Pakistan
/ History / The Rise of the Khilafat Movement
The Hindu
Muslim unity reached its climax during the Khilafat and the Non-cooperation
Movements. The Muslims of soothsayer, under the leadership of
the Ali Brothers, Maulana Mohammad Ali and Maulana Shaukat Ali,
launched the historic Khilafat Movement after the First World
War to protect the Ottoman Empire from dismemberment. Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948) linked the issue of Swaraj (self-government)
with the Khilafat issue to associate the Hindus with the Movement.
the ensuing Movement was the first countrywide popular movement.
Although
the Movement failed in its objectives, it had a far-reaching impact
on the Muslims of South Asia. After a long time, they took united
action on a purely Islamic issue which momentarily forged solidarity
among them. It also produced a class of Muslim leaders experienced
in organizing and mobilizing the public. This experience was of
immense value to the Muslims later during the Pakistan Movement
The collapse of the Khilafat Movement was followed by a period
of bitter Hindu Muslim antagonism. The Hindus organized two highly
anti Muslim movements, the Shudhi and the Sangathan. The former
movement was designed to convert Muslims to Hindusim and the latter
was meant to create solidarity among the Hindus in the event of
communal conflict. In retaliation, the Muslims sponsored the Tabligh
and Tanzim organizations to counter the impact of the Shudhi and
the Sangathan. In the 1920s, the frequency of communal riots was
unprecedented. Several Hindu-Muslim unity conferences were held
to remove the causes of conflict, but, it seemed nothing could
mitigate the intensity of communalism. Muslim Demand Safeguards
In the light of this situation, the Muslims revised their constitutional
demands. They now wanted preservation of their numerical majorities
in the Punjab and Bengal, separation of Sindh from Bombay, constitution
of Balochistan as a separate province and introduction of constitutional
reforms in the North-West Frontier Province. It was partly to
press these demands that one section of the All-India Muslim League
cooperated with the Statutory commission sent by the British Government
under the chairmanship of Sir John Simon in 1927.
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