Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Lately, L.K Advani has produced quite a few waves in the Indo-Pak political ocean by declaring Jinnah a secular leader based on one of Jinnah’s speeches after the partition. Whether Jinnah was a communal leader or a secular one remains to be decided by non-biased historians, we subcontinental residents have observed enough of Muslim/Christian genocide, Hindu- Muslim riots, Gujarat riots, East-Pakistan killings, minority killings, racial segregation etc in last 60 years or so. In my opinion, most of these problems are result of introduction of “Religion” into politics by religious pundits. I thought it would be interesting to understand the root causes of this serious problem by presenting some historical perspective.

Indo-Pakistan history is one of my favorite subjects. In my opinion, Mr. Gandhi is the first prominent politician in subcontinent’s political history that introduced religion into politics. With an exception of Aurangzaib Alamgir, most of the Muslim emperors were extremely secular. Even congress was pretty secular until the emergence of Gandhi jee. He introduced Hindu idiom and hard-core Hinduism to politics of Congress. He “Hinduised” Congress politics, which frightened Muslims away from it, as is manifested from Congress’s rule in Provinces during 1937 to 1939. He himself has written in ‘Young India’ on 12 May 1912 that

“In order to wrestle with the snake of politics, I have been experimenting with myself and my friends in politics by introducing religion into politics.”

Renowned scholar Dr. Eqbal Ahmad says that Gandhi was an anti-imperial opportunist. He used Hindu expression because Hinduism was religion of majority. He wanted to mobilize masses against British rule. If Muslims had been in majority, he would have used Islamic Expression in politics. Do you guys agree with Eqbal Ahmed? Was Gandhi a rabid communalist or a mere “ anti-imperial opportunist”?

With the help of hindsight we see that Gandhiji’s tactics of spiritualizing Indian politics caused more harm than any benefit for India. If there had been no Gandhi, or else, Gandhiji had not played upon religious sentiments of the masses, India would still have become free, as after the Second World War Great Britain had lost all power to cling on to its imperial possessions. In fact, it was obvious at the end of First World War that Great Britain is losing the control over sub continent. But Gandhiji’s tactics did help create fissure between Hindus and Muslims, which culminated in the partition of India. It created so much hatred among these large communities, that we are still facing the trouble to overcome it. In addition, we had to witness as its essential corollary the mayhem and carnage of millions in the wake of independence of India and Pakistan!!!

On the contrary, Jinnah, who was titled as Indo-Muslim Friendship Ambassador by Sarojnie K. Naido, parted ways from Congress in late 1920s once the Congress politics was poisoned with religion by Mahatnma Gandhi. As a matter of fact, as late as 1946, Jinnah accepted the Cabinet Mission which would have paved the way for an independent yet United India. Alas, it was Nehru who refused to obey the Cabinet Mission’s ruling after accepting it (Please read Abu Kalam Azad’s “India Wins Freedom”). Because of Nehru’s sudden turnaround, Jinnah also decided to go for the demand of Pakistan demand once and for all.

   It is certainly the irony of the selective-history that today Jinnah is regarded as a communal leader not Gandhi!!!

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Gandhi according to Steven Cohens book also tried to support Muslim causes. He supported the Khalifa movement, an effort to reestablish the Ottoman empire for example which was really a grassroots movement among Muslims.. I dont have the book, so cant really refrence this..

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

What is communalism? When one exploits people’ religious sentiments to achieve some gains, political or social.
When did Gandhi or Nehru ask one community to get united against the other community?

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Gandhi occupies an important place in the history of the subcontinent and no there is no denying the fact that peace studies and conflict resolution studies are replete with Gandhi's role as the initiator of non-violent movement,who talked about Ahimsa and coined the word satyagarha. His was the movement that inspired many people all over the world but then again, Gandhi 's statements and his ideas were self-contradictory and nodoubt the subject of some controversy.
His struggle against the Bristish rule in South Asia acknowledged and appreciated also gave a religious color to the freedom struggle in the region. He might not have done that deliberately, maybe he never believed in communalism at all; nonethless it sowed the seeds that led to the eventual division in the hindu and muslim ranks.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Jinnah on the otherhand was a shrewed diplomat, I believe. Nobody can question his desire and stand on hindu-muslim unity and even when he joined Muslim League and parted ways with Congress; he struggled to work within the confines of a united India inorder to get a better deal and place for the Muslims within the subcontinent.
It was only when much later ( i guess in the August of 1946) when Nehru and Patel (correct me if I am wrong) rejected the Cabinet missions plan that Jinnah talked about a separate homeland for the Muslims. He really capitalised on that moment and took advantage of their recalcitrance but he had no other option left, you see.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Both Gandhi and Jinnah were great leaders, having different visions in their minds for the Sub-continent and its people. Both had many common things too. They dedicated their lives for their cause and for their people. Gandhi is as much a leader for India as is Jinnah for Pakistan and vice versa. Leadership makes mistakes too, but it is not good to blame leaders like Gandhi or Jinnah even for their mistakes. They are just another name for us. Pakistan and Jinnah have the same meanings and similarly India and Gandhi have the same meanings.

It is not fair to call either of them as racist at least. Both of them were subjected to different situations in their conquests. Now both Gandhi and Jinnah even worked together for some time too. Jinnah preferred to separate because he vision the problem sub-continent might face when having either a Hindu government or a Muslim government. Even under British rule short riots based on religion were present at least if not common. Such riots used to threaten Muslim leadership at that time too.

Some leaders form all religious communities were making use of religion in their campaigns. Religion and region were the main factors in our politics even those days. Thus even if these leaders have made some use of negative politics; they had made it just to speed up the process of events.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Jinnah was asking over and over for more representation and the guarantee of Muslim rights in Independant India… The Communal card was only used because the lack of understandinon the part Nehru and Gandhi who competely underestimated the degree of alienation felt by the Muslim community. It only came down to the Communal card after the fact that there was no turning back from partition, when Nehru had destroyed any chance of a united India…
But Jinnah was not Racist and neither was Gandhi. Jinnah was also not communal until he was asked to REPRESENT his community.
Jinnah was a secularist while Gandhi was not..

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

http://www.dawn.com/2005/06/14/op.htm

Jinnah: before & after 1920 Congress session

By M.J. Akbar

“WELL, young man. I will have nothing to do with this pseudo-religious approach to politics. I part company with Congress and Gandhi. I do not believe in working up mob hysteria.” The young man was a journalist, Durga Das. The older man was Mohammad Ali Jinnah. The reference is from Durga Das’ classic book, India from Curzon to Nehru and After. Jinnah said this after the 1920 Nagpur session, where Gandhi’s non-cooperation resolution was passed almost unanimously.

On October 1, 1906, 35 Muslims of “noble birth, wealth and power” called on the fourth earl of Minto, Curzon’s successor as Viceroy of India. They were led by the Aga Khan and used for the first time a phrase that would dominate the history of the subcontinent in the 20th century: the “national interests” of Indian Muslims. They wanted help against an “unsympathetic” Hindu majority. They asked, very politely, for proportional representation in jobs and separate seats in councils, municipalities, university syndicates and high court benches. Lord Minto was happy to oblige. The Muslim League was born in December that year at Dhaka, chaired by Nawab Salimullah Khan, who had been too ill to join the 35 in October. The Aga Khan was its first president.

The Aga Khan wrote later that it was “freakishly ironic” that “our doughtiest opponent in 1906” was Jinnah, who “came out in bitter hostility toward all that I and my friends had done… He was the only well-known Muslim to take this attitude… He said that our principle of separate electorates was dividing the nation against itself”.

On precisely the same dates that the League was formed in Dhaka, Jinnah was in nearby Kolkata (Calcutta) with 44 other Muslims and roughly 1,500 Hindus, Christians and Parsis, serving as secretary to Dadabhai Naoroji, president of the Indian National Congress. Dadabhai was too ill to give his address, which had been partially drafted by Jinnah and was read out by Gopal Krishna Gokhale. Sarojini Naidu, who met the 30-year-old Jinnah for the first time here, remembered him as a symbol of “virile patriotism”.

Her description is arguably the best there is: “Tall and stately, but thin to the point of emancipation, languid and luxurious of habit, Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s attenuated form is a deceptive sheath of a spirit of exceptional vitality and endurance. Somewhat formal and fastidious, and a little aloof and imperious of manner, the calm hauteur of his accustomed reserve but masks, for those who know him, a naive and eager humanity, an intuition quick and tender as a woman’s, a humour gay and winning as child’s … a shy and splendid idealism which is of the very essence of the man.”

Jinnah entered the central legislative council in Calcutta (the capital of British India then) on January 25, 1910, along with Gokhale, Surendranath Banerjea and Motilal Nehru. Lord Minto expected the council to rubber stamp “any measures we may deem right to introduce”.

Jinnah’s maiden speech shattered such pompousness. He rose to defend another Gujarati working for his people in another colony across the seas, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. Jinnah expressed “the highest pitch of indignation and horror at the harsh and cruel treatment that is meted out to Indians in South Africa”.

Minto objected to a term such as “cruel treatment”. Jinnah responded at once: “My Lord! I should feel much inclined to use much stronger language.” Lord Minto kept quiet.

On March 7, 1911, Jinnah introduced what was to become the first non-official act in British Indian history, the Wakf Validating Bill, reversing an 1894 decision on waqf gifts. Muslims across the Indian empire were grateful.

Jinnah attended his first meeting of the League in Bankipur in 1912, but did not become a member. He was in Bankipur to attend the Congress session. When he went to Lucknow a few months later as a special guest of the League (it was not an annual session), Sarojini Naidu was on the platform with him. The bitterness that divided India did not exist then. Dr M.A. Ansari, Maulana Azad and Hakim Ajmal Khan attended the League session of 1914, and in 1915, the League tent had a truly unlikely guest list: Madan Mohan Malviya, Surendranath Banerjea, Annie Besant, B.G. Horniman, Sarojini Naidu and Mahatma Gandhi.

When Jinnah did join the League in 1913, he insisted on a condition, set out in immaculate English, that his “loyalty to the Muslim League and the Muslim interest would in no way and at no time imply even the shadow of disloyalty to the larger national cause to which his life was dedicated” (Jinnah: His Speeches and Writings, 1912-1917, edited by Sarojini Naidu).

Gokhale that year honoured Jinnah with a phrase that has travelled through time: it is “freedom from all sectarian prejudice which will make him (Jinnah) the best ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity”. In the spring of 1914 Jinnah chaired a Congress delegation to London to lobby Whitehall on a proposed Council of India bill.

When Gandhi landed in India in 1915, Jinnah, as president of the Gujarat Society (the mahatmas of both India and Pakistan were Gujaratis), spoke at a garden party to welcome the hero of South Africa. Jinnah was the star of 1915. At the Congress and League sessions, held in Mumbai at the same time, he worked tirelessly with Congress President Satyendra Sinha and Mazharul Haque (a Congressman who presided over the Muslim League that year) for a joint platform of resolutions. Haque and Jinnah were heckled so badly at the League session by mullahs that the meeting had to be adjourned. It reconvened the next day in the safer milieu of the Taj Mahal Hotel. The next year Jinnah became president of the League for the first time, at Lucknow.

Motilal Nehru, in the meantime, worked closely with Jinnah in the council. When the munificent Motilal convened a meeting of fellow-legislators to his handsome mansion in Allahabad in April, he considered Jinnah “as keen a nationalist as any of us. He is showing his community the way to Hindu-Muslim unity”. It was from this meeting in Allahabad that Jinnah went for a vacation to Darjeeling and the summer home of his friend Sir Dinshaw Manockjee Petit (French merchants had nicknamed Dinshaw’s small-built grandfather petit and it stuck) and met 16-year-old Ruttie.

I suppose a glorious view of the Everest encouraged romance. When Ruttie became 18 she eloped and on April 19, 1918, they were married. Ruttie’s Parsi family disowned her, she separated from Jinnah a decade later. (The wedding ring was a gift from the Raja of Mahmoodabad.)

As president Jinnah engineered the famous Lucknow Pact with Congress president A.C. Mazumdar. In his presidential speech Jinnah rejoiced that the new spirit of patriotism had “brought Hindus and Muslims together … for the common cause”. Mazumdar announced that all differences had been settled, and Hindus and Muslims would make a “joint demand for a representative government in India”.

Enter Gandhi, who never entered a legislature, and believed passionately that freedom could only be won by a non-violent struggle for which he would have to prepare the masses. In 1915 Gokhale advised Gandhi to keep “his ears open and his mouth shut” for a year, and see India. Gandhi stopped in Kolkata on his way to Rangoon and spoke to students. Politics, he said, should never be divorced from religion. The signal was picked by Muslims planning to marry politics with religion in their first great campaign against the British empire, the Khilafat movement.

Over the next three years Gandhi prepared the ground for his version of the freedom struggle: a shift from the legislatures to the street; a deliberate use of religious imagery to reach the illiterate masses through symbols most familiar to them (Ram Rajya for the Hindus, Khilafat for the Muslims); and an unwavering commitment to the poor peasantry, for whom Champaran became a miracle.

The massacre at Jallianwala Bagh in 1919 provided a perfect opportunity; Indian anger reached critical mass. Gandhi led the Congress towards its first mass struggle, the Non-Cooperation Movement of 1921.

The constitutionalist in Jinnah found mass politics ambitious, and the liberal in him rejected the invasion of religion in politics. When he rose to speak at the Nagpur session in 1920, where Gandhi moved the non-cooperation resolution, Jinnah was the only delegate to dissent till the end among some 50,000 “surging” Hindus and Muslims. He had two principal objections.

The resolution, he said, was a de facto declaration of swaraj, or complete independence, and although he agreed completely with Lala Lajpat Rai’s indictment of the British government, he did not think the Congress had, as yet, the means to achieve this end; as he put it, “it is not the right step to take at this moment … you are committing the Indian National Congress to a programme which you will not be able to carry out”. (Gandhi, after promising swaraj within a year, withdrew the Non-Cooperation Movement in the wake of communal riots in Kerala and of course the famous Chauri Chaura incident in 1922. Congress formally adopted full independence as its goal only in 1931.) His second objection was that non-violence would not succeed. In this Jinnah was wrong.

There is a remarkable sub-text in this speech, which has never been commented upon, at least to my knowledge. When Jinnah first referred to Gandhi, he called him “Mr Gandhi”. There were instant cries of “Mahatma Gandhi”. Without a moment’s hesitation, Jinnah switched to “Mahatma Gandhi”. Later, he referred to Mr Mohammad Ali, the more flamboyant of the two Ali Brothers, both popularly referred to as Maulana. There were angry cries of “Maulana”. Jinnah ignored them. He referred at least five times more to Ali, but each time called him only Mr Mohammad Ali.

Let us leave the last word to Gandhi. Writing in Harijan of June 8, 1940, Gandhi said, “Quaid-i-Azam himself was a great Congressman. It was only after the non-cooperation that he, like many other Congressmen belonging to several communities, left. Their defection was purely political.” In other words, it was not communal. It could not be, for almost every Muslim was with Gandhi when Jinnah left the Congress.

History might be better understood if we did not treat it as a heroes-and-villains movie. Life is more complex than that. The heroes of our national struggle changed sometimes with circumstances. The reasons for the three instances I cite are very different; their implications radically at variance. I am not making any comparisons, but only noting that leaders change their tactics.

Non-violent Gandhi, who broke the empire three decades later, received the Kaiser-I-Hind medal on June 3, 1915, (Tagore was knighted the same day) for recruiting soldiers for the war effort. Subhas Bose, ardently Gandhian in 1920, put on uniform and led the Indian National Army with support from Fascists. Jinnah, the ambassador of unity, became a partitionist.

The question that should intrigue us is why. Ambition and frustration are two reasons commonly suggested in India, but they are not enough to create a new nation. Jinnah made the demand for Pakistan only in 1940, after repeated attempts to obtain constitutional safeguards for Muslims and attempts at power-sharing had failed. What happened, for instance, to the constitution that the Congress was meant to draft in 1928? On the other hand, Congress leaders felt that commitments on the basis of any community would lead to extortion from every community. The only exception made was for Dalits, then called Harijans.

Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, who remained opposed to partition even after Nehru and Patel had accepted it as inevitable, places one finger on the failed negotiations in the United Provinces after the 1936-37 elections, and a second on the inexplicable collapse of the Cabinet Mission Plan of 1946 which would have kept India united — inexplicable because both the Congress and the Muslim League had accepted it. The plan did not survive a press conference given by Nehru. Jinnah responded with the unbridled use of the communal card, and there was no turning back.

A deeply saddened Gandhi spurned August 15, 1947, as a false dawn (to quote Faiz). He spent the day not in celebrations in Delhi but in fasting at Kolkata. Thanks to Gandhi — and H.S. Suhrawardy — there were no communal riots in Kolkata in 1947. Facts are humbling. They prevent you from jumping to conclusions.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Excellant work dude,

keep it up...

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Gandhi and Jinnah both did what they thought was in the best interest of people, some made the right decisions, some the wrong ones ... in either case it will be hard to question their intentions as they both didn't gain much from their politics (i.e. both died soon after).

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

A good article indeed…

I guess it is about time to say good bye to selective-history and start calling spade a spade regardless of one’s personal inclination towards a certain ethnic group/religion. It is indeed a pity that for last 60 years or so, students in pakistan and india have been taught in the name of history which fitted well with the political agendas of the respective governments in both countries.

 It is about time to instigate an introspection at every level, especially among the masses, in both countries. Only then, a new generation can be brought up whose minds are devoid of seeds of hatred, and racism. It is about time the students in Pakistan should start learning why Gandhi jee is called Mahatma in their neighboring country as early as 1930 and it really wont hurt if their Indian counterparts start paying more attention to the very reasons which compelled a secular person such as Jinnah to become Quaid Azam ( the biggest leader) of a certain community namely the Muslims.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Are we discussing…I am more secular than you are, or you are more communal than I am?

Gandhi never propagated a secular politics. He had a vision of virtue based politics, which includes religious ethics, but there was no place for communalism. Gandhi could be right or wrong, we can discuss, but he was not communal.

Did Jinnah play a communal card? Did he exploite the religious sentiments of one community against the other? Did he use riots as a weapon for achieving his goals?

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

You see, you are still not getting it or may be you don’t want to get it…either way, it is extremely disappointing to see Indians (not only you but many of my friends here in USA) keep coming back with an old narration of historical incidents without bothering to find out the root causes behind those incidents. I said million times in some of my last posts that after Advani’s courageous admittance of Jinnah’s greatness and secularism, Indians should at least ask themselves as to why a secular leader and Indo-muslim friendship ambassador, Mr Jinnah, decided to go the other way around. Not to mention that Jinnah kept the Indo-Muslim friendship flag in his hands not for one or two years but for almost 30 years (1902-1932)…….But my dear friend Anjann came back with same old stories without asking himself who really enforced those incidents at the first place….….blah blah blah blah blah blah blah

After advnai jee interview, I have seen a lot of neutral articles about Indo-Pak history in Indian newspapers. Here is one of them for my dear friend Mr Anjan by an indian author.. Please read it…

http://www.samachar.com/features/150605-editorial.html

**Carry on with Jinnah debate**  

The Jinnah trouble in the Sangh parivar might have been papered over for the time being with L. K. Advani taking back his resignation as BJP chief, but there is no denying the need for an informed debate on the issues touched upon by Advani on his recent visit to Pakistan.

For, it is important that the confusions and misunderstandings created by interested parties since the Partition are fully cleared and the role played by every significant actor in the bloody vivisection of British India is exposed to the lay public. Precisely because Jinnah was, and continues to be, a hero in Pakistan, there is no reason for neutral historians to ignore his contribution in the creation of that Muslim-majority country.

Likewise in India because the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty has been in control of the ruling Congress Party for a very long time, genuine chroniclers of the events leading up to the bloody Partition ought not to gloss over the role played by Nehru and, to a lesser degree, Sardar Patel.

History, they say, is written by victors. Unfortunately, in this country a one-sided view of history has alone been peddled by venal individuals in search of official patronage. Anyone independent enough to take a critical view of the chief characters in the Congress pantheon of freedom fighters has been summarily turned into an outcast, driven out of academic bodies and official institutions.

Advani’s certificate to Jinnah on the basis of his 11 August 1947 address to Pakistan’s Constituent Assembly might have offended the ossified RSS minds, but it should spur honest historians able to steer clear of the need to sing hallelujahs to the Congress Dynasty to assess the part played by Nehru in pushing Jinnah to the brink, forcing him to seek a separate homeland for the Muslims.

That a secular Jinnah played the communal card for fulfilling his political objectives is not in doubt. But what should be exposed is the equally vicious communal card used by Nehru in his quest to marginalise Jinnah. Whether Nehru could not stand Jinnah because of an ingrained inferiority complex given the latter’s ability to neutralise him in every respect, in his western education, a razor-sharp intellect and a hugely successful legal practice in sharp contrast, Nehru was a failed lawyer or it was a purely political clash too needs to be explored fully.

The point is that after more than five decades it is time to re-visit Partition in a less emotional and more analytic manner. It is in this context that we commend an article which appeared the other day in `Business Standard’.

The author, T. C. A Srinavasa- Raghavan, blessed with that rare gift to cut through the fluff of verbiage, the staple of most newspaper columns these days, to make his point in a very straightforward manner, has raked up some very relevant questions which, at least, go to show that Jinnah wasn’t alone in forcing the partition.

In 1937 Nehru, who was in charge of UP, preferred to cut a deal with the out and out communal Jamaat-e- Islami rather than with the Muslim League. Jinnah was at that time as secular as any other Congress leader, but Nehru plumped for the communal Jamaat. It was more an ego problem than a clash of ideology, certainly not over secularism of one as against the communalism of the other.

Again, Nehru instead of accommodating the League members in the Congress ministry, tried to entice them away by dangling the carrot of ministerships provided they dumped the League. In fact, he tried to break the League, a fact which angered Jinnah no end since he was keen to enter into an honest power-sharing alliance with the Congress in UP, akin to some of the coalitions that are in power at the Centre and in the States at present.

Of course, there should be no attempt to glorify Jinnah. After all, he was the foremost proponent of a separate Muslim-majority State, a demand which by itself makes him communal in the eyes of most Indians. But the question whether he alone used the communal card to grab power at the earliest possible or whether Nehru and Patel too refused to share power with him and, therefore, readily agreed to the partition must be forthrightly answered.

While at it, the author raises a question: “How many Indians know that when the time came to choose a Prime Minister in the interim government of 1946, out of 20 DPCC members who voted, 19 voted for Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and that it was only after Gandhiji asked him to stand down in favour of Nehru that the latter became Prime Minister? “History of modern India would have been different if the Mahatma had not played favourites.

Or maybe he thought that with another Gujarati at the helm it was one Gujarati too many? These questions shouldn’t be pushed under the carpet. Nor answered with an eye on the crumbs from the plate of the ruling Congress Dynasty.

Send in your comments on this article to [email=“[email protected]”][email protected]

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Unintentionaly perhaps.. I dont think it was Jinnahs intent to turn it into a battle between Koran and Geeta..

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

So, what is the logic? Nehru played a major role in Jinnah becoming communal and we must forget the massacre over the threat call of ‘Direct Action Day”?

There is an entire change in the Jinnah’ 1940 resolution speech to his 11th August 1947 speech.
In 1940 resolution he addressed the Muslims to get ready for a struggle for a separate state.
Who was his audience in his speech of 11th August 1947? I am sure that he was addressing the West. At a time when communities were killing each other, he was telling the West of his sincerity.

Given below is some web information of Cabinet mission plan. Would like to know how you find Nehru guilty for its failure, and if Cabinet mission plan was practical from any corner? And how much Jinnah was sincere for Cabinet mission’ proposals.

http://pakstudies.8m.com/cabinet_mission.html

http://www.mkgandhi-sarvodaya.org/biography/cabinetm.htm

http://www.bharatvani.org/books/mla/ch2.htm

http://www.majinnah.net/cripps%20scheme.html

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Why Jinnah failed to convince all Muslims to go to Pakistan, if he was really fighting for Muslims?

Was Jinnah secular or an anti-Islamic personality in first half of his life and struggle?

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

No. There was nothing wrong with Jinnah and his campaign. Jinnah tried his best to unite all Muslims. Whoever was keen in shifting to Pakistan came here. A good present example is Musharaf, who came here and is now ruling. Some Muslims in India who were having their business or were involved in Bollywood or who did not found them ready for the shift remained there.

Prior to partition every person who was studying English education, wearing English dress...was considered to be a LA-DIN, it is not exactly secular. He was not exactly thought of being anti-Islamic, but a person who was far from Islam and used to spend a Western Life.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

Jinnah was NOT fighting for a huge shift in demographics. He may have wanted a gradual shift constituted of those who choose to move to Pakistan. He did not intend for the Hindus to be kicked out of Pakistan nor for the Muslims to be kicked out of India. It wasnt his intent to convince anyone either. He simply wanted a Muslim majority state made up of those states which already were a Muslim majority. Whether people wanted to come or not was thir own perogative.
I think Jinnah was a hardcore secualr nationalist… At that time he did not see himself as a leader of Indian Muslims, he didnt even see himself as a Muslim to be frank. He was actually offended when Gandhi referered to him as a Mohamadan.. People have said that he drank and may have even eaten pork… He really didnt fit the mould of a typical Muslim leader, that why Mullahs went agaisnt him.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

what we see in iraq is repeat of india/pakistan only difference is sectarian and ethnic
devide instead of religen.

Re: Who is a communal/religious/racist leader - Jinnah or Gandhi

I have said this a MILLION times.. Dont forget the Direct action plan,but then dont forget the havoc reaced by the plans of Gandhi and other congress members either. Just because their strategies caused bloodshed, doesnt make it intentional.
Jinnah had already become communal, he already stated that there were two nations within India, Hindu and Muslims. Gandhi had seen the same thing earlier, tha is why he started the whole support for khalifa movement and Ram Raj.
But even though Jinnah began to lead the Muslims, doesnt mean he was dead set on partition. He wanted more political safe guards for Muslim rights, which might have been provided by the Cabinet Mission plan. Nehru, in an act of sheer stupidity perhaps, pushed everything over the edge. India could have remained united had it not been for him.
Whether the Cabinet Mission plan was workable or not was not relevent. Nehru could have tried to change or negotiate a change later. If the plan was so unacceptable, it shouldnt have been accepeted in the first place.
EVEN YOUR OWN CONGRESS member have been known to chastize Nehru for such a foolish move. Even with its flaws, the Cabinet Mission plan would have had India united and bloodshed could have been averted. Rather then Accpet the plan, Nehru decided to accept partition as the better solution! :COME ON!