By
Saquib Salim, New Age Islam
13 August
2022
The Prime Minister of India has declared that 14 August will be commemorated as ‘Partition Horrors Remembrance Day’. It is a dedicated effort to remember the losses India has suffered in the violence followed by the declaration of the Partition of India in 1947. While it is important to remember the loss of lives, more imperative is to analyse the reasons behind the Partition. We, as a nation, need to introspect the foundations of divisive politics which had once partitioned our motherland and still threatens our national security.
Indians moving between the two domains of India and Pakistan after partition
----
75 Years
of Freedom
Europe
since the conclusion of the Second World War (WWII) has tried to create
cooperation among its member states at different levels of understanding. This
cooperation is what we know as ‘European Union’. It must be remembered that the
member states of the EU were the nations which colonised almost the whole globe
during the 18th, 19th & 20th century. These very nations led by England
created empires where ‘The Blood Never Dried’ for almost three centuries. After
WWII, it became difficult to directly control these colonies in Asia, Africa
and elsewhere and thus we witnessed, after 1946, gradual decolonisation of the
former colonies. Most of the former colonies were able to win their freedoms in
the next two decades.
Colonisers
left the colonies but they never wanted to shun their control over these areas.
They knew that even if they did not control these regions directly, they could
dominate their economies and politics by keeping them weak. This is where
colonial powers used the time tested ‘Divide et impera’ (Divide and Rule) policy.
The colonisers before leaving Asia divided into small unnatural nations, which
would remain at perpetual war with each other.
Was it
surprising? No. In fact, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose prophesied this development
at least a decade before in 1938. At Haripura, Netaji said,
“It is a well-known truism that every empire is
based on the policy of divide and rule. But I doubt if any empire in the world
has practised this policy so skilfully, systematically and ruthlessly as Great
Britain. In accordance with this policy, before power was handed over to the
Irish people, Ulster was separated from the rest of Ireland. Similarly, before
any power is handed over to the Palestinians, the Jews will be separated from
the Arabs. An internal partition is necessary in order to neutralise the
transference of power. The same principle of partition appears in a different
form in the new Indian Constitution. Here we find an attempt to separate the
different communities and put them into water-tight compartments. And in the Federal
scheme there is juxtaposition of autocratic Princes and democratically elected
representatives from British India. If the new Constitution is finally
rejected, whether owing to the opposition of British India or owing to the
refusal of the Princes to joining it, I have no doubt that British ingenuity
will seek some other constitutional device for partitioning India and thereby
neutralising the transference of power to the Indian people.”
The fact
that the English were controlling India by dividing its people into religious
groups, castes, races and linguistic groups was well understood by the Indian
revolutionaries. When General Friedrich Von Bernhardi wrote Germany and the
Next War in 1911, it became a compulsory reading among Indian revolutionaries.
The book went through seven reprints within three years of its first edition
and inspired Ghadar Revolutionaries, People’s Movements, Socialists and
Pan-Islamists alike.
Bernhardi
argued that England was reigning over Asia by dividing Turkish people and Indian
people into small groups. He wrote, “in India, where some seventy millions of
Moslems live under the English rule. England, so far, in accordance with the
principle of divide et impera, has attempted to play off the Mohammedan against
the Hindu population. But now that a pronounced revolutionary and nationalist
tendency shows itself among these latter, the danger is imminent that
Pan-Islamism, thoroughly roused, should unite with the revolutionary elements
of Bengal. The co-operation of these elements might create a very grave danger,
capable of shaking the foundations of England's high position in the world.”
It doesn’t
take a rocket science to understand that why Ghadar Party, Netaji Subhas
Chandra Bose, Ubaidullah Sindhi, Barkatullah, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Raja
Mahendra Paratap and other revolutionaries exposed to European writings
stressed on Hindu-Muslim-Sikh unity more than any other aspect.
‘Divide et
impera’ was a well defined foundation of European politics. In the 18th
century, famous philosopher Immanuel Kant defined the policy as - “if there are
certain privileged persons, holding authority among the people, who have merely
chosen you for their sovereign as primus inter pares, bring about a quarrel
among them, and make mischief between them and the people. Now back up the
people with a dazzling promise of greater freedom; everything will now depend
unconditionally on your will.” The idea was simple. Make people fight among
themselves and then act as a juror. All the warring groups will fight among
themselves and the juror will be held in high esteem.
Dr. Ilia
Xypolia of University of Aberdeen, UK, in her influential paper, Divide et
Impera: Vertical and horizontal dimensions of British imperialism, argues that
“the British Empire deliberately introduced a ‘divide and rule’ structure in
order to gain an advantage in existing or emerging hostilities between the
local communities”. She argues that first the British Empire created divisions
among Indians and then within these divisions created an elite class to control
the masses.
Xypolia writes, “British rulers adopted the
‘divide and rule’ policy allied to territorial separation through segregation
and partition. The imperial governments divided populations into distinct
groups on the basis of linguistics, religion, ethnicity and race.” She further
points out, “The British government deliberately set up a ‘divide and rule’
structure in order to take advantage of the existing and emerging hostilities
between the communities of the native population. The collaboration of the
local native elites gave another dimension to the ‘divide and rule’ policies –
a horizontal one. Therefore, the ‘divide and rule’ policy can be applied in two
different ways. The first is where the foreign ruler divides the local
population vertically, separating it into distinct communities, usually along
religious, racial or linguistic lines. The second has a horizontal dimension
because it occurs when the foreign rule divides the whole population or one
community along class lines, thus separating the elites from the masses. The
foreign ruler often divides a community or the whole population into a
collaborating ruling elite and a resisting mass. The two different methods
usually operate in a complementary manner.”
What Xypolia
studied was a well known fact to the Indian Revolutionaries like Netaji,
Ubaidullah Sindhi and others. They were telling people that the British in
order to weaken us would try to divide our motherland before leaving. Faqir of
Ipi, an important ally of Netaji from Waziristan, kept calling Pakistan a part
of the British Empire even after 1947.
It was an
understanding of European political thinkers that their hegemony over Asian
civilizations like India, China, Arab, and Japan could sustain only if they were
divided into small warring groups. Netaji understood this that was why he
formed a Government of Undivided India in 1943. Today, our motherland has been
divided into several pieces. Our land and people are divided. Since 1937,
Myanmar, Pakistan, and Bangladesh have been taken away from our country and our
power has been reduced.
When Europe
after WWII could try to build a confederation of cooperation (EU), why we
cannot think of bringing our old regions back into a Union of Cooperation. This
will again restore the glory of our motherland as ‘Golden Bird’. An Undivided
India was the country for which Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose fought, Bhagat Singh
laid down his life and thousands embraced martyrdom.
Source: Europeans Divided India, Forged EU
For Themselves
URL: https://newageislam.com/interfaith-dialogue/europeans-india-eu/d/127704
New Age Islam, Islam Online, Islamic
Website, African Muslim News, Arab World News, South Asia News, Indian Muslim News, World Muslim News, Women in Islam, Islamic Feminism, Arab Women, Women In Arab, Islamophobia in America, Muslim Women in West, Islam Women and Feminism