|
Belated but perhaps sincere British attempts to accommodate the demands of
the two rival parties, while preserving the unitary state in India, seemed
unacceptable to both as they alternately rejected whatever proposal was put
forward during the war years. As a result, a three-way impasse settled in: the
Congress and the Muslim League doubted British motives in handing over power to
Indians, while the British struggled to retain some hold on India while offering
to give greater autonomy.
The Congress wasted precious time denouncing the British rather than allaying
Muslim fears during the highly charged election campaign of 1946. Even the more
mature Congress leaders, especially Gandhi and Nehru, failed to see how
genuinely afraid the Muslims were and how exhausted and weak the British had
become in the aftermath of the war. When it appeared that the Congress had no
desire to share power with the Muslim League at the center, Jinnah declared
August 16, 1946, Direct Action Day, which brought communal rioting and massacre
in many places in the north. Partition seemed preferable to civil war. On June
3, 1947, Viscount Louis Mountbatten, the viceroy (1947) and governor-general
(1947-48), announced plans for partition of the British Indian Empire into the
nations of India and Pakistan, which itself was divided into east and west wings
on either side of India (see fig. 4). At midnight, on August 15, 1947, India
strode to freedom amidst ecstatic shouting of "Jai Hind"
(roughly, Long Live India), when Nehru delivered a memorable and moving speech
on India's "tryst with destiny."
*****
Above all other concerns were the violence and the refugee problem: Muslims
were fleeing India; Hindus and Sikhs were fleeing Pakistan. Jinnah's plea to
regard religion as a personal matter, not a state matter, was ignored. No one
was prepared for the communal rioting and the mass movements of population that
followed the June 3, 1947, London announcement of imminent independence and
partition. The most conservative estimates of the casualties were 250,000 dead
and 12 million to 24 million refugees. The actual boundaries of the two new
states were not even known until August 17, when they were announced by a
commission headed by a British judge. The boundaries-- unacceptable to both
India and Pakistan--have remained.
|