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TOPIC INFO – UGC NET (History)
SUB-TOPIC INFO – History (UNIT 9)
CONTENT TYPE – Short Notes
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1. Formation of All India Muslim League (1906).
1.1. Background
1.2. Features
2. Reasons for the Formation
2.1. Objectives
3. Establishment of Pakistan
3.1. Condition of Muslims before 1871
3.2. Work of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
3.3. Work of Beck
3.4. Partition of Bengal and its Effects
3.5. Lucknow Pact, 1916
3.6. Pakistan
3.7. Pakistan Resolution (1940)
3.8. Causes of Pakistan Demand
3.9. Dr. Latif’s Scheme
3.10. The Aligarh Scheme
3.11. Formula of Rajagopalachari
3.12. Cabinet Mission
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Communal Politics: Muslim League and Genesis of Pakistan
UGC NET HISTORY (UNIT 9)
Formation of All India Muslim League (1906)
The All India Muslim League (also known as the Muslim League) was a political party founded in British India in 1906. Its strong advocacy, beginning in 1930, for the establishment of a separate Muslim-majority nation-state, Pakistan, resulted in the British Empire partitioning India in 1947. The party arose from the need for political representation of Muslims in British India, particularly in the event of massive Hindu opposition to Bengal’s partition in 1905, which was sponsored by the Indian National Congress. During the annual meeting of the All India Muslim Education Conference in Ahsan Manzil in 1906, the Nawab of Dhaka, Khwaja Salimullah, proposed the formation of a political party to protect the interests of Muslims in British India.
Background
- Despite the sincere efforts of the Congress’s forefathers to attract Muslims to their sessions, the majority of the Islamic leadership, with the exception of a few scholars such as Sir Syed Ahmed Khan and Syed Ameer Ali, who focused more on Islamic education and scientific developments.
- It rejected the notion that India has two distinct communities that should be represented separately in Congress sessions.
- The Indian National Congress was founded in 1885. It was formed with the intention of bringing the thoughts and demands of all Indians, regardless of religion, to the attention of the British government.
- The Indian National Congress was doing well, and because it was working with the British government, it was able to affect many major changes in the structure of the government and its policies.
- Although Congress was successful in many areas, it was unsuccessful in gaining the trust of Indian Muslims.
- The Indian Muslims believed that the Congress was primarily a Hindu organization that could not serve Muslim communities. It sparked the idea of forming a separate political group for Indian Muslims.
- Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, a philosopher and Muslim reformist, was the first to plant the communal idea that Muslims are a separate nation in the Indian political ethos.
- On December 30, 1906, approximately 3000 delegates attended a conference of the Muhammadan Educational Conference in Dhaka, where the ban on politics was lifted and a motion to form the AIML was moved.
- Nawab Khwaja Sir Salimullah Bahadur proposed the name, which was seconded by Hakim Ajmal Khan.
- The All India Muslim League was India’s first Muslim political party.
Features
- All India Muslim League, was a political organization that led the movement for the establishment of a separate Muslim nation during the partition of British India (1947).
- The Muslim League was established in 1906 to protect the rights of Indian Muslims.
- Initially encouraged by the British and generally supportive of their rule, the league adopted self-government for India as its goal in 1913.
- For decades, the league and its leaders, most notably Mohammed Ali Jinnah, advocated Hindu-Muslim unity in a united and independent India.
- It wasn’t until 1940 that the League of Nations called for the establishment of a separate Muslim state from India’s planned independent state.
- Because it feared that an independent India would be dominated by Hindus, the league advocated for a separate nation for India’s Muslims.
- Jinnah and the Muslim League led the fight for the partition of British India into separate Hindu and Muslim states, and the league became Pakistan’s dominant political party after the country’s independence in 1947.