Peace-Process - Ideological Moorings
Dr. M.K. Teng
The Muslim
separatist movement in Jammu and Kashmir in various forms it assumed
from time to time, during the last five decades of
the Indian freedom, has espoused the claim of the
Muslim community to reconstitute the State into an
Islamic polity. Kashmir dispute has its roots in
the struggle of the Muslims of India an Islamic
state, which enshrined a separate freedom for
them, on the basis of
religion.
The Muslims in the
British India and the Indian Princely
States refused to accept that they formed a part
of the Indian nation. They insisted upon their
claim to a separate nation. The separate homeland
of Pakistan was conceived by its founding fathers
as an Islamic state, which would enable the
Muslims in India to realise their Islamic
destiny.
The incessant
efforts of the Indian political class, unable to
break away from its liberal-reformist moorings,
and still in search of the means to legitimise its
rootlessness have caused much harm to the process
of political development in India as well as
impeded the integration of the Muslims in the
political culture of India. The Muslim League
which spearheaded the Muslim movement for Pakistan
in the British India and the All India States
Muslim League, which led the Muslim movement for
Pakistan in the Indian princely States visualised
expression of the consolidation of the Muslim
power in India. The Muslim people of India formed
part of the Muslim Ummah, and an expression of its
unity. Muslim commitment to the unity of the
Muslim Ummah was a negation of the national power
of the Indian people. Muslims did not recognise
any national power, which did not form a
subsidiary part of the Muslim Ummah.
The Muslims in
India supported the struggle for Pakistan
unequivocally and rejected the
ideological commitment of the Indian people to the
national identity of a United India, the Indian
struggle for freedom underlined. The partition of
India was not foisted on the Indian people by
British, as the Indian political class continues
to claim, even half a century after India was
freed from the British colonial hold. The
partition was wrought by the Muslims. The civil
war and wanton violence, which the Direct Action
campaign the Muslim League launched in August
1946, broke up the national consensus on the unity
of India, that permeated the outlook of the Indian
National Congress. Gandhi had not prepared the
Indian people to face a civil war. His
prescription of passive resistance, left the
field open for the Muslim League to break up
India.
The Muslim League
leaders and the leaders of the States Muslim
League, which coordinated the Muslim struggle for
Pakistan in the princely states, committed
themselves to the realisation of an Islamic State
of Pakistan. Mohammad Ali Jinnah made no mistake
about the ultimate objective of the struggle for
Pakistan.
The Muslim League
leaders made no mistake about the separate
freedom they sought for the Muslim nation of
India. The Muslim ‘nation’ of India, they averred
was the continuation of the history of the Muslim
power in India, which formed a part of the history
of the Muslim Ummah. The Muslims in India, the
Muslims League leaders claimed, were not a part of
the Indian nation, which spread over the
civilisational frontiers of India. The Muslims in
India were a separate ethnic identity of which the
history, social culture, political outlook and
religion, drew their content from Islam and its
history in India. The gospel of redemption, which
formed the basis of all Semitic religious
ideologies, did not admit of coexistence of
religions. The expression Jinnah gave to his
outlook about the commitment of Pakistan to
enable all people of Pakistan to live in freedom,
irrespective of their faith, in his inaugural
address to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan,
did not reflect his intention to repudiate the
Muslim commitment to an Islamic state. Indeed,
the Muslims believed as they do believe now, that
the Islamic order of society does not conflict
with the freedom of all people, irrespective of
their faith. For Jinnah the Muslim state was not a
theocracy. For him the Muslim state of Pakistan
was the expression of the Muslim political power
in India. The very concept of Pakistan, which
Jinnah was instrumental in forging underlined the
recognition of the geographical boundaries of the
Muslim India as well as the continuity of its
history. His claims to the Muslim majority
provinces of the British India and the Muslim
majority princely States as well as the Muslim
ruled princely states for Pakistan, was based upon
his acceptance of the continuity of the history
of the Muslim Ummah in India. Jinnah,
accompanied by Liaquat Ali Khan, met Mountbatten
after the partition plan was given final shape.
Mountbatten told Jinnah that partition had given
the Muslims, a broken country far smaller than
they had claimed. Jinnah looked straight at the
Viceroy and then told him in resigned words that
they would have accepted desert of Thar, if that
was what their were given as their homeland.
From 1947 to 1953,
Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah insisted upon the
exclusion of Jammu and Kashmir from the guarantees
for rights of freedom, the Constitution of India
envisaged and claimed the right of the Muslims to
redefine the rights and freedom of the people of
the State. He stated with the enthusiasm of a
religious preacher that the theological
imperatives of Islam provided adequate guarantees
for the protection of the rights and freedom of
non-Muslim population of the State The exclusion
of the State from the constitutional organisation
of India by Article 370, was based upon his
insistence on a separate structure of rights
which satisfied the aspirations of the Muslims. In
fact, in the meetings of the National Conference
leaders led by him with the Indian leaders and the
members of the Negotiating Committee of the
Constituent Assembly of India, he claimed a
separate freedom which the Muslims would
demarcate for the people of the State on the
basis of the Muslim majority character of its
population. It is not fairly well known that when
Nehru refused to deny the rights and freedom to
the people of Jammu and Kashmir embodied by the
Constitution of India, which he cried in pain, had
been evolved by the Constituent Assembly with
pride, Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah threatened to
resign from the membership of the Constituent
Assembly. The crisis which broke up the first
Interim Government in the State in 1953, grew out
of the conflict between the Muslimisation of the
State and the rights and aspirations of the Hindus
and the other minorities, the Buddhists and the
Sikhs in the State. Forty-three years later, Mufti
Mohammad Sayeed, a former Pradesh Congress
President, besides being a former Home Minister
of India and a former Chief Minister of the State,
pleaded for “one country, two systems” in the
first Round Table Conference on Kashmir held by
the Indian Government in 2006. The Muslims of the
State, followed the same ideological commitments-a
separate freedom for Jammu and Kashmir, organised
on the basis of one country, two systems, pattern
in India. The Indian Prime Minister has, of
course, very apologetically expressed the
inability of the Indian Government to accept
any change in the existing
borders of the State and yet agreed to carry the
peace-process forward. Would that lead to the
conclusion that the Government of India is ready
to recognise the right of the Muslims of the State
to a separate freedom by political arrangements
such as the “one country, two systems” envisages
or the exclusion of State from the Indian
political organisation underlines or the
modifications in the existing provisions of
Article 370, proposed by the Congress Party,
embody. It is a moot point how the Government of
India would adjust the demand for demilitarisation,
and joint management that Pakistan has been
pressing for and pro-Pakistan political flanks
like the Hurriyat-Conference are insisting upon,
to the re-location of power denominations in order
to ensure the Muslims a separate freedom on the
territories of India. The peace process has
reached a state, where the Government of India
has to decide whether it accepts the exclusion of
Jammu and Kashmir State from the secular political
organisation of India and Jehad as a component of
the peace-settlement with Pakistan and recognises
the precedence of religion and the Muslims in the
state and society of Jammu and Kashmir. It has
also to decide whether it has the mandate from the
Indian people to accept Jehad, as the legitimate
right of the Muslims in Kashmir, to foster
political change. So far, the terrorist groups,
waging Jehad in the State, have not shown any
inclination to accept a settlement with India,
which does not underline the integration of the
Muslims of Jammu and Kashmir, with the struggle of
the Muslims Ummah for its ascendence into a world
power of polar strength, Pakistan envisions.
Source: Kashmir
Sentinel
|