment of rent. All illegal exactions such
as nazrana (forced gifts) and begar (forced unpaid labour) were
abolished. In Bihar, the new tenancy legislation was passed
mainly in 1937 and 1938, that is, more quickly than in U.P. More
radical than that of U.P. in most respects, its main provisions
were: All increases in rent made since 1911 were abolished; this
was estimated to mean a reduction of about twenty -five per cent
in rent. The rent was also reduced if th e prices had fallen, during
the curr ency of the existing rent, the deterioration of soil and the | <s>[INST]326 | India’s Struggle For Independence
structural reform was bound to be an extremely formidable and
time-consuming operation, as was to be revealed later after
independence when the Congress and the Communists
attempted to transform the agrarian structure in different states
of the Indian union.
Within these constraints, the agrarian policy of the
Congress Ministries went a long way towards promoting the
interests of the peasantry. Agrarian legislation by these Ministries
differed from province to province depending on differing agrarian
relations, the mass base of the Congress, the class composition
and th e outlook of the provincial Congress organization and
leadership and the nature and extent of peasant mobilization. In
general, it dealt with questions of tenancy rights, security of
tenure and rents of the tenants a nd the problem of rural
indebtedness.
To enumerate the achiev ements of the Ministries, in this
regard, briefly: In U.P. a tenancy act was passed in October 1939
which gave all statutory tenants both in Agra and Oudh full
hereditary rights in their holdings while taking away the
landlord’s right to prevent the growth of occupancy. The rents of
hereditary tenants could be changed only after ten years, while
restrictions were placed on the rights of landlords to enhance
rents even after this period. A tenant could no longer be arrested
or imprisone d for non -payment of rent. All illegal exactions such
as nazrana (forced gifts) and begar (forced unpaid labour) were
abolished. In Bihar, the new tenancy legislation was passed
mainly in 1937 and 1938, that is, more quickly than in U.P. More
radical than that of U.P. in most respects, its main provisions
were: All increases in rent made since 1911 were abolished; this
was estimated to mean a reduction of about twenty -five per cent
in rent. The rent was also reduced if th e prices had fallen, during
the curr ency of the existing rent, the deterioration of soil and the[/INST] |
neglect of irrigation by the landlord. Occupancy ryots were given
the absolute right to transfer their holding on the payment of a
nominal amount of two per cent of rent to the landlord. A point of
radical departure was the grant to under -ryots of occupancy
rights if they had cultivated the land for twelve years. Existing
arrears of rent were substantially reduced and the rate of interest
on arrears was reduced from 12.5 to 6.25 per cent. The land lord’s
share in case of share -cropping was not to exceed 9/20 of the | <s>[INST]neglect of irrigation by the landlord. Occupancy ryots were given
the absolute right to transfer their holding on the payment of a
nominal amount of two per cent of rent to the landlord. A point of
radical departure was the grant to under -ryots of occupancy
rights if they had cultivated the land for twelve years. Existing
arrears of rent were substantially reduced and the rate of interest
on arrears was reduced from 12.5 to 6.25 per cent. The land lord’s
share in case of share -cropping was not to exceed 9/20 of the[/INST] |
327 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
produce. Lands which had been sold in the execution of decrees
for the payment of arrears between 1929 and 1937 (bakasht land)
were to be restored to previous tenants on payment of half t he
amount of arrears. The landlord’s power to realize rent was
greatly reduced — the tenant could no longer be arrested or
imprisoned on this account, nor could his immovable property be
sold without his consent. Landlords were forbidden from
charging ille gal dues; any violation would lead to six months
imprisonment. Occupancy tenants could no longer be ejected
from their holdings for non -payment of rent. In fact, the only
right that the landlord retained was the right to get his rent
which was reduced sign ificantly.
In Orissa, a tenancy bill was passed in May 1938 granting
the right of free transfer of occupancy holdings, reducing the
interest on arrears of rent from 12.5 to 6 per cent and abolishing
all illegal levies on tenants. Another bill passed in Fe bruary 1938
reduced all rents in the zamindari areas, transferred in the recent
past from Madras presidency to Orissa, to the rate of land
revenue payable for similar lands in the nearest ryotwari areas
plus 12.5 per cent as compensation to the zamindars. The
Governor refused to give assent to the bill as it would have
reduced the zamindars’ incomes by fifty to sixty per cent.
In Madras, a committee under the chairmanship of T. Prakasam
(1872 -1957), the Revenue Minister, recommended that in the
areas under Permanent Zamindari Settlement the ryot and not
the zamindar was the owner of the soil and that therefore the
level of rents prevailing when the Settlement was made in 1802
should be restored. This would have reduced the rents by about
two-thirds and woul d have meant virtual liquidation of the
zamindari system. The Premier, C. Rajagopalachari, gave full
support to the report. He also rejected the idea of compensating
the zamindars. The Legislative Assembly passed, in January | <s>[INST]327 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
produce. Lands which had been sold in the execution of decrees
for the payment of arrears between 1929 and 1937 (bakasht land)
were to be restored to previous tenants on payment of half t he
amount of arrears. The landlord’s power to realize rent was
greatly reduced — the tenant could no longer be arrested or
imprisoned on this account, nor could his immovable property be
sold without his consent. Landlords were forbidden from
charging ille gal dues; any violation would lead to six months
imprisonment. Occupancy tenants could no longer be ejected
from their holdings for non -payment of rent. In fact, the only
right that the landlord retained was the right to get his rent
which was reduced sign ificantly.
In Orissa, a tenancy bill was passed in May 1938 granting
the right of free transfer of occupancy holdings, reducing the
interest on arrears of rent from 12.5 to 6 per cent and abolishing
all illegal levies on tenants. Another bill passed in Fe bruary 1938
reduced all rents in the zamindari areas, transferred in the recent
past from Madras presidency to Orissa, to the rate of land
revenue payable for similar lands in the nearest ryotwari areas
plus 12.5 per cent as compensation to the zamindars. The
Governor refused to give assent to the bill as it would have
reduced the zamindars’ incomes by fifty to sixty per cent.
In Madras, a committee under the chairmanship of T. Prakasam
(1872 -1957), the Revenue Minister, recommended that in the
areas under Permanent Zamindari Settlement the ryot and not
the zamindar was the owner of the soil and that therefore the
level of rents prevailing when the Settlement was made in 1802
should be restored. This would have reduced the rents by about
two-thirds and woul d have meant virtual liquidation of the
zamindari system. The Premier, C. Rajagopalachari, gave full
support to the report. He also rejected the idea of compensating
the zamindars. The Legislative Assembly passed, in January[/INST] |
the zamindars. The Legislative Assembly passed, in January
1939, a resolution accepting th e recommendations, but before a
bill could be drafted, the Ministry resigned.
Measures of tenancy reform, usually extending security of
tenure to tenants in landlord areas, were also carried in the
legislatures of Bombay, the Central Provinces and the Nor th-West
Frontier Province. The agrarian legislation of the Congress
Ministries thus improved and secured the status of millions of
tenants in zamindari areas. The basic system of landlordism was, | <s>[INST]the zamindars. The Legislative Assembly passed, in January
1939, a resolution accepting th e recommendations, but before a
bill could be drafted, the Ministry resigned.
Measures of tenancy reform, usually extending security of
tenure to tenants in landlord areas, were also carried in the
legislatures of Bombay, the Central Provinces and the Nor th-West
Frontier Province. The agrarian legislation of the Congress
Ministries thus improved and secured the status of millions of
tenants in zamindari areas. The basic system of landlordism was,[/INST] |
328 | India’s Struggle For Independence
of course, not affected. Furthermore, it was, in the main,
statutory and occupancy tenants who benefited. The interests of
the sub -tenants of the occupancy tenants were overlooked.
Agricultural labourers were also not affected. This was partially
because these two sections had not yet been mobilized by the
kisan sabhas, nor had they become voters because of the
restricted franchise under the Act of 1935. Consequently, they
could not exert pressure on the Ministries through either
elections or the peasant movement.
Except for U .P. and Assam, the Congress Government
passed a series of stringent debtors’ relief acts which provided for
the regulation of the moneylenders’ business -— provisions of the
acts included measures such as the cancellation or drastic
reduction of accumulated interest ranging from 6.25 per cent i n
Madras to 9 per cent in Bombay and Bihar. These Governments
also undertook various rather modest rural reconstruction
programmes. In Bombay 40,000 dublas or tied serfs were
liberated. Grazing fees in the forests were abolished in Bombay
and reduced in Ma dras. While the tenancy bills were strongly
opposed by the landlords, the debtors’ relief bills were opposed
not only by the moneylenders but also by lawyers, otherwise
supporters of the Congress, because they derived a large part of
their income from debt litigation.
*
The Congress Ministries adopted, in general. a pro -labour
stance. Their basic approach was to advance workers’ interests
while promoting industrial peace, reducing the resort to strikes
as far as possible, establishing conciliation machiner y,
advocating compulsory arbitration before resorting to st rikes, and
creating goodwill between labour and capital with the Congress
and its ministers assuming the role of intermediaries, while, at
the same time, striving to improve the conditions of the w orkers
and secure wage increases. This attitude alarmed the Indian | <s>[INST]328 | India’s Struggle For Independence
of course, not affected. Furthermore, it was, in the main,
statutory and occupancy tenants who benefited. The interests of
the sub -tenants of the occupancy tenants were overlooked.
Agricultural labourers were also not affected. This was partially
because these two sections had not yet been mobilized by the
kisan sabhas, nor had they become voters because of the
restricted franchise under the Act of 1935. Consequently, they
could not exert pressure on the Ministries through either
elections or the peasant movement.
Except for U .P. and Assam, the Congress Government
passed a series of stringent debtors’ relief acts which provided for
the regulation of the moneylenders’ business -— provisions of the
acts included measures such as the cancellation or drastic
reduction of accumulated interest ranging from 6.25 per cent i n
Madras to 9 per cent in Bombay and Bihar. These Governments
also undertook various rather modest rural reconstruction
programmes. In Bombay 40,000 dublas or tied serfs were
liberated. Grazing fees in the forests were abolished in Bombay
and reduced in Ma dras. While the tenancy bills were strongly
opposed by the landlords, the debtors’ relief bills were opposed
not only by the moneylenders but also by lawyers, otherwise
supporters of the Congress, because they derived a large part of
their income from debt litigation.
*
The Congress Ministries adopted, in general. a pro -labour
stance. Their basic approach was to advance workers’ interests
while promoting industrial peace, reducing the resort to strikes
as far as possible, establishing conciliation machiner y,
advocating compulsory arbitration before resorting to st rikes, and
creating goodwill between labour and capital with the Congress
and its ministers assuming the role of intermediaries, while, at
the same time, striving to improve the conditions of the w orkers
and secure wage increases. This attitude alarmed the Indian[/INST] |
and secure wage increases. This attitude alarmed the Indian
capitalist class which now felt the need to organize itself to press
the ‘provincial governments to hasten slowly’ on such matters.’
Immediately after assuming office, the Bombay Ministry
appointed a Textile Enquiry Committee which recommended,
among other improvements, the increase of wages amounting to a | <s>[INST]and secure wage increases. This attitude alarmed the Indian
capitalist class which now felt the need to organize itself to press
the ‘provincial governments to hasten slowly’ on such matters.’
Immediately after assuming office, the Bombay Ministry
appointed a Textile Enquiry Committee which recommended,
among other improvements, the increase of wages amounting to a[/INST] |
329 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
crore of rupees. Despite mill owners protesting against the
recommendations, they were implemented. In November 1938,
the Governments pa ssed the Industrial Disputes Act which was
based on the philosophy of ‘class collaboration and not class
conflict,’ as the Premier B.G. Kher put it. The emphasis in the Act
was on conciliation, arbitration and negotiations in place of direct
action. The Ac t was also designed to prevent lightning strikes and
lockouts. The Act empowered the Government to refer an
industrial dispute to the Court of Industrial Arbitration. No strike
or lock -out could occur for an interim period of four months
during which the C ourt would give its award. The Act was
strongly opposed by Left Congressmen, including Communists
and Congress Socialists, for restricting the freedom to strike and
for laying down a new complicated procedure for registration of
trade unions, which, they s aid, would encourage unions
promoted by employers in Madras, too, the Government
promoted the policy of ‘internal settlement’ of labour disputes
through government sponsored conciliation and arbitration
proceedings. In U.P., Kanpur was the seat of serious labour
unrest as the workers expected active support from the popularly
elected Government. A major strike occurred in May 1938. The
Government set up a Labour Enqu iry Committee, headed by
Rajendra Prasad. The Committee’s recommendations included an
increa se in workers’ wages with a minimum wage of Rs. 15 per
month, formation of an arbitration board, recruitment of labour
for all mills by an independent board, maternity benefits to
women workers, and recognition of the Left - dominated Mazdur
Sabha by the em ployers. But the employers, who had refused to
cooperate with the Committee, rejected the report. They did,
however, in the end, because of a great deal of pressure from the
Government, adopt its principal recommendations. A similar | <s>[INST]329 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
crore of rupees. Despite mill owners protesting against the
recommendations, they were implemented. In November 1938,
the Governments pa ssed the Industrial Disputes Act which was
based on the philosophy of ‘class collaboration and not class
conflict,’ as the Premier B.G. Kher put it. The emphasis in the Act
was on conciliation, arbitration and negotiations in place of direct
action. The Ac t was also designed to prevent lightning strikes and
lockouts. The Act empowered the Government to refer an
industrial dispute to the Court of Industrial Arbitration. No strike
or lock -out could occur for an interim period of four months
during which the C ourt would give its award. The Act was
strongly opposed by Left Congressmen, including Communists
and Congress Socialists, for restricting the freedom to strike and
for laying down a new complicated procedure for registration of
trade unions, which, they s aid, would encourage unions
promoted by employers in Madras, too, the Government
promoted the policy of ‘internal settlement’ of labour disputes
through government sponsored conciliation and arbitration
proceedings. In U.P., Kanpur was the seat of serious labour
unrest as the workers expected active support from the popularly
elected Government. A major strike occurred in May 1938. The
Government set up a Labour Enqu iry Committee, headed by
Rajendra Prasad. The Committee’s recommendations included an
increa se in workers’ wages with a minimum wage of Rs. 15 per
month, formation of an arbitration board, recruitment of labour
for all mills by an independent board, maternity benefits to
women workers, and recognition of the Left - dominated Mazdur
Sabha by the em ployers. But the employers, who had refused to
cooperate with the Committee, rejected the report. They did,
however, in the end, because of a great deal of pressure from the
Government, adopt its principal recommendations. A similar[/INST] |
Government, adopt its principal recommendations. A similar
Bihar Labour Enquiry Co mmittee headed by Rajendra Prasad
was set up in 1938. It too recommended the strengthening of
trade union rights, an improvement in labour conditions, and
compulsory conciliation and arbitration to be tried before a strike
was declared.
*
The Congress Gov ernments undertook certain other
measures of social reform and welfare. Prohibition was | <s>[INST]Government, adopt its principal recommendations. A similar
Bihar Labour Enquiry Co mmittee headed by Rajendra Prasad
was set up in 1938. It too recommended the strengthening of
trade union rights, an improvement in labour conditions, and
compulsory conciliation and arbitration to be tried before a strike
was declared.
*
The Congress Gov ernments undertook certain other
measures of social reform and welfare. Prohibition was[/INST] |
330 | India’s Struggle For Independence
introduced in selected areas in different states. Measures for the
advancement of untouchables or Harijans (children of God), as
Gandhiji c alled them, including the pas sing of laws enabled
Harijans to enter temples. and to get free access to public office,
public sources of water such as wells and ponds, roads, means of
transport, hospitals, educational and other similar institutions
maintained out of public funds, and r estaurants and hotels.
Moreover, no court or public authority was to recognize any
custom or usage which imposed any civil disability on Harijans.
The number of scholarships and freeships for Harijan students
was increased. Efforts were made to increase th e number of
Harijans in police and other government services.
The Congress Ministries paid a lot of attention to primary,
technical and higher education and public health and sanitation.
Education for girls and Harijans was expanded. In particular, the
Ministries introduced basic education with an emphasis on
manual and productive work. Mass literacy campaigns among
adults were organized. Support and subsidies were given to
khadi, spinning and village industries. Schemes of prison reforms
were taken up. Th e Congress Governments removed impediments
in the path of indigenous industrial expansion and, in fact,
actively attempted to promote several modern industrial ventures
such as automobile manufacture.
The Congress Governments also joined the effort to dev elop
planning through the National Planning Committee appointed in
1938 by the Congress President Subhas Bose.
*
It was a basic aspect of the Congress strategy that in the
non-mass struggle phases of the national movement, mass
political activity and popu lar mobilization were to continue,
though within the four -walls of legality, in fact, it was a part of
the office -acceptance strategy that offices would be used to
promote mass political activity. Jawaharlal Nehru, as the | <s>[INST]330 | India’s Struggle For Independence
introduced in selected areas in different states. Measures for the
advancement of untouchables or Harijans (children of God), as
Gandhiji c alled them, including the pas sing of laws enabled
Harijans to enter temples. and to get free access to public office,
public sources of water such as wells and ponds, roads, means of
transport, hospitals, educational and other similar institutions
maintained out of public funds, and r estaurants and hotels.
Moreover, no court or public authority was to recognize any
custom or usage which imposed any civil disability on Harijans.
The number of scholarships and freeships for Harijan students
was increased. Efforts were made to increase th e number of
Harijans in police and other government services.
The Congress Ministries paid a lot of attention to primary,
technical and higher education and public health and sanitation.
Education for girls and Harijans was expanded. In particular, the
Ministries introduced basic education with an emphasis on
manual and productive work. Mass literacy campaigns among
adults were organized. Support and subsidies were given to
khadi, spinning and village industries. Schemes of prison reforms
were taken up. Th e Congress Governments removed impediments
in the path of indigenous industrial expansion and, in fact,
actively attempted to promote several modern industrial ventures
such as automobile manufacture.
The Congress Governments also joined the effort to dev elop
planning through the National Planning Committee appointed in
1938 by the Congress President Subhas Bose.
*
It was a basic aspect of the Congress strategy that in the
non-mass struggle phases of the national movement, mass
political activity and popu lar mobilization were to continue,
though within the four -walls of legality, in fact, it was a part of
the office -acceptance strategy that offices would be used to
promote mass political activity. Jawaharlal Nehru, as the[/INST] |
promote mass political activity. Jawaharlal Nehru, as the
president of the Congress, for exa mple, sent a circular to all
Congressmen on 10 July, 1937 emphasizing that organizational
and other work outside the legislature was to remain the major
occupation of the Congress for ‘without it legislative activity
would have little value’ and that ‘the two forms of activity must | <s>[INST]promote mass political activity. Jawaharlal Nehru, as the
president of the Congress, for exa mple, sent a circular to all
Congressmen on 10 July, 1937 emphasizing that organizational
and other work outside the legislature was to remain the major
occupation of the Congress for ‘without it legislative activity
would have little value’ and that ‘the two forms of activity must[/INST] |
331 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
be coordinated together and the masses should be kept in touch
with whatever we do and consulted about it. The initiative must
come from the masses.”
The question was the forms this mass political activity
should take, and how wo rk in administration and legislature was
to be coordinated with political work outside and, equally
important, what attitude the popularly elected government
should adopt towards popular agitations, especially those which
stepped outside the bounds of exis ting legality? There were no
historical precedents to learn from or to follow. Different answers
were found in different provinces. Unfortunately, the subject has
not been studied in any depth by historians, except in a case
study of U.P. by Visalakshi Men on.’ According to Menon, the
coordination of legislative and administrative activities and extra -
parliamentary struggles was quite successful in U.P. There was
widespread mass mobilization which took diverse forms, from the
organization of Congress committ ees in villages to the setting up
of popular organs of authority in the form of Congress police
stations and panchayats dispensing justice under the leadership
of local Congress committees, from organizing of mass petitions
to officials and Ministers to se tting up of Congress grievance
committees in the districts to hear local grievances and reporting
them to MLAs and Ministers, from mass literacy campaigns to
explain to the people the working of the Ministries, and from
organization of local, district and provincial camps and
conferences to celebration of various days and weeks. Local
Congress committees, members of Legislative Assembly,
provincial and all -India level leaders and even ministers were
involved in many of these extra -parliamentary mass mobiliz ation
programmes. More detailed research is likely to show that not all
Congress Governments were able to coordinate administration | <s>[INST]331 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
be coordinated together and the masses should be kept in touch
with whatever we do and consulted about it. The initiative must
come from the masses.”
The question was the forms this mass political activity
should take, and how wo rk in administration and legislature was
to be coordinated with political work outside and, equally
important, what attitude the popularly elected government
should adopt towards popular agitations, especially those which
stepped outside the bounds of exis ting legality? There were no
historical precedents to learn from or to follow. Different answers
were found in different provinces. Unfortunately, the subject has
not been studied in any depth by historians, except in a case
study of U.P. by Visalakshi Men on.’ According to Menon, the
coordination of legislative and administrative activities and extra -
parliamentary struggles was quite successful in U.P. There was
widespread mass mobilization which took diverse forms, from the
organization of Congress committ ees in villages to the setting up
of popular organs of authority in the form of Congress police
stations and panchayats dispensing justice under the leadership
of local Congress committees, from organizing of mass petitions
to officials and Ministers to se tting up of Congress grievance
committees in the districts to hear local grievances and reporting
them to MLAs and Ministers, from mass literacy campaigns to
explain to the people the working of the Ministries, and from
organization of local, district and provincial camps and
conferences to celebration of various days and weeks. Local
Congress committees, members of Legislative Assembly,
provincial and all -India level leaders and even ministers were
involved in many of these extra -parliamentary mass mobiliz ation
programmes. More detailed research is likely to show that not all
Congress Governments were able to coordinate administration[/INST] |
Congress Governments were able to coordinate administration
with popular mobilization, especially where the right -wing
dominated the ‘provincial Congress and the Government.
Moreover, even in U.P., mass mobilization was losing steam by
1939.
However, the dilemma also arose in another manner.
Political work outside the legislatures would involve organizing
popular protest. How far could a movement go in organizing
protests and agitation s against itself? | <s>[INST]Congress Governments were able to coordinate administration
with popular mobilization, especially where the right -wing
dominated the ‘provincial Congress and the Government.
Moreover, even in U.P., mass mobilization was losing steam by
1939.
However, the dilemma also arose in another manner.
Political work outside the legislatures would involve organizing
popular protest. How far could a movement go in organizing
protests and agitation s against itself?[/INST] |
332 | India’s Struggle For Independence
Could a party which ran a government be simultaneously
the organizer of popular movements and enforcer of law and
order? And what if some of the protests took a violent or extra -
legal form? Could civil liberties have their excess? How sh ould
the governmental wing of the movement then respond, since it is
one of the functions of any government — colonial or nationalist,
leftist or rightist or centrist --- to see that the existing laws are
observed, in fact, the issue looks at the very ques tion of the role
of the state in modern society, whether capitalist or socialist.
Moreover, part of the strategy of increasing Congress influence or
rather hegemony among the people w as dependent on the
demonstration, by the party leading the national mov ement, of its
ability to govern and the capacity to rule. At the same time,
existing laws were colonial laws. How far could a regime
committed to their over -throw go in enforcing them?
Furthe rmore, it was inevitable that, on the one hand, the long
suppress ed masses would try to bring pressure on the Ministries
to get their demands fulfilled as early as possible, especially as
they looked upon the Congress Ministries with ‘a sense of
ownership’ while, on the other, the satisfaction of these demands
by the Mi nistries would be slow because of the constraints
inherent in working through constitutional processes. The issue
was, perhaps, posed as an easily solvable problem as far as
Congressmen committed to non violence were concerned, but
there were many other Co ngressmen for example, Communists,
Socialists , Royists and Revolutionary Terrorists — and non -
Congressmen who were not so committed, who tell that expanded
civil liberties should be used to turn the masses towards more
militant or even violent forms of agi tation, and who tried to prove
through such agitations and inadequacy of non -violence, the
Congress strategy of S -TS ’and the policy of the working of | <s>[INST]332 | India’s Struggle For Independence
Could a party which ran a government be simultaneously
the organizer of popular movements and enforcer of law and
order? And what if some of the protests took a violent or extra -
legal form? Could civil liberties have their excess? How sh ould
the governmental wing of the movement then respond, since it is
one of the functions of any government — colonial or nationalist,
leftist or rightist or centrist --- to see that the existing laws are
observed, in fact, the issue looks at the very ques tion of the role
of the state in modern society, whether capitalist or socialist.
Moreover, part of the strategy of increasing Congress influence or
rather hegemony among the people w as dependent on the
demonstration, by the party leading the national mov ement, of its
ability to govern and the capacity to rule. At the same time,
existing laws were colonial laws. How far could a regime
committed to their over -throw go in enforcing them?
Furthe rmore, it was inevitable that, on the one hand, the long
suppress ed masses would try to bring pressure on the Ministries
to get their demands fulfilled as early as possible, especially as
they looked upon the Congress Ministries with ‘a sense of
ownership’ while, on the other, the satisfaction of these demands
by the Mi nistries would be slow because of the constraints
inherent in working through constitutional processes. The issue
was, perhaps, posed as an easily solvable problem as far as
Congressmen committed to non violence were concerned, but
there were many other Co ngressmen for example, Communists,
Socialists , Royists and Revolutionary Terrorists — and non -
Congressmen who were not so committed, who tell that expanded
civil liberties should be used to turn the masses towards more
militant or even violent forms of agi tation, and who tried to prove
through such agitations and inadequacy of non -violence, the
Congress strategy of S -TS ’and the policy of the working of[/INST] |
Congress strategy of S -TS ’and the policy of the working of
reforms. Could governance and tolerance, it’ not promotion, of
violent forms of protest coexist?
There w as one other problem. While many Congressmen
agitated within the perspective of accepting the Congress
Ministries as their own and their role as one of strengthening
them and the Congress through popular agitations and refrained
from creating situations in which punitive action by the
Government would become necessary, mans’ others were out to
expose the ‘breaches of faith and promises’ by these Ministries
and show tip the true’ character of the Congress as the political | <s>[INST]Congress strategy of S -TS ’and the policy of the working of
reforms. Could governance and tolerance, it’ not promotion, of
violent forms of protest coexist?
There w as one other problem. While many Congressmen
agitated within the perspective of accepting the Congress
Ministries as their own and their role as one of strengthening
them and the Congress through popular agitations and refrained
from creating situations in which punitive action by the
Government would become necessary, mans’ others were out to
expose the ‘breaches of faith and promises’ by these Ministries
and show tip the true’ character of the Congress as the political[/INST] |
333 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
organ of the upper classes and one w hich was, perhaps, no
different from the imperialist authorities so far as the masses and
their agitations were concerned, in their turn, many of the
Congressmen looked upon all hostile critics and militants as
forces of disorder and all situations in whic h people expressed
their feelings in an angry manner as ‘getting out of hand.’
Moreover, Congressmen like C. Rajagopalachari and K.M. Munshi
did not hesitate to use their respective state apparatuses in a
politically repressive manner. Unfortunately, the l ull dimensions
of this dilemma have not been adequately explored by historians
so far. Today they can, perhaps, be usefully analyzed in a
comparative framework vis -a-vis the functioning of the
Communists and other radical parties as ruling parties in sever al
states of the Indian Union after 1947, or as parts of ruling groups
as seen in France or Portugal, or as rulers in socialist countries.
The formation of Congress Ministries and the vast extension
of civil liberties unleashed popular energies everywhere . Kisan
sabhas sprang up in every part of the country and there was an
immense growth in trade union activity and membership.
Student and youth movements revived and burgeoned. A
powerful fillip was given to the state peoples’ movement. Left
parties were a ble to expand manifold. Even though it was under a
Central Government ban, the Communist Party was able to bring
out its weekly organ, The National Front, from Bombay. The CSP
brought out The Congress Socialist and several other journals in
Indian language s. Of particular interest is the example of Kirti
Lehar which the Kirti Communists of Punjab brought out from
Meerut, U.P., because they could not do so in Unionist -ruled
Punjab.
Inevitably, many of the popular movements clashed with the
Congress Governme nts. Even though peasant agitations usually
took the form of massive demonstrations and spectacular | <s>[INST]333 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
organ of the upper classes and one w hich was, perhaps, no
different from the imperialist authorities so far as the masses and
their agitations were concerned, in their turn, many of the
Congressmen looked upon all hostile critics and militants as
forces of disorder and all situations in whic h people expressed
their feelings in an angry manner as ‘getting out of hand.’
Moreover, Congressmen like C. Rajagopalachari and K.M. Munshi
did not hesitate to use their respective state apparatuses in a
politically repressive manner. Unfortunately, the l ull dimensions
of this dilemma have not been adequately explored by historians
so far. Today they can, perhaps, be usefully analyzed in a
comparative framework vis -a-vis the functioning of the
Communists and other radical parties as ruling parties in sever al
states of the Indian Union after 1947, or as parts of ruling groups
as seen in France or Portugal, or as rulers in socialist countries.
The formation of Congress Ministries and the vast extension
of civil liberties unleashed popular energies everywhere . Kisan
sabhas sprang up in every part of the country and there was an
immense growth in trade union activity and membership.
Student and youth movements revived and burgeoned. A
powerful fillip was given to the state peoples’ movement. Left
parties were a ble to expand manifold. Even though it was under a
Central Government ban, the Communist Party was able to bring
out its weekly organ, The National Front, from Bombay. The CSP
brought out The Congress Socialist and several other journals in
Indian language s. Of particular interest is the example of Kirti
Lehar which the Kirti Communists of Punjab brought out from
Meerut, U.P., because they could not do so in Unionist -ruled
Punjab.
Inevitably, many of the popular movements clashed with the
Congress Governme nts. Even though peasant agitations usually
took the form of massive demonstrations and spectacular[/INST] |
took the form of massive demonstrations and spectacular
peasant marches, in Bihar, the kisan movement often came in
frontal confrontation with the Ministry, especially when the Kisan
Sabha asked the peasants not to pay rent or to forcibly occupy
landlords’ lands. There were also cases of physical attacks upon
landlords, big and small, and the looting of crops. Kisan Sabha
workers popularized Sahajanand’s militant slogans: Logan Lenge
Kaise, Danda Hamara Zindabad (How will you collect rent, long
live our lathis or sticks) and Lathi Men Sat hi (Lathi is my | <s>[INST]took the form of massive demonstrations and spectacular
peasant marches, in Bihar, the kisan movement often came in
frontal confrontation with the Ministry, especially when the Kisan
Sabha asked the peasants not to pay rent or to forcibly occupy
landlords’ lands. There were also cases of physical attacks upon
landlords, big and small, and the looting of crops. Kisan Sabha
workers popularized Sahajanand’s militant slogans: Logan Lenge
Kaise, Danda Hamara Zindabad (How will you collect rent, long
live our lathis or sticks) and Lathi Men Sat hi (Lathi is my[/INST] |
334 | India’s Struggle For Independence
companion). Consequently, there was a breach in relations
between the Bihar kisan Sabha and the provincial Congress
leadership.
In Bombay, the AITUC, the Communist s, and the followers
of Dr. BR. Ambedkar organized a strike on 7 November 1938, in
seventeen out of seventy -seven textile mills against the passage of
the Industrial Disputes Act. There was some ‘disorder’ and large -
scale stone throwing at two mills and so me policemen were
injured. The police opened fire, killing two and injuring over
seventy. The Madras Government (as also the Provincial Congress
Committee) too adopted a strong policy towards strikes, which
sometimes took a violent turn. Kanpur workers str uck
repeatedly, sometimes acting violently and attacking the police.
But they tended to get Congress support.
Congress Ministries did not know how to deal with
situations where their own mass base was disaffected. They tried
to play a mediatory role which was successful in U.P. and Bihar
and to a certain extent in Madras, but not in Bombay. But, in
general, they were not able to satisfy the Left - wing critics. Quite
often they treated all militant protests, especially trade union
struggles, as a law and or der problem. They took recourse to
Section 144 of the Criminal Code against agitating workers and
arrested peasant and trade union leaders, even in Kanpur.
Jawaharlal Nehru was privately unhappy with the
Ministries’ response to popular protest but his pub lic stance was
different. Then his answer was: ‘We cannot agitate against
ourselves.’ He tended ‘to stand up loyally for the ministers in
public and protect them from petty and petulant criticism.” To
put a check on the growing agitations against Congress
Ministries, the All India Congress Committee passed a resolution
in September 1938, condemning those , ‘including a few
Congressmen,’ who ‘have been found in the name of civil liberty
to advocate murder, arson, looting and class war by violent
means.’ | <s>[INST]334 | India’s Struggle For Independence
companion). Consequently, there was a breach in relations
between the Bihar kisan Sabha and the provincial Congress
leadership.
In Bombay, the AITUC, the Communist s, and the followers
of Dr. BR. Ambedkar organized a strike on 7 November 1938, in
seventeen out of seventy -seven textile mills against the passage of
the Industrial Disputes Act. There was some ‘disorder’ and large -
scale stone throwing at two mills and so me policemen were
injured. The police opened fire, killing two and injuring over
seventy. The Madras Government (as also the Provincial Congress
Committee) too adopted a strong policy towards strikes, which
sometimes took a violent turn. Kanpur workers str uck
repeatedly, sometimes acting violently and attacking the police.
But they tended to get Congress support.
Congress Ministries did not know how to deal with
situations where their own mass base was disaffected. They tried
to play a mediatory role which was successful in U.P. and Bihar
and to a certain extent in Madras, but not in Bombay. But, in
general, they were not able to satisfy the Left - wing critics. Quite
often they treated all militant protests, especially trade union
struggles, as a law and or der problem. They took recourse to
Section 144 of the Criminal Code against agitating workers and
arrested peasant and trade union leaders, even in Kanpur.
Jawaharlal Nehru was privately unhappy with the
Ministries’ response to popular protest but his pub lic stance was
different. Then his answer was: ‘We cannot agitate against
ourselves.’ He tended ‘to stand up loyally for the ministers in
public and protect them from petty and petulant criticism.” To
put a check on the growing agitations against Congress
Ministries, the All India Congress Committee passed a resolution
in September 1938, condemning those , ‘including a few
Congressmen,’ who ‘have been found in the name of civil liberty
to advocate murder, arson, looting and class war by violent
means.’[/INST] |
means.’
‘The Congress,’ the resolution went on , ‘will, consistently with its
tradition, support measures that may be undertaken by Congress
governments for the defence of life and property.”
The Left was highly critical of the Congress Governments’
handling of popular protest; it accused them of trying to suppress | <s>[INST]means.’
‘The Congress,’ the resolution went on , ‘will, consistently with its
tradition, support measures that may be undertaken by Congress
governments for the defence of life and property.”
The Left was highly critical of the Congress Governments’
handling of popular protest; it accused them of trying to suppress[/INST] |
335 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
peasants’ and workers’ organizations. The Communist critique of
the Congress Ministries was later summed up by R. Palme Dutt :
‘The experience of the two years of Congress Ministries
demonstrated with growing acuteness the dangers implicit in
entanglement in imperialist administration under a leadership
already inclined to compromise. The dominant moderate
leadership in effective control of the Congress machinery and of
the Ministries was in practice developing an increasing
cooperation with imperialism, was acting more and more openly
in the interests of the upper -class landlords and industrialists,
and was showing an increasingly marked hostility to all militant
expression and forms of mass struggle . . . Henc e a new crisis of
the national movement began to develop.”
Gandhiji too thought that the policy of ministry formation
was leading to a crisis. But his angle of vision was very different
from that of the Communists. To start with, he opposed militant
agitat ions because he felt that their overt to covert violent
character threatened his basic strategy based on non -violence. At
the beginning of office acceptance, as pointed out earlier, he had
advised the Congress Ministries to rule without the police and the
army. Later he began to argue that ‘violent speech or writing does
not come under th e protection of civil liberty.” But even while
bemoaning the militancy and violence of the popular protest
agitations and just ifying the use of existing legal machinery
against them, Gandhiji objected to the frequent recourse to
colonial laws and law and order machinery to deal with popular
agitations. He wanted reliance to be placed on the political
education of the masses against the use of violence. He
questioned, for exa mple, the Madras Government’s resort to the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, especially to its ‘obnoxious
clauses.’ While criticizing Left -wing incitement to class violence, | <s>[INST]335 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
peasants’ and workers’ organizations. The Communist critique of
the Congress Ministries was later summed up by R. Palme Dutt :
‘The experience of the two years of Congress Ministries
demonstrated with growing acuteness the dangers implicit in
entanglement in imperialist administration under a leadership
already inclined to compromise. The dominant moderate
leadership in effective control of the Congress machinery and of
the Ministries was in practice developing an increasing
cooperation with imperialism, was acting more and more openly
in the interests of the upper -class landlords and industrialists,
and was showing an increasingly marked hostility to all militant
expression and forms of mass struggle . . . Henc e a new crisis of
the national movement began to develop.”
Gandhiji too thought that the policy of ministry formation
was leading to a crisis. But his angle of vision was very different
from that of the Communists. To start with, he opposed militant
agitat ions because he felt that their overt to covert violent
character threatened his basic strategy based on non -violence. At
the beginning of office acceptance, as pointed out earlier, he had
advised the Congress Ministries to rule without the police and the
army. Later he began to argue that ‘violent speech or writing does
not come under th e protection of civil liberty.” But even while
bemoaning the militancy and violence of the popular protest
agitations and just ifying the use of existing legal machinery
against them, Gandhiji objected to the frequent recourse to
colonial laws and law and order machinery to deal with popular
agitations. He wanted reliance to be placed on the political
education of the masses against the use of violence. He
questioned, for exa mple, the Madras Government’s resort to the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, especially to its ‘obnoxious
clauses.’ While criticizing Left -wing incitement to class violence,[/INST] |
he constantly sought to curb Right -wing confrontation with the
Left. He also defended t he right of the Socialists and the
Communists to preach and practise their politics in so far as they
abided by Congress methods. Gandhiji was able to see the
immense harm that the Congress would suffer in terms of erosion
of popular support, especially of the workers and peasants,
because of the repeated use of law and order machinery to deal
with their agitations. This would make it difficult to organize the
next wave of extra -legal mass movement against colonial rule. He
thus perceived the inherent dilem ma in the situation and dealt | <s>[INST]he constantly sought to curb Right -wing confrontation with the
Left. He also defended t he right of the Socialists and the
Communists to preach and practise their politics in so far as they
abided by Congress methods. Gandhiji was able to see the
immense harm that the Congress would suffer in terms of erosion
of popular support, especially of the workers and peasants,
because of the repeated use of law and order machinery to deal
with their agitations. This would make it difficult to organize the
next wave of extra -legal mass movement against colonial rule. He
thus perceived the inherent dilem ma in the situation and dealt[/INST] |
336 | India’s Struggle For Independence
with it in a large number of articles in Haryana during 1938 -39.
This was one major reason why he began to question the efficacy
of continuing with the policy of office acceptance.’8 He wrote in
December 1938 that if the Congr ess Ministries ‘find that they
cannot run the State without the use of the police and the
military, it is the clearest possible sign, in terms of non -violence,
that the Congress should give up office and again wander in the
wilderness in search of the Holy Grail.’
*
The period of the Congress Ministries witnessed the
emergence of serious weakn esses in the Congress. There was a
great deal of factional strife and bickering both on ideological and
personal bases, a good example of which was the factional
squab bles within the Congress Ministry and the Assembly party
in the Central provinces which led to the resignation of Dr. N.B.
Khare as premier. The practice of bogus membership made its
appearance and began to grow. There was a scramble for jobs
and positions of personal advantage. Indiscipline among
Congressmen was on the increase everywhere. Opportunists, self -
seekers and careerists, drawn by the lure of associating with a
party in power, began to enter the ranks of the Congress at
various levels. This was e asy because the Congress was an open
party which anybody could join. Many Congressmen began to
give way to casteism in their search for power.
Gandhiji began to feel that ‘We seem to be weakening from
within.’ Full of despondency, Gandhiji repeatedly lash ed out in
the columns of Haryana against the growing misuse of office and
creeping corruption in Congress ranks. ‘I would go to the length
of giving the whole Congress organization a decent burial, rather
than put up with the corruption that is rampant,’ h e told the
Gandhi Seva Sangh workers in May 1939.20 Earlier, in
November 1938, he had written in Haryana: ‘If the Congress is
not purged of illegalities and irregularities, it will cease to be the | <s>[INST]336 | India’s Struggle For Independence
with it in a large number of articles in Haryana during 1938 -39.
This was one major reason why he began to question the efficacy
of continuing with the policy of office acceptance.’8 He wrote in
December 1938 that if the Congr ess Ministries ‘find that they
cannot run the State without the use of the police and the
military, it is the clearest possible sign, in terms of non -violence,
that the Congress should give up office and again wander in the
wilderness in search of the Holy Grail.’
*
The period of the Congress Ministries witnessed the
emergence of serious weakn esses in the Congress. There was a
great deal of factional strife and bickering both on ideological and
personal bases, a good example of which was the factional
squab bles within the Congress Ministry and the Assembly party
in the Central provinces which led to the resignation of Dr. N.B.
Khare as premier. The practice of bogus membership made its
appearance and began to grow. There was a scramble for jobs
and positions of personal advantage. Indiscipline among
Congressmen was on the increase everywhere. Opportunists, self -
seekers and careerists, drawn by the lure of associating with a
party in power, began to enter the ranks of the Congress at
various levels. This was e asy because the Congress was an open
party which anybody could join. Many Congressmen began to
give way to casteism in their search for power.
Gandhiji began to feel that ‘We seem to be weakening from
within.’ Full of despondency, Gandhiji repeatedly lash ed out in
the columns of Haryana against the growing misuse of office and
creeping corruption in Congress ranks. ‘I would go to the length
of giving the whole Congress organization a decent burial, rather
than put up with the corruption that is rampant,’ h e told the
Gandhi Seva Sangh workers in May 1939.20 Earlier, in
November 1938, he had written in Haryana: ‘If the Congress is
not purged of illegalities and irregularities, it will cease to be the[/INST] |
power it is today and will fail to fulfil expectations when the real
struggle faces the country.’ Gandhiji, of course, saw that this
slackening of the movement and weakening of the moral fibre of
Congressmen was in part inevitable in a phase of non -mass | <s>[INST]power it is today and will fail to fulfil expectations when the real
struggle faces the country.’ Gandhiji, of course, saw that this
slackening of the movement and weakening of the moral fibre of
Congressmen was in part inevitable in a phase of non -mass[/INST] |
337 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
struggle. He, therefore, advised giving up of offices and sta rting
preparations for another phase of Satyagraha.
Jawaharlal too had been feeling for some time that the
positive role of the Ministries was getting exhausted. He wrote to
Gandhiji on 28 April 1938: ‘1 feel strongly that the Congress
ministries are work ing inefficiently and not doing much that they
could do. They are adapting themselves far too much to the old
order and trying to justify it. But all this, bad as it is, might be
tolerated. What is far worse is that we are losing the high position
that we have built up, with so much labour, in the hearts of the
people. We are s inking to the level of ordinary politicians who
have no principles to stand by and whose work is governed by a
day to day opportunism. .. I think there are enough men of
goodwill in t he Congress . But their minds are full of party
conflicts and the desire to crush this individual or that group.’
The Congress Ministries resigned in October 1939 because
of the political crisis brought about by World War 11. But
Gandhiji welcomed the resi gnations for another reason — they
would help cleanse the Congress of the ‘rampant corruption.’ He
wrote to C. Rajagopalachari on 23 October 1939: ‘1 am quite
clear in my mind that what has happened is best for the cause. It
is a bitter pill I know. But it was needed. It will drive away all the
parasites from the body. We have been obliged to do wrong things
which we shall be able to avoid.’ The resignations produced
another positive effect. They brought the Left and the Right in the
Congress closer because of a common policy on the question of
participation in the war.
*
In the balance, the legislative and administrative record of
the Congress Ministries was certainly positive. As R. Coupland
was to remark in 1944: ‘The old contention that Indian self -
government was a necessity for any really radical attack on the | <s>[INST]337 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
struggle. He, therefore, advised giving up of offices and sta rting
preparations for another phase of Satyagraha.
Jawaharlal too had been feeling for some time that the
positive role of the Ministries was getting exhausted. He wrote to
Gandhiji on 28 April 1938: ‘1 feel strongly that the Congress
ministries are work ing inefficiently and not doing much that they
could do. They are adapting themselves far too much to the old
order and trying to justify it. But all this, bad as it is, might be
tolerated. What is far worse is that we are losing the high position
that we have built up, with so much labour, in the hearts of the
people. We are s inking to the level of ordinary politicians who
have no principles to stand by and whose work is governed by a
day to day opportunism. .. I think there are enough men of
goodwill in t he Congress . But their minds are full of party
conflicts and the desire to crush this individual or that group.’
The Congress Ministries resigned in October 1939 because
of the political crisis brought about by World War 11. But
Gandhiji welcomed the resi gnations for another reason — they
would help cleanse the Congress of the ‘rampant corruption.’ He
wrote to C. Rajagopalachari on 23 October 1939: ‘1 am quite
clear in my mind that what has happened is best for the cause. It
is a bitter pill I know. But it was needed. It will drive away all the
parasites from the body. We have been obliged to do wrong things
which we shall be able to avoid.’ The resignations produced
another positive effect. They brought the Left and the Right in the
Congress closer because of a common policy on the question of
participation in the war.
*
In the balance, the legislative and administrative record of
the Congress Ministries was certainly positive. As R. Coupland
was to remark in 1944: ‘The old contention that Indian self -
government was a necessity for any really radical attack on the[/INST] |
social backwardness of India was thus confirmed.’’ And Nehru, a
stern critic of the Congress Ministries in 1938 - 39, wrote in 1944:
‘Looking back, I am surprised at their achievements during a
brief period of two years and a quarter, despite the innumerable
difficulties that surrounded them.’ Even though the Left was | <s>[INST]social backwardness of India was thus confirmed.’’ And Nehru, a
stern critic of the Congress Ministries in 1938 - 39, wrote in 1944:
‘Looking back, I am surprised at their achievements during a
brief period of two years and a quarter, despite the innumerable
difficulties that surrounded them.’ Even though the Left was[/INST] |
338 | India’s Struggle For Independence
critical, in the long view even its expectations were fulfilled in a
large measure. In 1935, Wang Ming, in his report on the
revoluti onary movements in colonial countries at the 6th
Congress of the Communist International, said in the section on
India: ‘Our Indian comrades in attempting to establish a united
anti-imperialist front with the National Congress in December
last year put bef ore the latter such demands as “the
establishment of an Indian workers’ and peasants’ soviet
republic,” “confiscation of all lands belonging to the zamindars
without compensation,” “a general strike as the only effective
programme of action,” etc. Such dem ands on the part of our
Indian comrades can serve as an example of how not to carry on
the tactics of the anti -imperialist united front. . The Indian
communists must formulate a programme of popular demands
which could serve as a platform for a broad anti -imperialist
united front . . . this programme for struggle in the immediate
future should include approximately the following demands: 1)
against the slavish constitution, 2) for the immediate liberation of
all political prisoners, 3) for the abolition of all extraordinary laws
etc., 4) against the lowering of wages, the lengthening of working
day and discharge of workers, 5) against burdensome taxes, high
land rents and against confiscation of peasants’ lands for non -
payment of debts and obligations, and 6 ) for the establishment of
democratic rights.’
Certainly, the Congress Ministries fulfilled this agenda more
or less in entirety.
One of the great achievements of the Congress Governments
was their firm handling of the communal riots. They asked the
district magistrates and police officers to take strong action to
deal with a communal outbreak.
The Congress leadership foiled the imperialist design of
using constitutional reforms to weaken the national movement
and, instead demonstrated how the constitutio nal structure | <s>[INST]338 | India’s Struggle For Independence
critical, in the long view even its expectations were fulfilled in a
large measure. In 1935, Wang Ming, in his report on the
revoluti onary movements in colonial countries at the 6th
Congress of the Communist International, said in the section on
India: ‘Our Indian comrades in attempting to establish a united
anti-imperialist front with the National Congress in December
last year put bef ore the latter such demands as “the
establishment of an Indian workers’ and peasants’ soviet
republic,” “confiscation of all lands belonging to the zamindars
without compensation,” “a general strike as the only effective
programme of action,” etc. Such dem ands on the part of our
Indian comrades can serve as an example of how not to carry on
the tactics of the anti -imperialist united front. . The Indian
communists must formulate a programme of popular demands
which could serve as a platform for a broad anti -imperialist
united front . . . this programme for struggle in the immediate
future should include approximately the following demands: 1)
against the slavish constitution, 2) for the immediate liberation of
all political prisoners, 3) for the abolition of all extraordinary laws
etc., 4) against the lowering of wages, the lengthening of working
day and discharge of workers, 5) against burdensome taxes, high
land rents and against confiscation of peasants’ lands for non -
payment of debts and obligations, and 6 ) for the establishment of
democratic rights.’
Certainly, the Congress Ministries fulfilled this agenda more
or less in entirety.
One of the great achievements of the Congress Governments
was their firm handling of the communal riots. They asked the
district magistrates and police officers to take strong action to
deal with a communal outbreak.
The Congress leadership foiled the imperialist design of
using constitutional reforms to weaken the national movement
and, instead demonstrated how the constitutio nal structure[/INST] |
and, instead demonstrated how the constitutio nal structure
could be used by a movement aiming at capture of state power to
further its own aims without getting co -opted. Despite certain
weaknesses, the Congress emerged stronger from the period of
office acceptance. Nor was the national movement diver ted from
its main task of fighting for self government because of being
engaged in day -to-day administration. Offices were used | <s>[INST]and, instead demonstrated how the constitutio nal structure
could be used by a movement aiming at capture of state power to
further its own aims without getting co -opted. Despite certain
weaknesses, the Congress emerged stronger from the period of
office acceptance. Nor was the national movement diver ted from
its main task of fighting for self government because of being
engaged in day -to-day administration. Offices were used[/INST] |
339 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
successfully for enhancing the national consciousness and
increasing the area of nationalist influence and thus
strengthening th e movement’s capacity to wage a mass struggle
in the future. The movement’s influence was now extended to the
bureaucracy, especially at the lower levels. And the morale of the
ICS (Indian Civil Service), one of the pillars of the British Empire,
suffered a shattering blow. Many ICS officers came to believe that
the British departure from India was only a matter of time. In
later years, especially during the Quit India Movement, the fear
that the Congress might again assume power in the future, a
prospect m ade real by the fact that Congress Ministries had
already been in power once, helped to neutralize many otherwise
hostile elements, such as landlords and even bureaucrats, and
ensured that many of them at least sat on the fence.
One may quote in this resp ect Visalakshi Menon’s
judgement : ‘From the instance of the United Provinces, it is
obvious that there was no popular disillusionment with the
Congress during the period of the Ministry. Rather, the people
were able to perceive, in more concrete terms, the shape of things
to come, if independence were won.’
There was also no growth of provincialism or lessening of
the sense of Indian unity, as the framers of the Act of 1935 and
of its provision for Provincial Autonomy had hoped. The
Ministries succeeded in evolving a common front before the
Government of India . Despite factionalism, the Congress
organization as a whole remained disciplined. Factionalism,
particularly at the top, was kept within bounds with a strong
hand by the central leadership. When it cam e to the crunch,
there was also no sticking so office. Acceptance of office thus did
prove to be just one phase in the freedom str uggle. When an all -
India political crisis occurred and the central Congress leadership
wanted it, the Ministries promptly resi gned. And the oppor tunists | <s>[INST]339 | Twenty -Eight Months Of Congress Rule
successfully for enhancing the national consciousness and
increasing the area of nationalist influence and thus
strengthening th e movement’s capacity to wage a mass struggle
in the future. The movement’s influence was now extended to the
bureaucracy, especially at the lower levels. And the morale of the
ICS (Indian Civil Service), one of the pillars of the British Empire,
suffered a shattering blow. Many ICS officers came to believe that
the British departure from India was only a matter of time. In
later years, especially during the Quit India Movement, the fear
that the Congress might again assume power in the future, a
prospect m ade real by the fact that Congress Ministries had
already been in power once, helped to neutralize many otherwise
hostile elements, such as landlords and even bureaucrats, and
ensured that many of them at least sat on the fence.
One may quote in this resp ect Visalakshi Menon’s
judgement : ‘From the instance of the United Provinces, it is
obvious that there was no popular disillusionment with the
Congress during the period of the Ministry. Rather, the people
were able to perceive, in more concrete terms, the shape of things
to come, if independence were won.’
There was also no growth of provincialism or lessening of
the sense of Indian unity, as the framers of the Act of 1935 and
of its provision for Provincial Autonomy had hoped. The
Ministries succeeded in evolving a common front before the
Government of India . Despite factionalism, the Congress
organization as a whole remained disciplined. Factionalism,
particularly at the top, was kept within bounds with a strong
hand by the central leadership. When it cam e to the crunch,
there was also no sticking so office. Acceptance of office thus did
prove to be just one phase in the freedom str uggle. When an all -
India political crisis occurred and the central Congress leadership
wanted it, the Ministries promptly resi gned. And the oppor tunists[/INST] |
started le aving. As the Congress General Secretary said at the
time: ‘The resignations of the ministries demonstrated to all thou
who had any doubts that Congress was not out for power and
office but for the emancipation of the p eople of India from the
foreign yoke.’
The Congress also avoided a split between its Left and Right
wings — a split which the British were trying to actively promote | <s>[INST]started le aving. As the Congress General Secretary said at the
time: ‘The resignations of the ministries demonstrated to all thou
who had any doubts that Congress was not out for power and
office but for the emancipation of the p eople of India from the
foreign yoke.’
The Congress also avoided a split between its Left and Right
wings — a split which the British were trying to actively promote[/INST] |
340 | India’s Struggle For Independence
since 1934. Despite strong critiques of each other by the two
wings, they not only remain ed united but tended to come closer
to each other, as the crisis at Tripu ri showed.
Above all, the Congress gained by influencing all sections of
the people . The process of the growth of Congress and nationalist
hegemony in Indian society was advanced. If mass struggles
destroyed one crucial elem ent of the hegemonic ideology of
British colonialism by demonstrating that British power was not
invincible then the sight of Indians exercising pow er shattered
another myth by which the British had held Indians in
subjection : that Indians were not fit to rule. | <s>[INST]340 | India’s Struggle For Independence
since 1934. Despite strong critiques of each other by the two
wings, they not only remain ed united but tended to come closer
to each other, as the crisis at Tripu ri showed.
Above all, the Congress gained by influencing all sections of
the people . The process of the growth of Congress and nationalist
hegemony in Indian society was advanced. If mass struggles
destroyed one crucial elem ent of the hegemonic ideology of
British colonialism by demonstrating that British power was not
invincible then the sight of Indians exercising pow er shattered
another myth by which the British had held Indians in
subjection : that Indians were not fit to rule.[/INST] |
341 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
CHAPTER 27. PEASANT MOVEMENTS
IN THE 1930s AND ‘40s
The 1930s bore witness to a new and nation -wide
awakening of Indian peasants to their own strength and capacity
to organize for the betterment of their living conditions. This
awakening was largely a result of the combination of particular
economic and political developments: the great Depression that
began to hit India from 1929 -30 and the new phase of mass
struggle launched by t he Indian National Congress in 1930.
The Depression which brought agricultural prices crashing
down to half or less of their normal levels dealt a severe blow to
the already impoverished peasants burdened with high taxes and
rents. The Government was obdu rate in refusing to scale down
its own rates of taxation or in asking zamindars to bring down
their rents. The prices of manufactured goods, too, didn’t register
comparable decreases. All told, the peasants were placed in a
situation where they had to cont inue to pay taxes, rents, and
debts at pre -Depression rates while their incomes continued to
spiral steadily downward.
The Civil Disobedience Movement was launched in this
atmos1here of discontent in 1930, and in many parts of the
country it soon took on the form of a no -tax and no-rent
campaign. Peasants, emboldened by the recent success of the
Bardoli Satyagraha (1928), joined the protest in large numbers.
In Andhra, for example, the political movement was soon
enmeshed with the campaign against re -settlement that
threatened an increase in land revenue. In U.P., no -revenue soon
turned into no -rent 3nd the movement continued even during the
period of truce following the Gandhi -Irwin Pact. Gandhiji himself
issued a manifesto to the U.P. kisans asking them t o pay only
fifty per cent of the legal rent and get receipts for payment of the
full amount. Peasants in Gujarat , especially in Surat an d Kheda , | <s>[INST]341 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
CHAPTER 27. PEASANT MOVEMENTS
IN THE 1930s AND ‘40s
The 1930s bore witness to a new and nation -wide
awakening of Indian peasants to their own strength and capacity
to organize for the betterment of their living conditions. This
awakening was largely a result of the combination of particular
economic and political developments: the great Depression that
began to hit India from 1929 -30 and the new phase of mass
struggle launched by t he Indian National Congress in 1930.
The Depression which brought agricultural prices crashing
down to half or less of their normal levels dealt a severe blow to
the already impoverished peasants burdened with high taxes and
rents. The Government was obdu rate in refusing to scale down
its own rates of taxation or in asking zamindars to bring down
their rents. The prices of manufactured goods, too, didn’t register
comparable decreases. All told, the peasants were placed in a
situation where they had to cont inue to pay taxes, rents, and
debts at pre -Depression rates while their incomes continued to
spiral steadily downward.
The Civil Disobedience Movement was launched in this
atmos1here of discontent in 1930, and in many parts of the
country it soon took on the form of a no -tax and no-rent
campaign. Peasants, emboldened by the recent success of the
Bardoli Satyagraha (1928), joined the protest in large numbers.
In Andhra, for example, the political movement was soon
enmeshed with the campaign against re -settlement that
threatened an increase in land revenue. In U.P., no -revenue soon
turned into no -rent 3nd the movement continued even during the
period of truce following the Gandhi -Irwin Pact. Gandhiji himself
issued a manifesto to the U.P. kisans asking them t o pay only
fifty per cent of the legal rent and get receipts for payment of the
full amount. Peasants in Gujarat , especially in Surat an d Kheda ,[/INST] |
refused to pay their taxes and went hijrat to neighbouring Baroda
territory to escape government repression. Th eir lands and
movable property w ere confiscated. In Bihar and Bengal,
powerful movements were launched against the hated | <s>[INST]refused to pay their taxes and went hijrat to neighbouring Baroda
territory to escape government repression. Th eir lands and
movable property w ere confiscated. In Bihar and Bengal,
powerful movements were launched against the hated[/INST] |
342 | India’s Struggle For Independence
chowkidara tax by which villagers were made to pa y for the
upkeep of their own oppressors. In Punjab , a no -revenue
campaign was accompa nied by the emergence of kisan sabhas
that demanded a reduction in land revenue and water -rates and
the scaling down of debts. Forest satyagrahas by which
peasants, including tribals, defied the forest laws that prohibited
them from use of the forests were popular in Maharashtra , Bihar
and the Central Provinces. Anti-zamindari struggles emerged in
Andhra, and the first target was the Venkatagiri zamindari, in
Nellore district.
*
The Civil Disobedience Movement contributed to the
emerging peasant movement i n another very important way; a
whole new generation of young militant, political cadres was born
from its womb. This new generation of political workers, which
first received its baptism of fire in the Civil Disobedience
Movement, was increasingly brought under the influence of the
Left ideology that was being propagated by Jawaharlal Nehru ,
Subhas Bose. the Communists and other Marxist and Left
individuals and groups. With the decline of the Civil Disobedience
Movement, these men and women began to search for an outlet
of their political energies and many of them found the answer in
organizing the peasants.
Also, in 1934, with the formation of the Congress Socialist
Party (CSP). the process of the consolidation of the Left forces
received a significant p ush forward. The Communists, too, got
the opportunity, by becoming members of the CSP to work in an
open and legal fashion. This consolidation of the Left acted as a
spur to the formation of an all -India body to coordinate the kisan
movement, a process tha t was already under wa y through the
efforts of N.G. Ranga and other kisan leaders. The culmination
was the establishment of the All -India Kisan Congress in
Lucknow in April 1936 which later changed its name to the All -
India kisan Sabha. Swami Sahajanand , the militant founder of | <s>[INST]342 | India’s Struggle For Independence
chowkidara tax by which villagers were made to pa y for the
upkeep of their own oppressors. In Punjab , a no -revenue
campaign was accompa nied by the emergence of kisan sabhas
that demanded a reduction in land revenue and water -rates and
the scaling down of debts. Forest satyagrahas by which
peasants, including tribals, defied the forest laws that prohibited
them from use of the forests were popular in Maharashtra , Bihar
and the Central Provinces. Anti-zamindari struggles emerged in
Andhra, and the first target was the Venkatagiri zamindari, in
Nellore district.
*
The Civil Disobedience Movement contributed to the
emerging peasant movement i n another very important way; a
whole new generation of young militant, political cadres was born
from its womb. This new generation of political workers, which
first received its baptism of fire in the Civil Disobedience
Movement, was increasingly brought under the influence of the
Left ideology that was being propagated by Jawaharlal Nehru ,
Subhas Bose. the Communists and other Marxist and Left
individuals and groups. With the decline of the Civil Disobedience
Movement, these men and women began to search for an outlet
of their political energies and many of them found the answer in
organizing the peasants.
Also, in 1934, with the formation of the Congress Socialist
Party (CSP). the process of the consolidation of the Left forces
received a significant p ush forward. The Communists, too, got
the opportunity, by becoming members of the CSP to work in an
open and legal fashion. This consolidation of the Left acted as a
spur to the formation of an all -India body to coordinate the kisan
movement, a process tha t was already under wa y through the
efforts of N.G. Ranga and other kisan leaders. The culmination
was the establishment of the All -India Kisan Congress in
Lucknow in April 1936 which later changed its name to the All -
India kisan Sabha. Swami Sahajanand , the militant founder of[/INST] |
India kisan Sabha. Swami Sahajanand , the militant founder of
the Bihar Provincial Kisan Sabha (1929), was elected the
President, and N.G. Ranga, the pioneer of the kisan movement in
Andhra and a renowned schol ar of the agrarian problem, the
General Secretary. The first session was greeted in p erson by | <s>[INST]India kisan Sabha. Swami Sahajanand , the militant founder of
the Bihar Provincial Kisan Sabha (1929), was elected the
President, and N.G. Ranga, the pioneer of the kisan movement in
Andhra and a renowned schol ar of the agrarian problem, the
General Secretary. The first session was greeted in p erson by[/INST] |
343 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
Jawaharlal Nehru. Other participants included Ram Manohar
Lohia, Sohan Singh Josh, Indulal Yagnik, Jayaprakash Narayan,
Mohanlal Gautam, Kamal Sarkar, Sudhin Pramanik and Ahmed
Din. The Conference resolved to bring out a Kisan Manifesto and
a peri odic bulletin edited by Indulal Yagnik.
A Kisan Manifesto was finalized at the All -India Kisan
Committee session in Bombay and formally presented to the
Congress Working Committee to be incorporated into its
forthcoming manifesto for the 1937 elections. T he Kisan
Manifesto considerably influenced the agrarian programme
adopted by the Congress at its Faizpur session, which included
demands for fifty per cent reduction in land revenue and rent, a
moratorium on debts, the abolition of feudal levies, security of
tenure for tenants, a living wage for agricultural labourers, and
the recognition of peasant unions.
At Faizpur, in Maharashtra, along with the Congress
session, was held the second session of the All India Kisan
Congress presided over by N.G. Ranga. Fi ve hundred kisans
marched for over 200 miles from Manmad to Faizpur educating
the people along the way about the objects of the Kisan Congress.
They were welcomed at Faizpur by Jawaharlal Nehru, Shankar
Rao Deo, M.N. Roy, Narendra Dev, S.A. Dange, M.R. Masani,
Yusuf Meherally, Bankim Mukherji and many other Kisan and
Congress leaders. Ranga, in his Presidential Address, declared:
‘We arc organizing ourselves in order to prepare ourselves for the
final inauguration of a Socialist state and society.’
*
The fo rmation of Congress Ministries in a majority of the
provinces in early 1937 marked the beginning of a new phase in
the growth of the peasant movement. The political atmosphere in
the country underwent a marked change: increased civil liberties,
a new sense of freedom born of the feeling that ‘our own people
are in power’, a heightened sense of expectation that the | <s>[INST]343 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
Jawaharlal Nehru. Other participants included Ram Manohar
Lohia, Sohan Singh Josh, Indulal Yagnik, Jayaprakash Narayan,
Mohanlal Gautam, Kamal Sarkar, Sudhin Pramanik and Ahmed
Din. The Conference resolved to bring out a Kisan Manifesto and
a peri odic bulletin edited by Indulal Yagnik.
A Kisan Manifesto was finalized at the All -India Kisan
Committee session in Bombay and formally presented to the
Congress Working Committee to be incorporated into its
forthcoming manifesto for the 1937 elections. T he Kisan
Manifesto considerably influenced the agrarian programme
adopted by the Congress at its Faizpur session, which included
demands for fifty per cent reduction in land revenue and rent, a
moratorium on debts, the abolition of feudal levies, security of
tenure for tenants, a living wage for agricultural labourers, and
the recognition of peasant unions.
At Faizpur, in Maharashtra, along with the Congress
session, was held the second session of the All India Kisan
Congress presided over by N.G. Ranga. Fi ve hundred kisans
marched for over 200 miles from Manmad to Faizpur educating
the people along the way about the objects of the Kisan Congress.
They were welcomed at Faizpur by Jawaharlal Nehru, Shankar
Rao Deo, M.N. Roy, Narendra Dev, S.A. Dange, M.R. Masani,
Yusuf Meherally, Bankim Mukherji and many other Kisan and
Congress leaders. Ranga, in his Presidential Address, declared:
‘We arc organizing ourselves in order to prepare ourselves for the
final inauguration of a Socialist state and society.’
*
The fo rmation of Congress Ministries in a majority of the
provinces in early 1937 marked the beginning of a new phase in
the growth of the peasant movement. The political atmosphere in
the country underwent a marked change: increased civil liberties,
a new sense of freedom born of the feeling that ‘our own people
are in power’, a heightened sense of expectation that the[/INST] |
are in power’, a heightened sense of expectation that the
ministries would bring in pro -people measures — all combined to
make the years 1937 -39 the high -water mark of the peasant
movement. The different Ministries also introduced varying kinds
of agrarian legislation — for debt relief, restoration of lands lost
during the Depression, for security of tenure to tenants and this | <s>[INST]are in power’, a heightened sense of expectation that the
ministries would bring in pro -people measures — all combined to
make the years 1937 -39 the high -water mark of the peasant
movement. The different Ministries also introduced varying kinds
of agrarian legislation — for debt relief, restoration of lands lost
during the Depression, for security of tenure to tenants and this[/INST] |
344 | India’s Struggle For Independence
provided an impetus for the mobilization of the peasantry either
in support of proposed legislation or for asking for changes in its
content.
The chief form of mobilization was through the holding of
kisan conferences or meetings at the thana, taluqa. district and
provincial levels at winch peasants’ demands would be aired and
resolu tions passed. These conferences would be addressed by
local, provincial and all-India leaders. The se would also usually
be preceded by a campaign of mobilization at the village level
when kisan workers would tour the villages, hold meetings, enrol
Congress a nd kisan Sabha members, collect subscriptions in
money and kind and exhort the peasants to attend the
conferences in large numbers. Cultural shows would be
organized at these conferences to carry the message of the
movement to the peasants in an appealing manner. The effect on
the surrounding areas was powerful indeed, and peasants
returned from these gatherings with a new sense of their own
strength and a greater understanding of their own conditions.
In Malabar, in Kerala, for example, a powerful peasant
movement developed as the result of the efforts mainly of CSP
activists, who had been working among the peasants since 1934,
touring villages and setting up Karsha ka Sanghams (peasant
associations). The main demands, around which the movement
cohered, wer e for the abolition of feudal levies or
akramapirivuka l, renewal fees or the practice of policceluthu,
advance rent, and the stopping of eviction of tenants by landlords
on the ground of personal cultivation. Peasants also demanded a
reduction in the tax, rent, and debt burden, and the use of
proper measures by landlords when measuring the grain rent,
and an end to the corrupt practices of the landlords’ managers.
The main forms of mobilization and agitation were the formation
of village units of the Karsh aka Sanghams, conferences and | <s>[INST]344 | India’s Struggle For Independence
provided an impetus for the mobilization of the peasantry either
in support of proposed legislation or for asking for changes in its
content.
The chief form of mobilization was through the holding of
kisan conferences or meetings at the thana, taluqa. district and
provincial levels at winch peasants’ demands would be aired and
resolu tions passed. These conferences would be addressed by
local, provincial and all-India leaders. The se would also usually
be preceded by a campaign of mobilization at the village level
when kisan workers would tour the villages, hold meetings, enrol
Congress a nd kisan Sabha members, collect subscriptions in
money and kind and exhort the peasants to attend the
conferences in large numbers. Cultural shows would be
organized at these conferences to carry the message of the
movement to the peasants in an appealing manner. The effect on
the surrounding areas was powerful indeed, and peasants
returned from these gatherings with a new sense of their own
strength and a greater understanding of their own conditions.
In Malabar, in Kerala, for example, a powerful peasant
movement developed as the result of the efforts mainly of CSP
activists, who had been working among the peasants since 1934,
touring villages and setting up Karsha ka Sanghams (peasant
associations). The main demands, around which the movement
cohered, wer e for the abolition of feudal levies or
akramapirivuka l, renewal fees or the practice of policceluthu,
advance rent, and the stopping of eviction of tenants by landlords
on the ground of personal cultivation. Peasants also demanded a
reduction in the tax, rent, and debt burden, and the use of
proper measures by landlords when measuring the grain rent,
and an end to the corrupt practices of the landlords’ managers.
The main forms of mobilization and agitation were the formation
of village units of the Karsh aka Sanghams, conferences and[/INST] |
of village units of the Karsh aka Sanghams, conferences and
meetings. But a form that became very popular and effective was
the marching of jat has or large groups of peasants to the houses
of big jenmies or landlords, placing the demands before them and
securing immediate redressal. T he main demand of these jathas
was for the abolition of feudal levies such as vasi, nuri, etc.
The Karshaka Sanghams also organized a powerful
campaign around the demand for amending the Malabar Tenancy | <s>[INST]of village units of the Karsh aka Sanghams, conferences and
meetings. But a form that became very popular and effective was
the marching of jat has or large groups of peasants to the houses
of big jenmies or landlords, placing the demands before them and
securing immediate redressal. T he main demand of these jathas
was for the abolition of feudal levies such as vasi, nuri, etc.
The Karshaka Sanghams also organized a powerful
campaign around the demand for amending the Malabar Tenancy[/INST] |
345 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
Act of 1929. The 6th of November, 1938 was observed as the
Malabar Tenancy Act Amendment Day and meetings all over the
district passed a uniform resolution pressing the demand. A
committee headed by R. Ramachandra Nedumgadi was appointed
by the All Malabar Karshaka Sangham to enquire into the
tenurial problem and its recommendations were endorsed by the
Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee on 20 November 1938. In
December, two jathas of five hundred each started from
Karivallur in north Malabar and Kanjiko de in the south and, after
being received and hosted b y local Congress Committees en route
converged at Chevayur near Calicut where the All Malabar
Karshaka Sangham was holding its conference. A public meeting
was held the same evening at Calicut beach presided over by P.
Krishna Pillai, the CSP and later Com munist leader, and
resolutions demanding amendments in the Tenancy Act were
passed. In response to popular pressure, T. Prakasam, the
Andhra Congress leader who was the Revenue Minister in the
Congress Ministry in Madras Presidency, toured Malabar in
Decem ber 1938 to acquaint himself with the tenant problem. A
Tenancy Committee was set up which included three left -wing
members. The Karshaka Sangham units and Congress
committees held a series of meetings to mobilize peasants to
present evidence and to submit memoranda to the Committee.
But, by the time the Committee submitted its report in 1940, the
Congress Ministries had already resigned and no immediate
progress was possible. But the campaign had successfully
mobilized the peasantry on the tenancy question and created an
awareness that ensured that in later years these demands would
inevitably have to be accepted. Meanwhile, the Madras Congress
Ministry had passed legislation for debt relief, and this was
welcomed by the Karshaka Sangham.
In coastal Andhra, too, the mobilization of peasants
proceeded on an unprecedented scale. The Andhra Provincial | <s>[INST]345 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
Act of 1929. The 6th of November, 1938 was observed as the
Malabar Tenancy Act Amendment Day and meetings all over the
district passed a uniform resolution pressing the demand. A
committee headed by R. Ramachandra Nedumgadi was appointed
by the All Malabar Karshaka Sangham to enquire into the
tenurial problem and its recommendations were endorsed by the
Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee on 20 November 1938. In
December, two jathas of five hundred each started from
Karivallur in north Malabar and Kanjiko de in the south and, after
being received and hosted b y local Congress Committees en route
converged at Chevayur near Calicut where the All Malabar
Karshaka Sangham was holding its conference. A public meeting
was held the same evening at Calicut beach presided over by P.
Krishna Pillai, the CSP and later Com munist leader, and
resolutions demanding amendments in the Tenancy Act were
passed. In response to popular pressure, T. Prakasam, the
Andhra Congress leader who was the Revenue Minister in the
Congress Ministry in Madras Presidency, toured Malabar in
Decem ber 1938 to acquaint himself with the tenant problem. A
Tenancy Committee was set up which included three left -wing
members. The Karshaka Sangham units and Congress
committees held a series of meetings to mobilize peasants to
present evidence and to submit memoranda to the Committee.
But, by the time the Committee submitted its report in 1940, the
Congress Ministries had already resigned and no immediate
progress was possible. But the campaign had successfully
mobilized the peasantry on the tenancy question and created an
awareness that ensured that in later years these demands would
inevitably have to be accepted. Meanwhile, the Madras Congress
Ministry had passed legislation for debt relief, and this was
welcomed by the Karshaka Sangham.
In coastal Andhra, too, the mobilization of peasants
proceeded on an unprecedented scale. The Andhra Provincial[/INST] |
proceeded on an unprecedented scale. The Andhra Provincial
Ryots Association and the Andhra Zamin Ryots Association
already had a long history of successful struggle against the
Government and zamindars. In addition, N.G. Ranga had, since
1933, been running the Indian Peasants’ Institute in his home
village of Nidobrolu in Guntur district which trained peasants to
become active workers of the peasant movement. After 1936, left -
wing Congressmen, members of the CSP, many of whom were to
latter join the CPI also joined in the effort to organize the | <s>[INST]proceeded on an unprecedented scale. The Andhra Provincial
Ryots Association and the Andhra Zamin Ryots Association
already had a long history of successful struggle against the
Government and zamindars. In addition, N.G. Ranga had, since
1933, been running the Indian Peasants’ Institute in his home
village of Nidobrolu in Guntur district which trained peasants to
become active workers of the peasant movement. After 1936, left -
wing Congressmen, members of the CSP, many of whom were to
latter join the CPI also joined in the effort to organize the[/INST] |
346 | India’s Struggle For Independence
peasants, and the name of P. Sundarayya was the foremost
among them.
The defeat of many zamindar and pro-zamindar candidates
in the 1937 elections by Congress candidates dealt a bl ow to the
zamindars prestige and gave confidence to the zamindari ryots.
Struggles were launched against the Bobbili and Mungala
zamindaris, and a major struggle erupted against the Kalipatnam
zamindari over cultivation and fishing rights.
In coastal Andh ra, the weapon of peasant marches had
already been used effectively since 1933. Peasant marchers
would converge on the district or taluqa headquarters and
present a list of demands to the authorities . But, in 1938, the
Provincial Kisan Conference organized , for the first time, a march
on a massive scale — a true long march in which over 2.000
kisans marched a distance of over 1,500 miles, starting from
Itchapur in the north, covering nine districts and walking for a
total of 130 days En route, they held hun dreds of meetings
attended by lakhs of peasants and collected over 1,100 petitions;
these were then presented to the provincial legislature in Madras
on 27 March 1938. One of their main demands was for debt
relief, and this was incorporated in the legislat ion passed by the
Congress Ministry and was widely appreciated in Andhra. In
response to the peasants’ demands the Ministry had appointed a
Zamind ari Enquiry Committee, but the legislation based on its
recommendations could not be passed before the Congres s
Ministries resigned.
Another notable feature of the movement in Andhra was the
organization of Summer Schools of Economics and Politics for
peasant activists. These training camps, held at Kothapatnam,
Mantenavaripalarn and other places were addressed b y many of
the major Left Communist leaders of the time including P.C.
Joshi, Ajoy Ghosh and R.D. Bhardwaj. Lectures were delivered on
Indian history, the history of the national struggle on Marxism, | <s>[INST]346 | India’s Struggle For Independence
peasants, and the name of P. Sundarayya was the foremost
among them.
The defeat of many zamindar and pro-zamindar candidates
in the 1937 elections by Congress candidates dealt a bl ow to the
zamindars prestige and gave confidence to the zamindari ryots.
Struggles were launched against the Bobbili and Mungala
zamindaris, and a major struggle erupted against the Kalipatnam
zamindari over cultivation and fishing rights.
In coastal Andh ra, the weapon of peasant marches had
already been used effectively since 1933. Peasant marchers
would converge on the district or taluqa headquarters and
present a list of demands to the authorities . But, in 1938, the
Provincial Kisan Conference organized , for the first time, a march
on a massive scale — a true long march in which over 2.000
kisans marched a distance of over 1,500 miles, starting from
Itchapur in the north, covering nine districts and walking for a
total of 130 days En route, they held hun dreds of meetings
attended by lakhs of peasants and collected over 1,100 petitions;
these were then presented to the provincial legislature in Madras
on 27 March 1938. One of their main demands was for debt
relief, and this was incorporated in the legislat ion passed by the
Congress Ministry and was widely appreciated in Andhra. In
response to the peasants’ demands the Ministry had appointed a
Zamind ari Enquiry Committee, but the legislation based on its
recommendations could not be passed before the Congres s
Ministries resigned.
Another notable feature of the movement in Andhra was the
organization of Summer Schools of Economics and Politics for
peasant activists. These training camps, held at Kothapatnam,
Mantenavaripalarn and other places were addressed b y many of
the major Left Communist leaders of the time including P.C.
Joshi, Ajoy Ghosh and R.D. Bhardwaj. Lectures were delivered on
Indian history, the history of the national struggle on Marxism,[/INST] |
on the Indian economy and numerous associated subjects.
Money and provisions for running these training camps were
collected from the peasants of Andhra. The celebration of various
kisan and other ‘days,’ as well as the popularization of peasant
songs, was another form of mobilization. | <s>[INST]on the Indian economy and numerous associated subjects.
Money and provisions for running these training camps were
collected from the peasants of Andhra. The celebration of various
kisan and other ‘days,’ as well as the popularization of peasant
songs, was another form of mobilization.[/INST] |
347 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
Bihar was another major ar ea of peasant mobilization in
this period. Swami Sahajanand., the founder of the Bihar
Provincial Kisan Sabha and a major leader 3f the All India Kisan
Sabha, was joined by many other left -wing leaders like
Karyanand Sharma, Rahul Sankritayan, Panchanan Sh arma and
Yadunandan Sharma in spreading the kisan sabha organization
to the village of Bihar.
The Bihar Provincial Kisan Sabha effectively used meetings,
conferences, rallies, and mass demonstrations, including a
demonstration of one lakh peasants at Patn a in 1938, to
popularize the kisan Sabha programme . The slogan of zamindari
abolition, adopted by the Sabha in 1935, was popularized among
the peasants through resolutions passed at these gatherings.
Other demands included the stopping of illegal levies, t he
prevention of eviction of tenants and the return of Bakasht lands.
The Congress Ministry had initiated legislation for the
reduction of rent and the restoration of Bakasht lands. Bakasht
lands were those which the occupancy tenants had lost to
zamindar s, mostly during the Depression years, by virtue of non -
payment of rent, and which they often continued to cult ivate as
share -croppers. But the formula that was finally incorporated in
the legislation on the basis of an agreement with the zamindars
did not satisfy the radical leaders of the kisan Sabha. The
legislation gave a certain proportion of the lands back to the
tenants on condition that they pay half the auction price of the
land. Besides, certain categories of land had been exempted from
the operat ion of the law.
The Bakasht lands issue became a major ground of
contention between the Kisan Sabha and the Congress Ministry.
Struggles, such as the one already in progress in Barahiya tal in
Monghyr district under the leadership of Karyanand Shanna,
were continued and new ones emerged. At Reora, in Gaya
district, with Yadunandan Sharma at their head, the peasants | <s>[INST]347 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
Bihar was another major ar ea of peasant mobilization in
this period. Swami Sahajanand., the founder of the Bihar
Provincial Kisan Sabha and a major leader 3f the All India Kisan
Sabha, was joined by many other left -wing leaders like
Karyanand Sharma, Rahul Sankritayan, Panchanan Sh arma and
Yadunandan Sharma in spreading the kisan sabha organization
to the village of Bihar.
The Bihar Provincial Kisan Sabha effectively used meetings,
conferences, rallies, and mass demonstrations, including a
demonstration of one lakh peasants at Patn a in 1938, to
popularize the kisan Sabha programme . The slogan of zamindari
abolition, adopted by the Sabha in 1935, was popularized among
the peasants through resolutions passed at these gatherings.
Other demands included the stopping of illegal levies, t he
prevention of eviction of tenants and the return of Bakasht lands.
The Congress Ministry had initiated legislation for the
reduction of rent and the restoration of Bakasht lands. Bakasht
lands were those which the occupancy tenants had lost to
zamindar s, mostly during the Depression years, by virtue of non -
payment of rent, and which they often continued to cult ivate as
share -croppers. But the formula that was finally incorporated in
the legislation on the basis of an agreement with the zamindars
did not satisfy the radical leaders of the kisan Sabha. The
legislation gave a certain proportion of the lands back to the
tenants on condition that they pay half the auction price of the
land. Besides, certain categories of land had been exempted from
the operat ion of the law.
The Bakasht lands issue became a major ground of
contention between the Kisan Sabha and the Congress Ministry.
Struggles, such as the one already in progress in Barahiya tal in
Monghyr district under the leadership of Karyanand Shanna,
were continued and new ones emerged. At Reora, in Gaya
district, with Yadunandan Sharma at their head, the peasants[/INST] |
district, with Yadunandan Sharma at their head, the peasants
won a major victory when the District Magistrate gave an award
restoring 850 out of the disputed 1,000 bighas to the tenants.
This gave a major fillip to the movement elsewhere. In
Darbhanga, movements emerged in Padri, Raghopore, Dekuli and
Pandoul. Jamuna Karjee led the movement in Saran district, and
Rahul Sankritayan in Annawari. The movements adopted the | <s>[INST]district, with Yadunandan Sharma at their head, the peasants
won a major victory when the District Magistrate gave an award
restoring 850 out of the disputed 1,000 bighas to the tenants.
This gave a major fillip to the movement elsewhere. In
Darbhanga, movements emerged in Padri, Raghopore, Dekuli and
Pandoul. Jamuna Karjee led the movement in Saran district, and
Rahul Sankritayan in Annawari. The movements adopted the[/INST] |
348 | India’s Struggle For Independence
methods of Saiyagraha, and forcible so wing and harvesting of
crops. The zamindars retaliated by using lathials to break up
meetings and terrorize the peasants. Clashes with the zamindars’
men became the order of the day and the police often intervened
to arrest the leaders and activists. In so me places, the
government and other Congress leaders intervened to bring a
compromise. The movement on the Bakasht issue reached its
peak in late 1938 and 1939, but by August 1939 a combination
of concessions, legislation and the arrest of about 600 activi sts
succeeded in quietening the peasants. The movement was
resumed in certain pockets in 1945 and continued in one form or
another till zamindari was abolished.
Punjab was another centre of kisan activity. Here, too, the
kisan sabhas that had emerged in th e early 1930s, through the
efforts of Naujawan Bharat Sabha, Kirti Kisan . Congress and
Akali activists, were given a new sense of direction and cohesion
by the Punjab Kisan Committee formed in 1937. The pattern of
mobilization was the familiar one — kisan workers toured villages
enrolling kisan Sabha and Congress members, organizing
meetings , mobilizing people for the tehsils, district and provincial
level conferences (which were held with increasing frequency and
attended by an array of national stars). Th e main demands
related to the reduction of taxes and a moratorium on debts. The
target of attack was the Unionist Ministry, dominated by the big
landlords of Western Punjab.
The two issues that came up for an immediate struggle were
the resettlement of land revenue of Amritsar and Lahore districts
and the increase in the canal tax or water -rate. Jathas marched
to the district headquarters and huge demonstrations were held.
The culmination was the Lahore Kisan Morcha in 1939 in which
hundreds of kisans from many districts of the province courted
arrest. A different kind of struggle broke out in the Multan and | <s>[INST]348 | India’s Struggle For Independence
methods of Saiyagraha, and forcible so wing and harvesting of
crops. The zamindars retaliated by using lathials to break up
meetings and terrorize the peasants. Clashes with the zamindars’
men became the order of the day and the police often intervened
to arrest the leaders and activists. In so me places, the
government and other Congress leaders intervened to bring a
compromise. The movement on the Bakasht issue reached its
peak in late 1938 and 1939, but by August 1939 a combination
of concessions, legislation and the arrest of about 600 activi sts
succeeded in quietening the peasants. The movement was
resumed in certain pockets in 1945 and continued in one form or
another till zamindari was abolished.
Punjab was another centre of kisan activity. Here, too, the
kisan sabhas that had emerged in th e early 1930s, through the
efforts of Naujawan Bharat Sabha, Kirti Kisan . Congress and
Akali activists, were given a new sense of direction and cohesion
by the Punjab Kisan Committee formed in 1937. The pattern of
mobilization was the familiar one — kisan workers toured villages
enrolling kisan Sabha and Congress members, organizing
meetings , mobilizing people for the tehsils, district and provincial
level conferences (which were held with increasing frequency and
attended by an array of national stars). Th e main demands
related to the reduction of taxes and a moratorium on debts. The
target of attack was the Unionist Ministry, dominated by the big
landlords of Western Punjab.
The two issues that came up for an immediate struggle were
the resettlement of land revenue of Amritsar and Lahore districts
and the increase in the canal tax or water -rate. Jathas marched
to the district headquarters and huge demonstrations were held.
The culmination was the Lahore Kisan Morcha in 1939 in which
hundreds of kisans from many districts of the province courted
arrest. A different kind of struggle broke out in the Multan and[/INST] |
Montgomery canal colony areas. Here large private companies
that had leased this recently -colonized land from the government
and some big landlords insisted on recovering a whole range of
feudal levies from the share -croppers who tilled the land. The
kisan leaders organized the tenants to resist these exactions
which had recently been declared illegal by a government
notification and there were strikes b y cultivators in some areas in
which they refused to pick cotton and harvest the crops. Many | <s>[INST]Montgomery canal colony areas. Here large private companies
that had leased this recently -colonized land from the government
and some big landlords insisted on recovering a whole range of
feudal levies from the share -croppers who tilled the land. The
kisan leaders organized the tenants to resist these exactions
which had recently been declared illegal by a government
notification and there were strikes b y cultivators in some areas in
which they refused to pick cotton and harvest the crops. Many[/INST] |
349 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
concessions were won as a result. The tenants’ struggle,
I suspended as a result of the War, was resumed in 1946 -47.
The peasant movement in Punjab was mainly lo cated in the
Central districts, the most active being the districts of Jullundur,
Amritsar, Hoshiarpur, Lyalipur and Sheikhupura. These districts
were the home of the largely self-cultivating Sikh peasantry that
had already been mobilized into the national struggle via the
Gurdwara Reform Movement of the early 1920s and the Civil
Disobedience Movement in 1930 -32. The Muslim tenants -at-will
of Western Punjab, the most backward part of the province, as
well as the Hindu peasants of South -eastern Punjab (the p resent -
day Haryana) largely remained outside the ambit of the Kisan
Movement. The tenants of Montgomery and Multan districts
mobilized by the kisan leaders were also mostly emigrants from
Central Punjab, Baba Sohan Singh. Teja Singh Swatantar, Baba
Rur Singh, Master Han Singh, Bhagat Singh Bilga, and Wadhawa
Ram were some of the important peasant leaders.’
The princely states in Punjab also witnessed a major
outbreak of peasant discontent. The most powerful movement
emerged in Patiala and bas based on the demand for restoration
of lands illegally seized by a landlord -official combine through
various forms of deceit and intimidation. The muzaras (tenants)
refused to pay the batai (share rent) to their biswedars
(landlords) and in this they were led by Left l eaders like Bhagwan
Singh Longowalia and Jagir Singh Joga and in later years by Teja
Singh Swatantar. This struggle continued intermittently till 1953
when legislation enabling the tenants to become owners of their
land was passed.
In other parts of the c ountry as well, the mobilization of
peasants around the demands for security of tenure, abolition of
feudal levies, reduction of taxes and debt relief, made major
headway. In Bengal, under the leadership of Bankim Mukherji, | <s>[INST]349 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
concessions were won as a result. The tenants’ struggle,
I suspended as a result of the War, was resumed in 1946 -47.
The peasant movement in Punjab was mainly lo cated in the
Central districts, the most active being the districts of Jullundur,
Amritsar, Hoshiarpur, Lyalipur and Sheikhupura. These districts
were the home of the largely self-cultivating Sikh peasantry that
had already been mobilized into the national struggle via the
Gurdwara Reform Movement of the early 1920s and the Civil
Disobedience Movement in 1930 -32. The Muslim tenants -at-will
of Western Punjab, the most backward part of the province, as
well as the Hindu peasants of South -eastern Punjab (the p resent -
day Haryana) largely remained outside the ambit of the Kisan
Movement. The tenants of Montgomery and Multan districts
mobilized by the kisan leaders were also mostly emigrants from
Central Punjab, Baba Sohan Singh. Teja Singh Swatantar, Baba
Rur Singh, Master Han Singh, Bhagat Singh Bilga, and Wadhawa
Ram were some of the important peasant leaders.’
The princely states in Punjab also witnessed a major
outbreak of peasant discontent. The most powerful movement
emerged in Patiala and bas based on the demand for restoration
of lands illegally seized by a landlord -official combine through
various forms of deceit and intimidation. The muzaras (tenants)
refused to pay the batai (share rent) to their biswedars
(landlords) and in this they were led by Left l eaders like Bhagwan
Singh Longowalia and Jagir Singh Joga and in later years by Teja
Singh Swatantar. This struggle continued intermittently till 1953
when legislation enabling the tenants to become owners of their
land was passed.
In other parts of the c ountry as well, the mobilization of
peasants around the demands for security of tenure, abolition of
feudal levies, reduction of taxes and debt relief, made major
headway. In Bengal, under the leadership of Bankim Mukherji,[/INST] |
headway. In Bengal, under the leadership of Bankim Mukherji,
the peasants of Burdwan agitated against the enhancement of
the canal tax on the Damodar canal and secured major
concessions. Kisans of the 24 -Parganas pressed their demands
by a march to Calcutta in April 1938. In Surma Valley, in Assam,
a no-rent struggle continued for six months again st zamindari
oppression and Karuna Sindhu Roy conducted a major campaign
for amendment of the tenancy law. In Orissa, the Utkal Provincial | <s>[INST]headway. In Bengal, under the leadership of Bankim Mukherji,
the peasants of Burdwan agitated against the enhancement of
the canal tax on the Damodar canal and secured major
concessions. Kisans of the 24 -Parganas pressed their demands
by a march to Calcutta in April 1938. In Surma Valley, in Assam,
a no-rent struggle continued for six months again st zamindari
oppression and Karuna Sindhu Roy conducted a major campaign
for amendment of the tenancy law. In Orissa, the Utkal Provincial[/INST] |
350 | India’s Struggle For Independence
Kisan Sabha, organized by Malati Chowdhury and others in
1935, succeeded in getting the kisan manifesto accepted by t he
PCC as part of its election manifesto, and the Ministry that
followed introduced significant agrarian legislation. In the Orissa
States, a powerful movement in which tribals also participated
was led on the question of forced labour, rights in forests, and
the reduction of rent. Major clashes occurred in Dhenkanal and
thousands fled the state to escape repression. The kisans of
Ghalla Dhir state in the North -West Frontier Province protested
against evictions and feudal exactions by their Nawab. In Gujara t
the main demand was for the abolition of the system of hail
(bonded labour) and a significant success was registered. The
Central Provinces Kisan Sabha led a march to Nagpur demanding
the abolition of the malguzari system, reduction of taxes and
moratori um on debts.
*
The rising tide of peasant awakening was checked by the
outbreak of World War II which brought about the resignation of
the Congress Ministries and the launching of severe repression
against left -wing and kisan Sabha leaders and workers bec ause
of their strong anti -War stance. The adoption by the CM of the
Peoples’ War line in December 1941 following Hitler’s attack on
the Soviet Union created dissensions between the Communist
and non -Communist members of the kisan Sabha. These
dissensions c ame to a head with the Quit India Movement, in
which Congress Socialist members played a leading role. The CPI
because of its pro -War People’s War line asked its cadres to stay
away, and though mans local level workers did join the Quit
India Movement, the party line sealed the rift in the kisan sabha
ranks, resulting in a split in 1943. In these year’ three major
leaders of the All India Kisan Sabha, N.G. Ranga, Swam,
Sahajanand Saraswati and Indulal Yagnik, left the organization.
Nevertheless, during the War years the kisan Sabha continued to | <s>[INST]350 | India’s Struggle For Independence
Kisan Sabha, organized by Malati Chowdhury and others in
1935, succeeded in getting the kisan manifesto accepted by t he
PCC as part of its election manifesto, and the Ministry that
followed introduced significant agrarian legislation. In the Orissa
States, a powerful movement in which tribals also participated
was led on the question of forced labour, rights in forests, and
the reduction of rent. Major clashes occurred in Dhenkanal and
thousands fled the state to escape repression. The kisans of
Ghalla Dhir state in the North -West Frontier Province protested
against evictions and feudal exactions by their Nawab. In Gujara t
the main demand was for the abolition of the system of hail
(bonded labour) and a significant success was registered. The
Central Provinces Kisan Sabha led a march to Nagpur demanding
the abolition of the malguzari system, reduction of taxes and
moratori um on debts.
*
The rising tide of peasant awakening was checked by the
outbreak of World War II which brought about the resignation of
the Congress Ministries and the launching of severe repression
against left -wing and kisan Sabha leaders and workers bec ause
of their strong anti -War stance. The adoption by the CM of the
Peoples’ War line in December 1941 following Hitler’s attack on
the Soviet Union created dissensions between the Communist
and non -Communist members of the kisan Sabha. These
dissensions c ame to a head with the Quit India Movement, in
which Congress Socialist members played a leading role. The CPI
because of its pro -War People’s War line asked its cadres to stay
away, and though mans local level workers did join the Quit
India Movement, the party line sealed the rift in the kisan sabha
ranks, resulting in a split in 1943. In these year’ three major
leaders of the All India Kisan Sabha, N.G. Ranga, Swam,
Sahajanand Saraswati and Indulal Yagnik, left the organization.
Nevertheless, during the War years the kisan Sabha continued to[/INST] |
play and important role in various kinds of relief work, as for
example in the Bengal Famine of 1943 and helped to lessen the
rigour of shortages of essential goods , rationing and the like. It
also continued its org anizational work, despite being severely
handicapped by its taking the unpopular pro - War stance which
alienated it from various sections of the peasantry. | <s>[INST]play and important role in various kinds of relief work, as for
example in the Bengal Famine of 1943 and helped to lessen the
rigour of shortages of essential goods , rationing and the like. It
also continued its org anizational work, despite being severely
handicapped by its taking the unpopular pro - War stance which
alienated it from various sections of the peasantry.[/INST] |
351 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
*
The end of the War, followed by the negotiations for the
transfer of power and the anticipation o f freedom, marked a
qualitatively new stage in the development of the peasant
movement. A new spirit was evident and the certainty of
approaching freedom with the promise of a new social order
encouraged peasants, among other social groups, to assert their
rights and claims with a new vigour.
Many struggles that had been left off in 1939 were renewed.
The demand for zamindari abolition was pressed with a greater
sense of urgency. The organization of agricultural workers in
Andhra which had begun a few year s earlier took on the form of a
struggle for higher wages and use of standard measures for
payment of wages in kind.
The peasants of Punnapra -Vayalar in Travancore fought
bloody battles with the administration. In Telengana, the
peasants organized thcmseh ’es to resist the landlords’ oppression
and played an important role in the anti -Nizam struggle. Similar
events took place in other parts of the country.
But in British India, it was the tebhaga struggle in Bengal that
held the limelight. in late 1946, th e share -croppers of Bengal
began to assert that they would no longer pay a half share of
their crop to the jotedars but only one -third and that before
division the crop would be stored in their khamars (godowns) and
not that of the jotedars. They were no d oubt encouraged by the
fact that the Bengal Land Revenue Commission, popularly known
as the Floud Commission, had already made this
recommendation in its report to the government. The Hajong
tribals were simultaneously demanding commutation of their
kind r ents into cash rents. The tebhaga movement, led by the
Bengal Provincial Kisan Sabha, soon developed into a clash
between jotedars and bargadars with the bargadars insisting on
storing the crop in their own khamars.
The movement received a great boost in late January 1947 | <s>[INST]351 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
*
The end of the War, followed by the negotiations for the
transfer of power and the anticipation o f freedom, marked a
qualitatively new stage in the development of the peasant
movement. A new spirit was evident and the certainty of
approaching freedom with the promise of a new social order
encouraged peasants, among other social groups, to assert their
rights and claims with a new vigour.
Many struggles that had been left off in 1939 were renewed.
The demand for zamindari abolition was pressed with a greater
sense of urgency. The organization of agricultural workers in
Andhra which had begun a few year s earlier took on the form of a
struggle for higher wages and use of standard measures for
payment of wages in kind.
The peasants of Punnapra -Vayalar in Travancore fought
bloody battles with the administration. In Telengana, the
peasants organized thcmseh ’es to resist the landlords’ oppression
and played an important role in the anti -Nizam struggle. Similar
events took place in other parts of the country.
But in British India, it was the tebhaga struggle in Bengal that
held the limelight. in late 1946, th e share -croppers of Bengal
began to assert that they would no longer pay a half share of
their crop to the jotedars but only one -third and that before
division the crop would be stored in their khamars (godowns) and
not that of the jotedars. They were no d oubt encouraged by the
fact that the Bengal Land Revenue Commission, popularly known
as the Floud Commission, had already made this
recommendation in its report to the government. The Hajong
tribals were simultaneously demanding commutation of their
kind r ents into cash rents. The tebhaga movement, led by the
Bengal Provincial Kisan Sabha, soon developed into a clash
between jotedars and bargadars with the bargadars insisting on
storing the crop in their own khamars.
The movement received a great boost in late January 1947[/INST] |
The movement received a great boost in late January 1947
when the Muslim League Ministry led by Suhrawardy published
the Bengal Bargadars Temporary Regulation Bill in the Calcutta
Gazette on 22 January 1947. Encouraged by the fact that the
demand for tebhaga could no longer be called illegal, p easants in | <s>[INST]The movement received a great boost in late January 1947
when the Muslim League Ministry led by Suhrawardy published
the Bengal Bargadars Temporary Regulation Bill in the Calcutta
Gazette on 22 January 1947. Encouraged by the fact that the
demand for tebhaga could no longer be called illegal, p easants in[/INST] |
352 | India’s Struggle For Independence
hitherto untouched villages and areas joined the struggle. In
many places, peasants tried to remove the paddy already stored
in the jotedars’ khamars to their own, and this resulted in
innumerable clashes.
The jotedars appealed to the Governmen t, and the police
came in to suppress the peasants. Major clashes ensued at a few
places, the most important being the one at Khanpur in which
twenty peasants were killed. Repression continued and by the
end of February the movement was virtually dead. A f ew
incidents occurred in March as well, but these were only the
death pangs of a dying struggle.
The Muslim League Ministry failed to pursue the bill in the
Assembly and it was only in 1950 that the Congress Ministry
passed a Bargadars Bill which incorpor ated, in substance, the
demands of the movement.
The main centres of the movement were Dinajpur, Rangpur,
Jalpaiguri, Mymensingh, Midnapore, and to a lesser extent 24 -
Parganas and Khulna. Initially, the base was among the Rajbansi
Kshatriya peasants, but it soon spread to Muslims, Hajongs,
Santhals and Oraons. Among the important leaders of this
movement were Krishnobinode Ray, Abani Lahiri, Sunil Sen,
Bhowani Sen, Moni Singh, Ananta Singh, Bhibuti Guha, Ajit Ray,
Sushil Sen, Sama r Ganguli, and Gurudas Tal ukdar.
*
To draw up a balance sheet of such a diverse and varied
struggle is no easy task , but it can be asserted that perhaps the
most important contribution of the peasant movements that
covered large areas of the subcontinent in the 30s and 40s was
that even when they did not register immediate successes, they
created the climate which necessitated the post -Independence
agrarian reforms. Zamindari abolition, for example, did not come
about as a direct culmination of any particular struggle, but the
popu larization of the demand by the kisan sabha certainly
contributed to its achievement. | <s>[INST]352 | India’s Struggle For Independence
hitherto untouched villages and areas joined the struggle. In
many places, peasants tried to remove the paddy already stored
in the jotedars’ khamars to their own, and this resulted in
innumerable clashes.
The jotedars appealed to the Governmen t, and the police
came in to suppress the peasants. Major clashes ensued at a few
places, the most important being the one at Khanpur in which
twenty peasants were killed. Repression continued and by the
end of February the movement was virtually dead. A f ew
incidents occurred in March as well, but these were only the
death pangs of a dying struggle.
The Muslim League Ministry failed to pursue the bill in the
Assembly and it was only in 1950 that the Congress Ministry
passed a Bargadars Bill which incorpor ated, in substance, the
demands of the movement.
The main centres of the movement were Dinajpur, Rangpur,
Jalpaiguri, Mymensingh, Midnapore, and to a lesser extent 24 -
Parganas and Khulna. Initially, the base was among the Rajbansi
Kshatriya peasants, but it soon spread to Muslims, Hajongs,
Santhals and Oraons. Among the important leaders of this
movement were Krishnobinode Ray, Abani Lahiri, Sunil Sen,
Bhowani Sen, Moni Singh, Ananta Singh, Bhibuti Guha, Ajit Ray,
Sushil Sen, Sama r Ganguli, and Gurudas Tal ukdar.
*
To draw up a balance sheet of such a diverse and varied
struggle is no easy task , but it can be asserted that perhaps the
most important contribution of the peasant movements that
covered large areas of the subcontinent in the 30s and 40s was
that even when they did not register immediate successes, they
created the climate which necessitated the post -Independence
agrarian reforms. Zamindari abolition, for example, did not come
about as a direct culmination of any particular struggle, but the
popu larization of the demand by the kisan sabha certainly
contributed to its achievement.[/INST] |
353 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
The immediate demands on which struggles were fought in
the pre -Independence days were the reduction of taxes, the
abolition of illegal cesses or feudal levies and begar or vethi, the
ending of oppression by landlords and their agents, the reduction
of debts, the restoration of illegally or illegitimately seized lands,
and security of tenure for tenants. Except in a few pockets like
Andhra and Gujarat, the demands of agri cultural labourers did
not really become part of the movement. These demands were
based on the existing consciousness of the peasantry of their just
or legitimate rights, which was itself a product of tradition,
custom, usage, and legal rights. When landlo rds or the
Government demanded what was seen by peasants as illegitimate
— high taxes , exorbitant rents, illegal cesses , forced labour or
rights over land which peasants felt was theirs — they were
willing to resist if they could muster the necessary organ izational
and other resources. But they were also willing to continue to
respect what they considered legitimate demands.
The struggles based on these demands were clearly not aimed at
the overthrow of the existing agrarian structure but towards
alleviati ng its most oppressive aspects. Nevertheless, they
corroded the power of the landed classes in many ways and thus
prepared the ground for the transformation of the structure itself.
The kisan movement was faced with the task of transforming the
peasants’ c onsciousness and building movements based on a
transformed consciousness.
It is also important to note that, by and large, the forms of
struggle and mobilization adopted by the peasant movements in
diverse areas were similar in nature as were their demand s. The
main focus was on mobilization through meetings, conferences,
rallies, demonstrations, enrolment of members, formation of
kisan sabhas or ryotu and karshaka sanghams. Direct action
usually involved Satyagraha or civil disobedience, and non - | <s>[INST]353 | Peasant Movements in the 1930s and ‘40s
The immediate demands on which struggles were fought in
the pre -Independence days were the reduction of taxes, the
abolition of illegal cesses or feudal levies and begar or vethi, the
ending of oppression by landlords and their agents, the reduction
of debts, the restoration of illegally or illegitimately seized lands,
and security of tenure for tenants. Except in a few pockets like
Andhra and Gujarat, the demands of agri cultural labourers did
not really become part of the movement. These demands were
based on the existing consciousness of the peasantry of their just
or legitimate rights, which was itself a product of tradition,
custom, usage, and legal rights. When landlo rds or the
Government demanded what was seen by peasants as illegitimate
— high taxes , exorbitant rents, illegal cesses , forced labour or
rights over land which peasants felt was theirs — they were
willing to resist if they could muster the necessary organ izational
and other resources. But they were also willing to continue to
respect what they considered legitimate demands.
The struggles based on these demands were clearly not aimed at
the overthrow of the existing agrarian structure but towards
alleviati ng its most oppressive aspects. Nevertheless, they
corroded the power of the landed classes in many ways and thus
prepared the ground for the transformation of the structure itself.
The kisan movement was faced with the task of transforming the
peasants’ c onsciousness and building movements based on a
transformed consciousness.
It is also important to note that, by and large, the forms of
struggle and mobilization adopted by the peasant movements in
diverse areas were similar in nature as were their demand s. The
main focus was on mobilization through meetings, conferences,
rallies, demonstrations, enrolment of members, formation of
kisan sabhas or ryotu and karshaka sanghams. Direct action
usually involved Satyagraha or civil disobedience, and non -[/INST] |
usually involved Satyagraha or civil disobedience, and non -
payment o f rent and taxes. All these forms had become the stock -
in-trade of the national movement for the past several years. As
in the national movement, violent clashes were the exception and
not the norm. They were rarely sanctioned by the leadership and
were us ually popular responses to extreme repression.
The relationship of the peasant movement with the national
movement continued to be one of a vital and integral nature. For
one, areas where the peasant movement was active were usually | <s>[INST]usually involved Satyagraha or civil disobedience, and non -
payment o f rent and taxes. All these forms had become the stock -
in-trade of the national movement for the past several years. As
in the national movement, violent clashes were the exception and
not the norm. They were rarely sanctioned by the leadership and
were us ually popular responses to extreme repression.
The relationship of the peasant movement with the national
movement continued to be one of a vital and integral nature. For
one, areas where the peasant movement was active were usually[/INST] |
354 | India’s Struggle For Independence
the ones that had been drawn into the earlier national struggles.
This was true at least of Punjab, Kerala, Andhra, U.P. and Bihar.
This was hardly surprising since it was the spread of the national
movement that had created the initial conditions required for the
emergence of peasant struggles — a politicized and conscious
peasantry and a band of active political workers capable of and
willing to perform the task of organization and leadership.
In its ideology as well, the kisan movement accepted and
based itself on the ideolo gy of nationalism. Its cadres and leaders
carried the message not only of organization of the peasantry on
class lines but also of national freedom. As we have shown
earlier, in most areas kisan activists simultaneously enrolled
kisan sabha and Congress me mbers.
True, in some regions, like Bihar, serious differences
emerged between sections of Congressmen and the kisan sabha
and at times the kisan movement seemed set on a path of
confrontation with the Congress, but this tended to happen only
when both lef t-wing activists and right - wing or conservative
Congressmen took extreme positions and showed an
unwillingness to accommodate each other. Before 1942 these
differences were usually contained and the kisan movement and
the national movement occupied largel y common ground. With
the experience of the split of 1942, the kisan movement found
that if it diverged too far and too clearly from the path of the
national movement, it tended to lose its mass base, as well as
create a split within the ranks of its leade rship. The growth and
development of the peasant movement was thus indissolubly
linked with the national struggle for freedom. | <s>[INST]354 | India’s Struggle For Independence
the ones that had been drawn into the earlier national struggles.
This was true at least of Punjab, Kerala, Andhra, U.P. and Bihar.
This was hardly surprising since it was the spread of the national
movement that had created the initial conditions required for the
emergence of peasant struggles — a politicized and conscious
peasantry and a band of active political workers capable of and
willing to perform the task of organization and leadership.
In its ideology as well, the kisan movement accepted and
based itself on the ideolo gy of nationalism. Its cadres and leaders
carried the message not only of organization of the peasantry on
class lines but also of national freedom. As we have shown
earlier, in most areas kisan activists simultaneously enrolled
kisan sabha and Congress me mbers.
True, in some regions, like Bihar, serious differences
emerged between sections of Congressmen and the kisan sabha
and at times the kisan movement seemed set on a path of
confrontation with the Congress, but this tended to happen only
when both lef t-wing activists and right - wing or conservative
Congressmen took extreme positions and showed an
unwillingness to accommodate each other. Before 1942 these
differences were usually contained and the kisan movement and
the national movement occupied largel y common ground. With
the experience of the split of 1942, the kisan movement found
that if it diverged too far and too clearly from the path of the
national movement, it tended to lose its mass base, as well as
create a split within the ranks of its leade rship. The growth and
development of the peasant movement was thus indissolubly
linked with the national struggle for freedom.[/INST] |
355 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
CHAPTER 28. THE FREEDOM
STRUGGLE IN
PRINCELY INDIA
The variegated pattern of the British conquest of India, and
the different stratage ms through which the various par ts of the
country were brought under colonial rule, had resulted in two -
fifths of t he sub -continent being ruled by Indian princes. The
areas ruled by the Princes included Indian States li ke Hyderabad ,
Mysore and Kashmir that were equal in size to many European
countries, and numerous small States who counted their
population in the thousands. The common feature was that all of
them, big and small, recognized the paramountcy of the British
Government.
In return, the British guaranteed the Princes against any
threat to their autocratic power, internal or external. Most of the
princely States were run as unmitigated autocracies, with
absolute power concentrated in the hands of the ruler or hi s
favourites. The burden of the land tax was usually heavier than
in British India and there was usually much less of the rule of
law and civil liberties. The rulers had unrestrained power over
the state revenues for personal use, and this often led to
ostentatious living and waste Some of the more enlightened
rulers and their ministers did make attempts, from time to time,
to introduce reforms in the administration, the system of taxation
and even granted powers to the people to participate in
government B ut the vast majority of the States were bastions of
economic, social, political and educational backwardness, for
reasons not totally of their own making .
Ultimately , it was the British Government that was
responsible for the situa tion in which the Indian States found
themselves in the twentieth ce ntury. As the national movement
grew in strength, the Princes were increasi ngly called upon to
play the role of ‘bulwarks of reaction.’ Any sympathy with | <s>[INST]355 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
CHAPTER 28. THE FREEDOM
STRUGGLE IN
PRINCELY INDIA
The variegated pattern of the British conquest of India, and
the different stratage ms through which the various par ts of the
country were brought under colonial rule, had resulted in two -
fifths of t he sub -continent being ruled by Indian princes. The
areas ruled by the Princes included Indian States li ke Hyderabad ,
Mysore and Kashmir that were equal in size to many European
countries, and numerous small States who counted their
population in the thousands. The common feature was that all of
them, big and small, recognized the paramountcy of the British
Government.
In return, the British guaranteed the Princes against any
threat to their autocratic power, internal or external. Most of the
princely States were run as unmitigated autocracies, with
absolute power concentrated in the hands of the ruler or hi s
favourites. The burden of the land tax was usually heavier than
in British India and there was usually much less of the rule of
law and civil liberties. The rulers had unrestrained power over
the state revenues for personal use, and this often led to
ostentatious living and waste Some of the more enlightened
rulers and their ministers did make attempts, from time to time,
to introduce reforms in the administration, the system of taxation
and even granted powers to the people to participate in
government B ut the vast majority of the States were bastions of
economic, social, political and educational backwardness, for
reasons not totally of their own making .
Ultimately , it was the British Government that was
responsible for the situa tion in which the Indian States found
themselves in the twentieth ce ntury. As the national movement
grew in strength, the Princes were increasi ngly called upon to
play the role of ‘bulwarks of reaction.’ Any sympathy with[/INST] |
play the role of ‘bulwarks of reaction.’ Any sympathy with
nationalism, such as that expressed by the Maharaja of Baro da, | <s>[INST]play the role of ‘bulwarks of reaction.’ Any sympathy with
nationalism, such as that expressed by the Maharaja of Baro da,[/INST] |
356 | India’s Struggle For Independence
was looked upon with extreme disfavour. Many a potential
reformer among the rulers was gradually drained of initiative by
the constant surveillance and interference exerci sed by the
British residents. Th ere were honorable exceptions, however, and
some States, like Baroda and Mysore, succeeded in promoting
industrial and agricultural development, administrative and
political reforms, and education to a considerable degree.
*
The advance of the national movement in British India, and
the accompanying inc rease in political consciousness about
democracy, responsible government and civil liberties had an
inevitable impact on the people of the States. In the first and
second decade of the twentieth century, runaway terrorists from
British India seeking shelte r in the States became agents of
politicization. A much more powerful influence was exercised by
the Non -Cooperation and Khilafat Movement launched in 1920;
around this time and under its impact, numerous local
organizations of the States’ people came into existence. Some of
the States in which praja mandals or States’ People’s Conferences
were organized were Mysore, Hyderabad, Baroda, the Kathiawad
States, the Deccan States, Jamnagar, Indore, and Nawanagar.
This proce ss came to a head in December 19 27 with the
convening of the All India States’ People’s Conference (AISPC)
which was attended by 700 political workers from the States. The
men chiefly responsible for this initiative were Baiwantrai Mehta,
Manikial Kothari and G.R. Abhayankar.
The policy of the Indian National Congress towards the
Indian states had been first enunciated in 1920 at Nagpur when
a resolution calling upon the Princes to grant full responsible
government in their States had been passed. Simultaneously,
however, the Congress, while al lowing residents of the States to
become members of the Congress, made it clear that they could
not initiate political activity in the States in the name of Congress | <s>[INST]356 | India’s Struggle For Independence
was looked upon with extreme disfavour. Many a potential
reformer among the rulers was gradually drained of initiative by
the constant surveillance and interference exerci sed by the
British residents. Th ere were honorable exceptions, however, and
some States, like Baroda and Mysore, succeeded in promoting
industrial and agricultural development, administrative and
political reforms, and education to a considerable degree.
*
The advance of the national movement in British India, and
the accompanying inc rease in political consciousness about
democracy, responsible government and civil liberties had an
inevitable impact on the people of the States. In the first and
second decade of the twentieth century, runaway terrorists from
British India seeking shelte r in the States became agents of
politicization. A much more powerful influence was exercised by
the Non -Cooperation and Khilafat Movement launched in 1920;
around this time and under its impact, numerous local
organizations of the States’ people came into existence. Some of
the States in which praja mandals or States’ People’s Conferences
were organized were Mysore, Hyderabad, Baroda, the Kathiawad
States, the Deccan States, Jamnagar, Indore, and Nawanagar.
This proce ss came to a head in December 19 27 with the
convening of the All India States’ People’s Conference (AISPC)
which was attended by 700 political workers from the States. The
men chiefly responsible for this initiative were Baiwantrai Mehta,
Manikial Kothari and G.R. Abhayankar.
The policy of the Indian National Congress towards the
Indian states had been first enunciated in 1920 at Nagpur when
a resolution calling upon the Princes to grant full responsible
government in their States had been passed. Simultaneously,
however, the Congress, while al lowing residents of the States to
become members of the Congress, made it clear that they could
not initiate political activity in the States in the name of Congress[/INST] |
but only in their individual capacity or as members of the local
political organizations. Given the great differences in the political
conditions between British India and the States, and between the
different States themselves, the general lack of civil liberties
including freedom of association, the comparative political | <s>[INST]but only in their individual capacity or as members of the local
political organizations. Given the great differences in the political
conditions between British India and the States, and between the
different States themselves, the general lack of civil liberties
including freedom of association, the comparative political[/INST] |
357 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
backwardness of the p eople, and the fact that the Indian States
were legally independent entities, these were understandable
restraints imposed in the interest of the movements in the States
as ell as the movement in British India. The main emphasis was
that people of the Stat es should build up their own strength and
demonstrate their capacity to struggle for their demands.
Informal links between the co ngress and the various
organisations of the people of the States, including the AISPC ,
always continued to be close. In 1927, t he Congress reiterated as
resolution of 1920 , and in 1929. Jawaharlal Nehru, in his
presidential address to the famous Lahore Congress, declared
that ‘the Indian states cannot live apart from the rest of India. . .
the only people who have a right to deter mine the future of the
states must be the people of those states’) In later years, the
Congress demanded that the Princes guarantee fundamental
rights to their people.
In the mid thirties, two associated developments brought
about a distinct change in the situation in the Indian States.
First, the Government of India Act of 1935 projected a scheme of
federation in which the Indian States were to be brought into a
direct constitutional relationship with British India and the
States were to send representati ves to the Federal Legislature.
The catch was that these representatives would be nominees of
the Princes and not democratically elected representatives of the
people. They would number one -third of the total numbers of the
Federal legislature and act as a solid conservative block that
could be trusted to thwart nationalist pressures. The Indian
National Congress and the AISPC and other organizations of the
States’ people clearly saw through this imperialist manoeuvre
and demanded that the States be represe nted not by the Princes’
nominees but by elected representatives of the people. This lent a | <s>[INST]357 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
backwardness of the p eople, and the fact that the Indian States
were legally independent entities, these were understandable
restraints imposed in the interest of the movements in the States
as ell as the movement in British India. The main emphasis was
that people of the Stat es should build up their own strength and
demonstrate their capacity to struggle for their demands.
Informal links between the co ngress and the various
organisations of the people of the States, including the AISPC ,
always continued to be close. In 1927, t he Congress reiterated as
resolution of 1920 , and in 1929. Jawaharlal Nehru, in his
presidential address to the famous Lahore Congress, declared
that ‘the Indian states cannot live apart from the rest of India. . .
the only people who have a right to deter mine the future of the
states must be the people of those states’) In later years, the
Congress demanded that the Princes guarantee fundamental
rights to their people.
In the mid thirties, two associated developments brought
about a distinct change in the situation in the Indian States.
First, the Government of India Act of 1935 projected a scheme of
federation in which the Indian States were to be brought into a
direct constitutional relationship with British India and the
States were to send representati ves to the Federal Legislature.
The catch was that these representatives would be nominees of
the Princes and not democratically elected representatives of the
people. They would number one -third of the total numbers of the
Federal legislature and act as a solid conservative block that
could be trusted to thwart nationalist pressures. The Indian
National Congress and the AISPC and other organizations of the
States’ people clearly saw through this imperialist manoeuvre
and demanded that the States be represe nted not by the Princes’
nominees but by elected representatives of the people. This lent a[/INST] |
great sense of urgency to the demand for responsible democratic
government in the States.
The second development was the assumption of office by
Congress Ministrie s in the majority of the provinces in British
India in 1937. The tact that the Congress was in power created a
new sense of confidence and expectation in the people of the
Indian States and acted as a spur to greater political activity. The
Princes too had to reckon with a new political reality
— the Congress was no longer just a party in opposition but a | <s>[INST]great sense of urgency to the demand for responsible democratic
government in the States.
The second development was the assumption of office by
Congress Ministrie s in the majority of the provinces in British
India in 1937. The tact that the Congress was in power created a
new sense of confidence and expectation in the people of the
Indian States and acted as a spur to greater political activity. The
Princes too had to reckon with a new political reality
— the Congress was no longer just a party in opposition but a[/INST] |
358 | India’s Struggle For Independence
party in power with a capacity to influence developments in
contiguous Indian States.
The years 1938 -39, in fact, stand out as years of a new
awakening in the Indian States and were witness to a large
number of movements demanding responsible government and
other reforms. Praja mandals mushroomed in many States that
had earlier no such organizations. Major struggles broke out in
Jaipur, Kashmir, Rajkot, P atiala , Hyderabad , Mysore,
Travancore, and the Orissa States.
These new developments brought about a significant change
in Congress policy as well. Whereas, even in the Haripura session
in 1938, the Congress had reiterated its policy that movements in
the States should not be launched in the name of the Congress
but should rely on their own independent strength and fight
through local organizations, a few months later, on seeing the
new spirit that was abroad among the people and their capacity
to struggle . Gandhiji and the Congress changed their attitude on
this question. The radicals and socialists in the Congress, as well
as political workers in the States, had in any case been pressing
for this change for quite some time.
Explaining the shift in policy in an interview to the Times of
India on 24 January, 1939, Gandhiji said: ‘The policy of non -
intervention by the Congress was, in my opinion, a perfect piece
of statesmanship when the people of the States were not
awakened. That policy would be cowardice when there is all -
round awakening among the people of the States and a
determination to go through a long course of suffering for the
vindication of their just rights . . . The moment they became
ready, the legal, constitutional and artif icial boundary was
destroyed.’
Following upon this, the Congress at Tripuri in March 1939
passed a resolution enunciating its new policy: ‘The great
awakening that is taking place among the people of the States
may lead to a relaxation, or to a complete removal of the restr aint | <s>[INST]358 | India’s Struggle For Independence
party in power with a capacity to influence developments in
contiguous Indian States.
The years 1938 -39, in fact, stand out as years of a new
awakening in the Indian States and were witness to a large
number of movements demanding responsible government and
other reforms. Praja mandals mushroomed in many States that
had earlier no such organizations. Major struggles broke out in
Jaipur, Kashmir, Rajkot, P atiala , Hyderabad , Mysore,
Travancore, and the Orissa States.
These new developments brought about a significant change
in Congress policy as well. Whereas, even in the Haripura session
in 1938, the Congress had reiterated its policy that movements in
the States should not be launched in the name of the Congress
but should rely on their own independent strength and fight
through local organizations, a few months later, on seeing the
new spirit that was abroad among the people and their capacity
to struggle . Gandhiji and the Congress changed their attitude on
this question. The radicals and socialists in the Congress, as well
as political workers in the States, had in any case been pressing
for this change for quite some time.
Explaining the shift in policy in an interview to the Times of
India on 24 January, 1939, Gandhiji said: ‘The policy of non -
intervention by the Congress was, in my opinion, a perfect piece
of statesmanship when the people of the States were not
awakened. That policy would be cowardice when there is all -
round awakening among the people of the States and a
determination to go through a long course of suffering for the
vindication of their just rights . . . The moment they became
ready, the legal, constitutional and artif icial boundary was
destroyed.’
Following upon this, the Congress at Tripuri in March 1939
passed a resolution enunciating its new policy: ‘The great
awakening that is taking place among the people of the States
may lead to a relaxation, or to a complete removal of the restr aint[/INST] |
which the Congress imposed upon itself, thus resulting in an ever
increasing identification of the Congress with the States’
peoples’.3 Also in 1939, the AISPC elected Jawaharlal Nehru as
its President for the Ludhiana session, thus setting the seal o n
the fusion of the movements in Princely India and British India. | <s>[INST]which the Congress imposed upon itself, thus resulting in an ever
increasing identification of the Congress with the States’
peoples’.3 Also in 1939, the AISPC elected Jawaharlal Nehru as
its President for the Ludhiana session, thus setting the seal o n
the fusion of the movements in Princely India and British India.[/INST] |
359 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
The outbreak of the Second World War brought about a
distinct change in the political atmosphere. Congress Ministries
resigned , the Government armed itself with the Defence of India
Rules, and in the States as well there was less tolerance of
political activity. Things came to a head again in 1942 with the
launching of the Quit India Movement. This time the Congress
made no distinction between British India and the Indian States
and the cal l for struggle was extended to the people of the States.
The people of the States thus formally joined the struggle for
Indian independence, and in addition to their demand for
responsible government they asked the British to quit India and
demanded that t he States become integral parts of the Indian
nation.
The negotiations for transfer of power that ensued after the
end of the War brought the problem of the States to the centre of
the stage. It was, indeed, to the credit of the national leadership,
espec ially Sardar Patel, that the extremely complex situation
created by the lapse of British paramountcy
which rendered the States legally independent — was handled in
a manner that defused the situation to a great degree. Most of the
States succumbed to a co mbination of diplomatic pressure, arm -
twisting, popular movements and their own realization that
independence was not a realistic alternative, and signed the
Instruments of Accession. But some of the States like
Travancore, Junagadh, Kashmir and H yderabad held out till the
last minute. Fina lly, only Hyderabad held out and made a really
serious bid for Independence.
To illustrate the pattern of political activity in the Indian
States, it is instructive to look more closely at the course of the
movements in two representative States, Rajkot and Hyderabad
— one among the smallest and the other the largest, one made
famous by Gandhiji’s personal intervention and the other by its | <s>[INST]359 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
The outbreak of the Second World War brought about a
distinct change in the political atmosphere. Congress Ministries
resigned , the Government armed itself with the Defence of India
Rules, and in the States as well there was less tolerance of
political activity. Things came to a head again in 1942 with the
launching of the Quit India Movement. This time the Congress
made no distinction between British India and the Indian States
and the cal l for struggle was extended to the people of the States.
The people of the States thus formally joined the struggle for
Indian independence, and in addition to their demand for
responsible government they asked the British to quit India and
demanded that t he States become integral parts of the Indian
nation.
The negotiations for transfer of power that ensued after the
end of the War brought the problem of the States to the centre of
the stage. It was, indeed, to the credit of the national leadership,
espec ially Sardar Patel, that the extremely complex situation
created by the lapse of British paramountcy
which rendered the States legally independent — was handled in
a manner that defused the situation to a great degree. Most of the
States succumbed to a co mbination of diplomatic pressure, arm -
twisting, popular movements and their own realization that
independence was not a realistic alternative, and signed the
Instruments of Accession. But some of the States like
Travancore, Junagadh, Kashmir and H yderabad held out till the
last minute. Fina lly, only Hyderabad held out and made a really
serious bid for Independence.
To illustrate the pattern of political activity in the Indian
States, it is instructive to look more closely at the course of the
movements in two representative States, Rajkot and Hyderabad
— one among the smallest and the other the largest, one made
famous by Gandhiji’s personal intervention and the other by its[/INST] |
refusal to accede to the Indian Union in 1947 , necessitating the
use of armed force s to bring about its integration.
*
Rajkot, a small state with a population of roughly 75,000,
situated in the Kathiawad peninsula, had an importance out of
all proportion to its size and rank among the States of Western | <s>[INST]refusal to accede to the Indian Union in 1947 , necessitating the
use of armed force s to bring about its integration.
*
Rajkot, a small state with a population of roughly 75,000,
situated in the Kathiawad peninsula, had an importance out of
all proportion to its size and rank among the States of Western[/INST] |
360 | India’s Struggle For Independence
India because Rajkot city was the seat of the Western India State
Agency from where the British Political Agent maintained his
supervision of the numerous States of the area.
Rajkot had enjoyed the good fortune of being ruled for
twenty years till 1930 — by Lakhajiraj, who had taken great care
to promote the industrial, educational and political development
of his state. Lakhajiraj encouraged popular participation in
government by inaugurating in 1923 the Rajkot Praja Pratinidhi
Sabha. This representative assembly consisted of ninety
repre sentatives elected on the basis of universal adult franchise,
something quite unusual in those times. Though the Thakore
Sahib, as the ruler was called, had full power to veto any
suggestion, yet under Lakhajiraj this was the exception rather
than the rule and popular participation was greatly legitimized
under his aegis.
Lakhajiraj had also encouraged nationalist political activity
by giving permission to Mansukhlal Mehta and Amritlal Sheth to
hold the first Kathiawad Political Conference in Rajkot in 192 1
which was presided over by Vithalbhai Patel. He himself attended
the Rajkot and Bhavnagar (1925) sessions of the Conference,
donated land in Rajkot for the starting of a national school that
became the centre of political activity’ and, in defiance of th e
British Political Agent or Resident, wore khadi as a symbol of the
national movement. He was extremely proud of Gandhiji and his
achievements and often invited ‘the son of Rajkot’ to the Durbar
and would then make Gandhiji sit on the throne while he hims elf
sat in the Durbar. He gave a public reception to Jawaharlal
Nehru during his visit to the State.
Lakhajiraj died in 1939 and his son Dharmendra Singhji, a
complete contrast to the father, soon took charge of the State.
The new Thakore was interested o nly in pleasure, and effective
power fell into the hands of Dewan Virawala , who did nothing to | <s>[INST]360 | India’s Struggle For Independence
India because Rajkot city was the seat of the Western India State
Agency from where the British Political Agent maintained his
supervision of the numerous States of the area.
Rajkot had enjoyed the good fortune of being ruled for
twenty years till 1930 — by Lakhajiraj, who had taken great care
to promote the industrial, educational and political development
of his state. Lakhajiraj encouraged popular participation in
government by inaugurating in 1923 the Rajkot Praja Pratinidhi
Sabha. This representative assembly consisted of ninety
repre sentatives elected on the basis of universal adult franchise,
something quite unusual in those times. Though the Thakore
Sahib, as the ruler was called, had full power to veto any
suggestion, yet under Lakhajiraj this was the exception rather
than the rule and popular participation was greatly legitimized
under his aegis.
Lakhajiraj had also encouraged nationalist political activity
by giving permission to Mansukhlal Mehta and Amritlal Sheth to
hold the first Kathiawad Political Conference in Rajkot in 192 1
which was presided over by Vithalbhai Patel. He himself attended
the Rajkot and Bhavnagar (1925) sessions of the Conference,
donated land in Rajkot for the starting of a national school that
became the centre of political activity’ and, in defiance of th e
British Political Agent or Resident, wore khadi as a symbol of the
national movement. He was extremely proud of Gandhiji and his
achievements and often invited ‘the son of Rajkot’ to the Durbar
and would then make Gandhiji sit on the throne while he hims elf
sat in the Durbar. He gave a public reception to Jawaharlal
Nehru during his visit to the State.
Lakhajiraj died in 1939 and his son Dharmendra Singhji, a
complete contrast to the father, soon took charge of the State.
The new Thakore was interested o nly in pleasure, and effective
power fell into the hands of Dewan Virawala , who did nothing to[/INST] |
stop the Thakore from frittering away the State’s wealth, and
finances reached such a pass that the State began to sell
monopolies for the sale of matches, sugar , rice, and cinema
licences to individual merchants. This immediately resulted in a
rise in prices and enhanced the discontent that had already
emerged over the Thakore’s easy -going life -style and his disregard
for popular participation in government as re flected in the lapse | <s>[INST]stop the Thakore from frittering away the State’s wealth, and
finances reached such a pass that the State began to sell
monopolies for the sale of matches, sugar , rice, and cinema
licences to individual merchants. This immediately resulted in a
rise in prices and enhanced the discontent that had already
emerged over the Thakore’s easy -going life -style and his disregard
for popular participation in government as re flected in the lapse[/INST] |
361 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
of the Pratinidhi Sabha as well as the increase in taxes.
The ground for struggle had been prepared over several years of
political work by political groups in Rajkot and Kathiawad. The
first group had been led by Mansukhlal Mehta and Amritlal
Sheth and later by Balwantrai Mehta. another by Phulchand
Shah, a third by Vrajlal Shukia, and a fourth group consisted of
Gandhian constructive workers who, after 1936, under the
leadership of U.N. Dhebar, emerged as the leading group in the
Rajkot struggle.
The first struggle emerged under the leadership of Jethalal
Joshi, a Gandhian worker, who organized the 800 labourers of
the state -owned cotton mill into a labour union and led a twenty -
one day strike in 1936 to secure better working conditi ons. The
Durbar had been forced to concede the union’s demands. This
victory encouraged Joshi and Dhebar to convene, in March 1937,
the first meeting of the Kathiawad Rajakiya Parishad to be held in
eight years. The conference, attended by 15,000 people,
demanded responsible government, reduction in taxes and state
expenditure.
There was no response from the Durbar and, on 15 August
1938, the Panshad workers organized a protest against gambling
(the monopoly for which had been sold to a disreputable outfit
called Carnival) at the Gokulashtmi Fair. According ,to a pre -
arranged plan, the protesters were severely beaten with lathis
first by the Agency police and then by the State police. This
resulted in a complete hanal in Rajkot city, and a session of the
Parishad was held on 5 September and presided over by Sardar
Patel. In a meeting with Dewan Virawala, Patel, on behalf of the
Parishad, demanded a committee to frame proposals for
responsible government, a ne’ election to the Pratinidhi Sabha,
reduction of la nd revenue by fifteen percent , cancellation of all
monopolies or /ijaras, and a limit on the ruler’s claim on the
State treasury. The Durbar, instead of conceding the demands, | <s>[INST]361 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
of the Pratinidhi Sabha as well as the increase in taxes.
The ground for struggle had been prepared over several years of
political work by political groups in Rajkot and Kathiawad. The
first group had been led by Mansukhlal Mehta and Amritlal
Sheth and later by Balwantrai Mehta. another by Phulchand
Shah, a third by Vrajlal Shukia, and a fourth group consisted of
Gandhian constructive workers who, after 1936, under the
leadership of U.N. Dhebar, emerged as the leading group in the
Rajkot struggle.
The first struggle emerged under the leadership of Jethalal
Joshi, a Gandhian worker, who organized the 800 labourers of
the state -owned cotton mill into a labour union and led a twenty -
one day strike in 1936 to secure better working conditi ons. The
Durbar had been forced to concede the union’s demands. This
victory encouraged Joshi and Dhebar to convene, in March 1937,
the first meeting of the Kathiawad Rajakiya Parishad to be held in
eight years. The conference, attended by 15,000 people,
demanded responsible government, reduction in taxes and state
expenditure.
There was no response from the Durbar and, on 15 August
1938, the Panshad workers organized a protest against gambling
(the monopoly for which had been sold to a disreputable outfit
called Carnival) at the Gokulashtmi Fair. According ,to a pre -
arranged plan, the protesters were severely beaten with lathis
first by the Agency police and then by the State police. This
resulted in a complete hanal in Rajkot city, and a session of the
Parishad was held on 5 September and presided over by Sardar
Patel. In a meeting with Dewan Virawala, Patel, on behalf of the
Parishad, demanded a committee to frame proposals for
responsible government, a ne’ election to the Pratinidhi Sabha,
reduction of la nd revenue by fifteen percent , cancellation of all
monopolies or /ijaras, and a limit on the ruler’s claim on the
State treasury. The Durbar, instead of conceding the demands,[/INST] |
State treasury. The Durbar, instead of conceding the demands,
asked the Resident to appoint a British officer as Dewan to deal
effectively wit h the situation, and Cadell took over on 12
September. Meanwhile, Virawala himself became Private Adviser
to the Thakore, so that he could continue to operate from behind
the scenes. | <s>[INST]State treasury. The Durbar, instead of conceding the demands,
asked the Resident to appoint a British officer as Dewan to deal
effectively wit h the situation, and Cadell took over on 12
September. Meanwhile, Virawala himself became Private Adviser
to the Thakore, so that he could continue to operate from behind
the scenes.[/INST] |
362 | India’s Struggle For Independence
The Satyagraha now assumed major proportions and
included withhold of la nd revenue, defiance of monopoly rights,
boycott of all goods produced by the State, including electricity
and cloth. There was a run on the State Bank and strikes in the
state cotton mill and by students. All sources of income of the
state, including exci se and custom duties, were sought to be
blocked.
Sardar Patel, though most of the tune not physically present
in Rajkot, kept in regular touch with the Rajkot leaders by
telephone every evening. Volunteers began to arrive from other
parts of Kathiawad, fr om British Gujarat and Bombay. The
movement demonstrated a remarkable degree of organization: a
secret chain of command ensured that on the arrest of one leader
another took charge and code numbers published in newspapers
informed each Satyagrahi of his ar rival date and arrangements in
Rajkot.
By the end of November, the British were clearly worried
about the implications of a possible Congress victory in Rajkot.
The Viceroy, Linlithgow, wired to the Secretary of State: ‘I have
little doubt that if Congres s were to win in the Rajkot case the
movement would go right through Kathiawad, and that they
would then extend their activities in other directions . . ‘
But the Durbar decided to ignore the Political Department’s
advice and go ahead with a settlement wit h Sardar Patel. The
agreement that was reached on 26 December, 1938, provided for
a limit on the Thakore’s Privy Purse and the appointment of a
committee of ten State subjects or officials to draw up a scheme
of reforms designed to give the widest possible powers to the
people. A separate letter to the Sardar by the Thakore contained
the informal understanding that ‘seven members of the
Committee . . . are to be recommended by Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel and they are to be nominated by us’ . All prisoners were
released and the Satyagraha was withdrawn.
But such open defiance by the Thakore could hardly be | <s>[INST]362 | India’s Struggle For Independence
The Satyagraha now assumed major proportions and
included withhold of la nd revenue, defiance of monopoly rights,
boycott of all goods produced by the State, including electricity
and cloth. There was a run on the State Bank and strikes in the
state cotton mill and by students. All sources of income of the
state, including exci se and custom duties, were sought to be
blocked.
Sardar Patel, though most of the tune not physically present
in Rajkot, kept in regular touch with the Rajkot leaders by
telephone every evening. Volunteers began to arrive from other
parts of Kathiawad, fr om British Gujarat and Bombay. The
movement demonstrated a remarkable degree of organization: a
secret chain of command ensured that on the arrest of one leader
another took charge and code numbers published in newspapers
informed each Satyagrahi of his ar rival date and arrangements in
Rajkot.
By the end of November, the British were clearly worried
about the implications of a possible Congress victory in Rajkot.
The Viceroy, Linlithgow, wired to the Secretary of State: ‘I have
little doubt that if Congres s were to win in the Rajkot case the
movement would go right through Kathiawad, and that they
would then extend their activities in other directions . . ‘
But the Durbar decided to ignore the Political Department’s
advice and go ahead with a settlement wit h Sardar Patel. The
agreement that was reached on 26 December, 1938, provided for
a limit on the Thakore’s Privy Purse and the appointment of a
committee of ten State subjects or officials to draw up a scheme
of reforms designed to give the widest possible powers to the
people. A separate letter to the Sardar by the Thakore contained
the informal understanding that ‘seven members of the
Committee . . . are to be recommended by Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel and they are to be nominated by us’ . All prisoners were
released and the Satyagraha was withdrawn.
But such open defiance by the Thakore could hardly be[/INST] |
But such open defiance by the Thakore could hardly be
welcomed by the British government. Consultations involving the
Resident, the Political Department, the Viceroy and the Secretary
of State were immediately he ld and the Thakore was instructed
not to accept the Sardar’s list of members of the Committee, but
to select another set with the help of the Resident. Accordingly, | <s>[INST]But such open defiance by the Thakore could hardly be
welcomed by the British government. Consultations involving the
Resident, the Political Department, the Viceroy and the Secretary
of State were immediately he ld and the Thakore was instructed
not to accept the Sardar’s list of members of the Committee, but
to select another set with the help of the Resident. Accordingly,[/INST] |
363 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
the list of names sent by Patel was rejected, the excuse being that
it contained the names of only Brahmins and Banias, and did not
give any representation to Rajputs, Muslims and the depressed
classes.
The breach of agreement by the State led to a resumption of
the Satyagraha on 26 January 1939. Virawala answered with
severe repression. As bef ore, this soon led to a growing concern
and sense of outrage among nationalists outside Rajkot.
Kasturba, Gandhiji’s wife, who had been brought up in Rajkot,
was so moved by the state of affairs that she decided, in spite of
her poor health and against eve rybody’s advice, to go to Rajkot.
On arrival, she and her companion Maniben Patel, the Sardar’s
daughter, were arrested and detained in a village sixteen miles
from Rajkot.
But Rajkot was destined for even more dramatic events. The
Mahatma decided that he , too, must go to Rajkot. He had already
made it clear that he considered the breach of a solemn
agreement by the Thakore Sahib a serious affair and one that
was the duty of every Satyagrahi to resist. He also felt that he
had strong claims on R ajkot becau se of his family’s close
association with the State and the Thakore’s family, and that this
justified and prompted his personal intervention.
In accordance with his wishes, mass Satyagraha was suspended
to prepare the way for negotiations. But a number of discussions
with the Resident, the Thakore and Dewa n Virawala yielded no
results and resulted in an ultimatum by Gandhiji that if, by 3
March, the Durbar did not agree to honour its agreement with
the Sardar, he would go on a fast unto death. The Thakore, or
rather Virawala, who was the real power behind the throne, stuck
to his original position and left Gandhiji with no choice but to
begin his fast.
The fast was the signal for a nation -wide protest. Gandhiji’s
health was already poor and any prolonged f ast was likely to be | <s>[INST]363 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
the list of names sent by Patel was rejected, the excuse being that
it contained the names of only Brahmins and Banias, and did not
give any representation to Rajputs, Muslims and the depressed
classes.
The breach of agreement by the State led to a resumption of
the Satyagraha on 26 January 1939. Virawala answered with
severe repression. As bef ore, this soon led to a growing concern
and sense of outrage among nationalists outside Rajkot.
Kasturba, Gandhiji’s wife, who had been brought up in Rajkot,
was so moved by the state of affairs that she decided, in spite of
her poor health and against eve rybody’s advice, to go to Rajkot.
On arrival, she and her companion Maniben Patel, the Sardar’s
daughter, were arrested and detained in a village sixteen miles
from Rajkot.
But Rajkot was destined for even more dramatic events. The
Mahatma decided that he , too, must go to Rajkot. He had already
made it clear that he considered the breach of a solemn
agreement by the Thakore Sahib a serious affair and one that
was the duty of every Satyagrahi to resist. He also felt that he
had strong claims on R ajkot becau se of his family’s close
association with the State and the Thakore’s family, and that this
justified and prompted his personal intervention.
In accordance with his wishes, mass Satyagraha was suspended
to prepare the way for negotiations. But a number of discussions
with the Resident, the Thakore and Dewa n Virawala yielded no
results and resulted in an ultimatum by Gandhiji that if, by 3
March, the Durbar did not agree to honour its agreement with
the Sardar, he would go on a fast unto death. The Thakore, or
rather Virawala, who was the real power behind the throne, stuck
to his original position and left Gandhiji with no choice but to
begin his fast.
The fast was the signal for a nation -wide protest. Gandhiji’s
health was already poor and any prolonged f ast was likely to be[/INST] |
dangerous. There were harta ls, an adjournment of the legislature
and finally a threat that the Congress Ministries might resign.
The Viceroy was bombarded with telegrams asking for his
intervention. Gandhiji himself urged the Paramount Power to
fulfil its responsibility to the people of the State by persuading
the Thakore to honour his promise. On 7 March, the Viceroy | <s>[INST]dangerous. There were harta ls, an adjournment of the legislature
and finally a threat that the Congress Ministries might resign.
The Viceroy was bombarded with telegrams asking for his
intervention. Gandhiji himself urged the Paramount Power to
fulfil its responsibility to the people of the State by persuading
the Thakore to honour his promise. On 7 March, the Viceroy[/INST] |
364 | India’s Struggle For Independence
suggested arbitration by the Chief Justice of India, Sir Maurice
Gwyer, to decide whether in fact the Thakore had violat ed the
agreement. This seemed a reasonable enough proposition , and
Gandhiji broke his fast.
The Chief Justice’s award, announced on 3 April, 1939,
vindicated the Sardar’s position that the Durbar had agreed to
accept seven of his nominees. The ball was no w back in the
Thakore’s court. But there had been no change of heart in
Rajkot. Virawala continued with his policy of
propping up Rajput, Muslim and depressed classes’ claims to
representation and refused to accept any of the proposals made
by Gandhiji to accommodate their representatives while
maintaining a majority of the Sardar’s and the Parishad’s
nominees.
The situation soon began to take an ugly turn, with hostile
demonstrations by Rajputs and Muslims during Gandhiji’s prayer
meetings, and Mohammed Au Jinnah’s and Ambedkar’s demand
that the Muslims and depressed classes be given separate
representation. The Durbar used all this to continue to refuse to
honour the agreement in either its letter or spirit. The Paramount
Power, too, would not intervene because it had nothing to gain
and everything to lose from securing an outright Congress
victory. Nor did it see its role as one of promoting responsible
government in the States.
At this point, Gandhiji, analyzing the reasons for his failure
to achieve a ‘change of heart’ in his opponents, came to the
conclusion that the cause lay in his attempt to use the authority
of the Paramount Power to coerce the Thakore into an agreement.
This, for him, smacked of violence; non -violence should have
meant that he sh ould have directed his fast only at
the Thakore and Virawala, arid relied only on the strength of his
suffering to effect a ‘change of heart’. Therefore, he released the
Thakore from the agreement, apologized to the Viceroy and the
Chief Justice for wasti ng their time, and to his opponents, the | <s>[INST]364 | India’s Struggle For Independence
suggested arbitration by the Chief Justice of India, Sir Maurice
Gwyer, to decide whether in fact the Thakore had violat ed the
agreement. This seemed a reasonable enough proposition , and
Gandhiji broke his fast.
The Chief Justice’s award, announced on 3 April, 1939,
vindicated the Sardar’s position that the Durbar had agreed to
accept seven of his nominees. The ball was no w back in the
Thakore’s court. But there had been no change of heart in
Rajkot. Virawala continued with his policy of
propping up Rajput, Muslim and depressed classes’ claims to
representation and refused to accept any of the proposals made
by Gandhiji to accommodate their representatives while
maintaining a majority of the Sardar’s and the Parishad’s
nominees.
The situation soon began to take an ugly turn, with hostile
demonstrations by Rajputs and Muslims during Gandhiji’s prayer
meetings, and Mohammed Au Jinnah’s and Ambedkar’s demand
that the Muslims and depressed classes be given separate
representation. The Durbar used all this to continue to refuse to
honour the agreement in either its letter or spirit. The Paramount
Power, too, would not intervene because it had nothing to gain
and everything to lose from securing an outright Congress
victory. Nor did it see its role as one of promoting responsible
government in the States.
At this point, Gandhiji, analyzing the reasons for his failure
to achieve a ‘change of heart’ in his opponents, came to the
conclusion that the cause lay in his attempt to use the authority
of the Paramount Power to coerce the Thakore into an agreement.
This, for him, smacked of violence; non -violence should have
meant that he sh ould have directed his fast only at
the Thakore and Virawala, arid relied only on the strength of his
suffering to effect a ‘change of heart’. Therefore, he released the
Thakore from the agreement, apologized to the Viceroy and the
Chief Justice for wasti ng their time, and to his opponents, the[/INST] |
Muslims and the Rajputs, and left Rajkot to return to British
India.
The Rajkot Satyagraha brought into clear focus the
paradoxical situation that existed in the States and which made
the task of resistance a very c omplex one. The rulers of the States | <s>[INST]Muslims and the Rajputs, and left Rajkot to return to British
India.
The Rajkot Satyagraha brought into clear focus the
paradoxical situation that existed in the States and which made
the task of resistance a very c omplex one. The rulers of the States[/INST] |
365 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
were protected by the might of the British Government against
any movements that aimed at reform and popular pressure on
the British Government to induce reform could always be resisted
by pleading the legal position of the autonomy of the States. This
legal independence, however, was usually forgotten by the British
when the States desired to follow a course that was unpalatable
to the Paramount Power. It was, after all, the British Government
that urged the Thakore to refuse to honour his agreement with
the Sardar. But the legal separation of power and responsibility
between the States and the British Government did provide a
convenient excuse for resisting pressure, an excuse that did not
exist in British India. This m eant that movements of resistance in
the States operated in conditions that were very different from
those that provided the context for movements in British India.
Perhaps, then, the Congress had not been far wrong when for
years it had urged that the mov ements in Princely India and
British India could not be merged. Its hesitation to take on the
Indian States was based on a comprehension of the genuine
difficulties in the situation, difficulties which were clearly shown
up by the example of Rajkot.
Despi te the apparent failure of the Rajkot Satyagraha, it
exercised a powerful politicizing influence on the people of the
States, especially in Western India. It also demonstrated to the
Princes that they survived only because the British were there to
prop th em up, and thus, the struggle of Rajkot, along with others
of its time, facilitated the process of the integration of the States
at the time of independence. Many a Prince who had seen for
himself that the people were capable of resisting would hesitate
in 1947 to resist the pressure f or integration when it came. In the
absence of these struggles, the whole process of integration
would inevitably have been arduous and protracted. It is hardly a | <s>[INST]365 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
were protected by the might of the British Government against
any movements that aimed at reform and popular pressure on
the British Government to induce reform could always be resisted
by pleading the legal position of the autonomy of the States. This
legal independence, however, was usually forgotten by the British
when the States desired to follow a course that was unpalatable
to the Paramount Power. It was, after all, the British Government
that urged the Thakore to refuse to honour his agreement with
the Sardar. But the legal separation of power and responsibility
between the States and the British Government did provide a
convenient excuse for resisting pressure, an excuse that did not
exist in British India. This m eant that movements of resistance in
the States operated in conditions that were very different from
those that provided the context for movements in British India.
Perhaps, then, the Congress had not been far wrong when for
years it had urged that the mov ements in Princely India and
British India could not be merged. Its hesitation to take on the
Indian States was based on a comprehension of the genuine
difficulties in the situation, difficulties which were clearly shown
up by the example of Rajkot.
Despi te the apparent failure of the Rajkot Satyagraha, it
exercised a powerful politicizing influence on the people of the
States, especially in Western India. It also demonstrated to the
Princes that they survived only because the British were there to
prop th em up, and thus, the struggle of Rajkot, along with others
of its time, facilitated the process of the integration of the States
at the time of independence. Many a Prince who had seen for
himself that the people were capable of resisting would hesitate
in 1947 to resist the pressure f or integration when it came. In the
absence of these struggles, the whole process of integration
would inevitably have been arduous and protracted. It is hardly a[/INST] |
matter of surprise that the man who was responsible more than
any other for effecting the integration in 1947 -48 was the same
Sardar who was a veteran of many struggles against the Princes.
*
Bu there was one State that refused to see the writing on
the wall —- Hyderabad. Hyderabad was the largest princely State
in India both by virtue of its size and its population. The Nizam’s | <s>[INST]matter of surprise that the man who was responsible more than
any other for effecting the integration in 1947 -48 was the same
Sardar who was a veteran of many struggles against the Princes.
*
Bu there was one State that refused to see the writing on
the wall —- Hyderabad. Hyderabad was the largest princely State
in India both by virtue of its size and its population. The Nizam’s[/INST] |
366 | India’s Struggle For Independence
dominions included three distinct linguistic areas: Marathi -
speaking (twenty -eight percent), Kannadas peaking (twenty -two)
and Telugu -speaking (fifty per cent). Osman Ali Khan , who
became N izam in 1911 and continued till 1948, ruled the State
as a personalized autocracy. The sarf khas, the Nizam’s own
estate, which accounted for ten per cent of the total area of the
State, went directly to meet the royal expenses. Another thirty per
cent of the States’ area was held as jagirs by various categories of
the rural population and was heavily burdened by a whole gamut
of illegal levies and exactions and forced labour or vethi.
Particularly galling to the overwhelmingly Hindu population
of the Stat e was the cultural and religious suppression practised
by the Nizam. Urdu was made the court language and all efforts
were made to promote it, including the setting up of the Osmania
University. Other languages of the State — Telugu, Marathi and
Kannada — were neglected and even private efforts to promote
education in these languages were obstructed. Muslims were
given a disproportionately large share of the jobs in the
administration, especially in its upper echelons. The Arya Samaj
Movement that grew rapi dly in the 1920s was actively suppressed
and official permission had to be sought to set up a havan kund
for Arya Samaj religious observances. The Nizam’s administration
increasingly tried to project Hyderabad as a Muslim state, and
this process was accele rated after 1927 with the emergence of the
Ittehad ul Muslimin, an organization that based itself on the
notion of the Nizam as the ‘Royal Embodiment of Muslim
Sovereignty in the Deccan.’
It is in this context of political, economic, cultural and
religiou s oppression that the growth of political consciousness
and the course of the State’s People’s Movement in Hyderabad
has to be understood.
As in other parts of India, it was the Non -Cooperation and | <s>[INST]366 | India’s Struggle For Independence
dominions included three distinct linguistic areas: Marathi -
speaking (twenty -eight percent), Kannadas peaking (twenty -two)
and Telugu -speaking (fifty per cent). Osman Ali Khan , who
became N izam in 1911 and continued till 1948, ruled the State
as a personalized autocracy. The sarf khas, the Nizam’s own
estate, which accounted for ten per cent of the total area of the
State, went directly to meet the royal expenses. Another thirty per
cent of the States’ area was held as jagirs by various categories of
the rural population and was heavily burdened by a whole gamut
of illegal levies and exactions and forced labour or vethi.
Particularly galling to the overwhelmingly Hindu population
of the Stat e was the cultural and religious suppression practised
by the Nizam. Urdu was made the court language and all efforts
were made to promote it, including the setting up of the Osmania
University. Other languages of the State — Telugu, Marathi and
Kannada — were neglected and even private efforts to promote
education in these languages were obstructed. Muslims were
given a disproportionately large share of the jobs in the
administration, especially in its upper echelons. The Arya Samaj
Movement that grew rapi dly in the 1920s was actively suppressed
and official permission had to be sought to set up a havan kund
for Arya Samaj religious observances. The Nizam’s administration
increasingly tried to project Hyderabad as a Muslim state, and
this process was accele rated after 1927 with the emergence of the
Ittehad ul Muslimin, an organization that based itself on the
notion of the Nizam as the ‘Royal Embodiment of Muslim
Sovereignty in the Deccan.’
It is in this context of political, economic, cultural and
religiou s oppression that the growth of political consciousness
and the course of the State’s People’s Movement in Hyderabad
has to be understood.
As in other parts of India, it was the Non -Cooperation and[/INST] |
As in other parts of India, it was the Non -Cooperation and
Khilafat Movement of 1920 -22 that created the first stirr ings of
political activity. From various parts of the State, there were
reports of charkhas being popularized national schools being set
up, of propaganda against drink and un touchability, of badges
containing pictures of Gandhiji and the All brothers bein g sold.
Public meetings were not much in evidence, expect in connection
with the Khilafat Movement, which could take on a more open | <s>[INST]As in other parts of India, it was the Non -Cooperation and
Khilafat Movement of 1920 -22 that created the first stirr ings of
political activity. From various parts of the State, there were
reports of charkhas being popularized national schools being set
up, of propaganda against drink and un touchability, of badges
containing pictures of Gandhiji and the All brothers bein g sold.
Public meetings were not much in evidence, expect in connection
with the Khilafat Movement, which could take on a more open[/INST] |
367 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
form because the Nizam hesitated to come out openly against it .
Public demonstration of Hindu -Muslim unity was very popular in
the’ years.
This new awakening found expression in the subsequent
years in the holding of a series of Hyderabad political conferences
at different venues outside the State. The main discussion at
these conferences cantered around the need for a system of
responsible government and for elementary civil liberties that
were lacking in the State. Oppressive practices like vethi or veth
begar and exorbitant taxation, as well as the religious and
cultural suppression of the people, were also condemned.
Simul taneously, there began a process of regional cultural
awakening , the lead being taken by the Telengana area. A
cohesion to this effort was provided by the founding of the
Andhra Jana Sangham which later grew into the Andhra
Mahasabha. The emphasis initiall y was on the promotion of
Telugu language and literature by setting up library associations,
schools, journals and newspapers and promoting a research
society. Even these activities came under attack from the State
authorities, and schools, libraries and n ewspapers would be
regularly shut down. The Mahasabha refrained from any direct
political activity or stance till the 1940s.
The Civil Disobedience Movement of 1930 -32, in which
many people from the State participated by going to the British
areas, carrie d the process of politicization further. Hyderabad
nationalists, especially many of the younger ones, spent time in
jail with nationalists from British India and became part of the
political trends that were sweeping the rest of the nation. A new
impatienc e was imparted to their politics, and the pressure for a
more vigorous politics became stronger.
In 1937, the other two regions of the State also set up their
own organizations — the Maharashtra Parishad and the Kannada
Parishad. And, in 1938, activists f rom all three regions came | <s>[INST]367 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
form because the Nizam hesitated to come out openly against it .
Public demonstration of Hindu -Muslim unity was very popular in
the’ years.
This new awakening found expression in the subsequent
years in the holding of a series of Hyderabad political conferences
at different venues outside the State. The main discussion at
these conferences cantered around the need for a system of
responsible government and for elementary civil liberties that
were lacking in the State. Oppressive practices like vethi or veth
begar and exorbitant taxation, as well as the religious and
cultural suppression of the people, were also condemned.
Simul taneously, there began a process of regional cultural
awakening , the lead being taken by the Telengana area. A
cohesion to this effort was provided by the founding of the
Andhra Jana Sangham which later grew into the Andhra
Mahasabha. The emphasis initiall y was on the promotion of
Telugu language and literature by setting up library associations,
schools, journals and newspapers and promoting a research
society. Even these activities came under attack from the State
authorities, and schools, libraries and n ewspapers would be
regularly shut down. The Mahasabha refrained from any direct
political activity or stance till the 1940s.
The Civil Disobedience Movement of 1930 -32, in which
many people from the State participated by going to the British
areas, carrie d the process of politicization further. Hyderabad
nationalists, especially many of the younger ones, spent time in
jail with nationalists from British India and became part of the
political trends that were sweeping the rest of the nation. A new
impatienc e was imparted to their politics, and the pressure for a
more vigorous politics became stronger.
In 1937, the other two regions of the State also set up their
own organizations — the Maharashtra Parishad and the Kannada
Parishad. And, in 1938, activists f rom all three regions came[/INST] |
Parishad. And, in 1938, activists f rom all three regions came
together and decided to found the Hyderabad State Congress as a
state-wide body of the people of Hyderabad. This was not a
branch of the Indian National Congress, despite its name, and
despite the fact that its members had close contacts with the
Congress. But even before the organization could be formally
founded, the Nizam’s government issued orders banning it, the | <s>[INST]Parishad. And, in 1938, activists f rom all three regions came
together and decided to found the Hyderabad State Congress as a
state-wide body of the people of Hyderabad. This was not a
branch of the Indian National Congress, despite its name, and
despite the fact that its members had close contacts with the
Congress. But even before the organization could be formally
founded, the Nizam’s government issued orders banning it, the[/INST] |
368 | India’s Struggle For Independence
ostensible ground being that it was a communal body of Hindus
and that Muslims were not sufficiently represented in it.
Negotiations with the Government bore no fruit, and the decision
was taken to launch a Satyagraha.
The leader of this Satyagraha was Swami Ramanand Tirtha,
a Marathi -speaking nationalist who had given up his studies
during the Non -Cooperation Movemen t, attended a national
school and college, worked as a trade unionist in Bombay and
Sholapur and finally moved to Mominabad in Hyderabad State
where he ran a school on nationalist lines. A Gandhian in his life-
style and a Nehru ite in his ideology, Swamiji emerged in 1938 as
the leader of the movement since the older and more established
leaders were unwilling or unable to venture into this new type of
politics of confrontation with the State.
The Satyagraha started in October 1938 and the pattern
adopted w as that a group of five Satyagrahis headed by a popular
leader and consisting of representatives of all the regions would
defy the ban by proclaiming themselves as members of the State
Congress. This was repeated thrice a week for two months and all
the Satyagrahis were sent to jail. Huge crowds would collect to
witness the Satyagraha and express solidarity with the
movement . The two centres of the Satyagraha were Hyderabad
city and Aurangabad city in the Marathwada area.
Gandhiji himself took a keen perso nal interest in the
developments, and regularly wrote to Sir Akbar Hydari, the Prime
Minister, pressing him for better treatment of the Satyagrahis
and for a change in the State’s attitude. And it was at his
instance that, after two months, in December j 1 938, the
Satyagraha was withdrawn.
The reasons for this decision were to be primarily found in
an accompanying development — the Satyagraha launched by
the Arya Samaj and the Hindu Civil Liberties Union at the same
time as the State Congress Satyagraha. The A rya Samaj | <s>[INST]368 | India’s Struggle For Independence
ostensible ground being that it was a communal body of Hindus
and that Muslims were not sufficiently represented in it.
Negotiations with the Government bore no fruit, and the decision
was taken to launch a Satyagraha.
The leader of this Satyagraha was Swami Ramanand Tirtha,
a Marathi -speaking nationalist who had given up his studies
during the Non -Cooperation Movemen t, attended a national
school and college, worked as a trade unionist in Bombay and
Sholapur and finally moved to Mominabad in Hyderabad State
where he ran a school on nationalist lines. A Gandhian in his life-
style and a Nehru ite in his ideology, Swamiji emerged in 1938 as
the leader of the movement since the older and more established
leaders were unwilling or unable to venture into this new type of
politics of confrontation with the State.
The Satyagraha started in October 1938 and the pattern
adopted w as that a group of five Satyagrahis headed by a popular
leader and consisting of representatives of all the regions would
defy the ban by proclaiming themselves as members of the State
Congress. This was repeated thrice a week for two months and all
the Satyagrahis were sent to jail. Huge crowds would collect to
witness the Satyagraha and express solidarity with the
movement . The two centres of the Satyagraha were Hyderabad
city and Aurangabad city in the Marathwada area.
Gandhiji himself took a keen perso nal interest in the
developments, and regularly wrote to Sir Akbar Hydari, the Prime
Minister, pressing him for better treatment of the Satyagrahis
and for a change in the State’s attitude. And it was at his
instance that, after two months, in December j 1 938, the
Satyagraha was withdrawn.
The reasons for this decision were to be primarily found in
an accompanying development — the Satyagraha launched by
the Arya Samaj and the Hindu Civil Liberties Union at the same
time as the State Congress Satyagraha. The A rya Samaj[/INST] |
time as the State Congress Satyagraha. The A rya Samaj
Satyagraha, which was attracting Satyagrahis from all over the
country, was launched as a protest against the religious
persecution of the Arya Samaj, and it had clearly religious
objectives. It also tended to take on communal overtones. The
State Congress and Gandhiji increasingly felt that in the popular
mind their clearly secular Satyagraha with distinct political | <s>[INST]time as the State Congress Satyagraha. The A rya Samaj
Satyagraha, which was attracting Satyagrahis from all over the
country, was launched as a protest against the religious
persecution of the Arya Samaj, and it had clearly religious
objectives. It also tended to take on communal overtones. The
State Congress and Gandhiji increasingly felt that in the popular
mind their clearly secular Satyagraha with distinct political[/INST] |
369 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
objectives were being confused with the religious -communal
Satyagraha of the Arya Sam aj and that it was, therefore, best to
dema rcate themselves from it by withdrawing their own
Satyagraha. The authorities were in any case lumping the two
together and seeking to project the State Congress as a Hindu
communal organizahon.
Simultaneously, there was the emergence of what came to
be known as the Vande Mataram Movement. Students of colleges
in Hyderabad city org arnz.cd a protest strike against the
authorities’ refusal to let them sing Vande Mataram in their
hostel prayer rooms. This strike rapidly spread to other parts of
the State and many of the students who were expelled from the
Hyderaba d colleges left the State and continued their studies in
Nagpur University in the Congress -ruled Central Provinces where
they were given shelter by a hospitable Vice -Chancellor This
movement was extr emely significant because it created a young
and militant cadre that provided the activists as well as the
leadership of the movement in later years.
The State Congress, however continued to be banned, and
the regional cultural organizations remained the main forums of
activity. The Andhra Mahasabha was particularly active in this
phase, and the majority of the younger newly -politicized cadre
flocked to it. A significant development that occurred around the
year 1940 was that Ravi Narayan Reddy, who had em erged as a
major leader of the radicals in the Andhra Mahasabha and had
participated in the State Congress Satyagraha along with B. Yella
Reddy, was drawn towards the Communist Party. As a result,
several of the younger cadres also came under Left and
Comm unist influence, and these radical elements gradually
increased in strength and pushed the Andhra Mahasabha
towards more radical politics. The Mahasabha began to take an
active interest in the problems of the peasants.
The outbreak of the War provided an excuse to the | <s>[INST]369 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
objectives were being confused with the religious -communal
Satyagraha of the Arya Sam aj and that it was, therefore, best to
dema rcate themselves from it by withdrawing their own
Satyagraha. The authorities were in any case lumping the two
together and seeking to project the State Congress as a Hindu
communal organizahon.
Simultaneously, there was the emergence of what came to
be known as the Vande Mataram Movement. Students of colleges
in Hyderabad city org arnz.cd a protest strike against the
authorities’ refusal to let them sing Vande Mataram in their
hostel prayer rooms. This strike rapidly spread to other parts of
the State and many of the students who were expelled from the
Hyderaba d colleges left the State and continued their studies in
Nagpur University in the Congress -ruled Central Provinces where
they were given shelter by a hospitable Vice -Chancellor This
movement was extr emely significant because it created a young
and militant cadre that provided the activists as well as the
leadership of the movement in later years.
The State Congress, however continued to be banned, and
the regional cultural organizations remained the main forums of
activity. The Andhra Mahasabha was particularly active in this
phase, and the majority of the younger newly -politicized cadre
flocked to it. A significant development that occurred around the
year 1940 was that Ravi Narayan Reddy, who had em erged as a
major leader of the radicals in the Andhra Mahasabha and had
participated in the State Congress Satyagraha along with B. Yella
Reddy, was drawn towards the Communist Party. As a result,
several of the younger cadres also came under Left and
Comm unist influence, and these radical elements gradually
increased in strength and pushed the Andhra Mahasabha
towards more radical politics. The Mahasabha began to take an
active interest in the problems of the peasants.
The outbreak of the War provided an excuse to the[/INST] |
The outbreak of the War provided an excuse to the
government for avoiding any moves towards political and
constitutional reforms. A symbolic protest against the continuing
ban was again registered by Swami Ramanand Tirtha and six
others personally selected by Gandhiji. They were arrested in
September 1940 and kept in detention till December 1941. A
resumption of the struggle was ruled out by Gandhiji since an | <s>[INST]The outbreak of the War provided an excuse to the
government for avoiding any moves towards political and
constitutional reforms. A symbolic protest against the continuing
ban was again registered by Swami Ramanand Tirtha and six
others personally selected by Gandhiji. They were arrested in
September 1940 and kept in detention till December 1941. A
resumption of the struggle was ruled out by Gandhiji since an[/INST] |
370 | India’s Struggle For Independence
All-India struggle was in the offing and now all struggles would
be part of that.
The Quit India Movement was launched in August 1942 and
it was made clear that now there was no distinction to be made
between the people of British India and the States: every Indian
was to participate. The meeting of the AISPC was convened along
with the AICC session at Bombay that announced the
commencem ent of struggle. Gandhiji and Jawaharlal Nehru both
addressed the AISPC Standing Committee, and Gandhiji himself
explained the implications of the Quit India Movement and told
the Committee that henceforth there would be one movement.
The movement in the S tates was now to be not only for
responsible government but for the independence of India and
the in tegration of the States with British India.
The Quit India Movement got a considerable response from
Hyderabad, especially the youth. Though arrests of the main
leaders, including Swamiji, prevented an organized movement
from emerging, many people all over the State offered Satyagraha
and many others were arrested. On 2 October 1942, a batch of
women offered Satyagraha in Hyderabad city, and Sarojini Naidu
was arrested earlier in the day. Slogans such as ‘Gandhi Ka
Charkha Chalana Padega, Goron ko London Jana Padega’
(Gandhiji’s wheel will have to be spun, while the Whites will have
to return to London) became popular. In a state where, till a few
years ago e ven well -established leaders had to send their
speeches to the Collector in advance and accept deletions made
by him, the new atmosphere was hardly short of revolutionary.
But the Quit India Movement also sealed the rift that had
developed between the Com munist and non -Communist radical
nationalists after the Communist Party had adopted the slogan of
People’s War in December 1941. Communists were opposed to
the Quit India Movement as it militated against their
understanding that Britain must be supported i n its anti -Fascist | <s>[INST]370 | India’s Struggle For Independence
All-India struggle was in the offing and now all struggles would
be part of that.
The Quit India Movement was launched in August 1942 and
it was made clear that now there was no distinction to be made
between the people of British India and the States: every Indian
was to participate. The meeting of the AISPC was convened along
with the AICC session at Bombay that announced the
commencem ent of struggle. Gandhiji and Jawaharlal Nehru both
addressed the AISPC Standing Committee, and Gandhiji himself
explained the implications of the Quit India Movement and told
the Committee that henceforth there would be one movement.
The movement in the S tates was now to be not only for
responsible government but for the independence of India and
the in tegration of the States with British India.
The Quit India Movement got a considerable response from
Hyderabad, especially the youth. Though arrests of the main
leaders, including Swamiji, prevented an organized movement
from emerging, many people all over the State offered Satyagraha
and many others were arrested. On 2 October 1942, a batch of
women offered Satyagraha in Hyderabad city, and Sarojini Naidu
was arrested earlier in the day. Slogans such as ‘Gandhi Ka
Charkha Chalana Padega, Goron ko London Jana Padega’
(Gandhiji’s wheel will have to be spun, while the Whites will have
to return to London) became popular. In a state where, till a few
years ago e ven well -established leaders had to send their
speeches to the Collector in advance and accept deletions made
by him, the new atmosphere was hardly short of revolutionary.
But the Quit India Movement also sealed the rift that had
developed between the Com munist and non -Communist radical
nationalists after the Communist Party had adopted the slogan of
People’s War in December 1941. Communists were opposed to
the Quit India Movement as it militated against their
understanding that Britain must be supported i n its anti -Fascist[/INST] |
War. The young nationalists in Telengana coalesced around
Jamalpuram Keshavrao but a large section went with Ravi
Narayan Reddy to the Communists. The Communists were also
facilitated by the removal of the ban on the CPI by the Nizam, in
keeping with the policy of the Government of India that had
removed the ban because of the CPI’s pro - War stance. Therefore, | <s>[INST]War. The young nationalists in Telengana coalesced around
Jamalpuram Keshavrao but a large section went with Ravi
Narayan Reddy to the Communists. The Communists were also
facilitated by the removal of the ban on the CPI by the Nizam, in
keeping with the policy of the Government of India that had
removed the ban because of the CPI’s pro - War stance. Therefore,[/INST] |
371 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
while most of the nationalists were clamped in jail because of
their support to the Quit India Movement, the Communists
remained f ree to extend and consolidate their base among the
people. This process reached a head in 1944 when a split
occurred in the Andhra Mahasabha session at Bhongir, and the
pro-nationalist as well as the liberal elements walked out and set
up a separate organi zation. The Andhra Mahasabha now was
completely led by the Communists and they soon launched a
programme of mobilization and organization of the peasantry.
The end of the War in 1945 brought about a change in the
Peoples’ War line, and the restraint on org anizing struggles was
removed.
The years 1945 -46, and especially the latter half of 1946,
saw the growth of a powerful peasant struggle in various pockets
in Nalgonda district, and to some extent in Warangal and
Khammam. The main targets of attack were th e forced grain levy,
the practice of veth begar, illegal exactions and illegal seizures of
land. Clashes took place initially between the landlords’ goond as
and the peasants led by the Sangham (as the Andhra Mahasabha
was popularly known), and later betwee n the armed forces of the
State police and peasants armed with sticks and stones. The
resistance was strong, but so was the repression, and by the end
of 1946 the severity of the repression succeeded in pushing the
movement into quietude. Thousands were ar rested and beaten,
many died, and the leaders languished in jails. Yet, the
movement had succeeded in instilling into the oppressed and
downtrodden peasants of Telengana a new confidence in their
ability to resist.
On 4 June 1947, the Viceroy, Mountbatten , announced at a
press conference that the British would soon leave India for good
on 15 August. On 12 June, the Nizam announced that on the
lapse of British paramountcy he would become a sovereign
monarch. The intention was clear: he would not accede to t he | <s>[INST]371 | The Freedom Struggle in Princely India
while most of the nationalists were clamped in jail because of
their support to the Quit India Movement, the Communists
remained f ree to extend and consolidate their base among the
people. This process reached a head in 1944 when a split
occurred in the Andhra Mahasabha session at Bhongir, and the
pro-nationalist as well as the liberal elements walked out and set
up a separate organi zation. The Andhra Mahasabha now was
completely led by the Communists and they soon launched a
programme of mobilization and organization of the peasantry.
The end of the War in 1945 brought about a change in the
Peoples’ War line, and the restraint on org anizing struggles was
removed.
The years 1945 -46, and especially the latter half of 1946,
saw the growth of a powerful peasant struggle in various pockets
in Nalgonda district, and to some extent in Warangal and
Khammam. The main targets of attack were th e forced grain levy,
the practice of veth begar, illegal exactions and illegal seizures of
land. Clashes took place initially between the landlords’ goond as
and the peasants led by the Sangham (as the Andhra Mahasabha
was popularly known), and later betwee n the armed forces of the
State police and peasants armed with sticks and stones. The
resistance was strong, but so was the repression, and by the end
of 1946 the severity of the repression succeeded in pushing the
movement into quietude. Thousands were ar rested and beaten,
many died, and the leaders languished in jails. Yet, the
movement had succeeded in instilling into the oppressed and
downtrodden peasants of Telengana a new confidence in their
ability to resist.
On 4 June 1947, the Viceroy, Mountbatten , announced at a
press conference that the British would soon leave India for good
on 15 August. On 12 June, the Nizam announced that on the
lapse of British paramountcy he would become a sovereign
monarch. The intention was clear: he would not accede to t he[/INST] |
monarch. The intention was clear: he would not accede to t he
Indian Union. The first open session of the Hyderabad State
Congress which demanded accession to the Indian Union and
grant of responsible government was held from 16 to 18 June.
The State Congress, with the full support of the Indian National
Congress, had also thwarted an attempt by the Nizam. a few
months earlier, to foist an undemocratic constitution on the
people. The boycott of the elections launched by them had | <s>[INST]monarch. The intention was clear: he would not accede to t he
Indian Union. The first open session of the Hyderabad State
Congress which demanded accession to the Indian Union and
grant of responsible government was held from 16 to 18 June.
The State Congress, with the full support of the Indian National
Congress, had also thwarted an attempt by the Nizam. a few
months earlier, to foist an undemocratic constitution on the
people. The boycott of the elections launched by them had[/INST] |