Author: Rajinder Puri
Publication: Free Press Journal
Date: August 20, 2009
Jaswant Singh, former cabinet minister, has
written a book on Mohammed Ali Jinnah which has become a talking point across
India.
I have not read the book. I have heard Jaswant
Singh on TV expounding his views on Jinnah. The main thrust of his work seems
to be: 1) Jinnah has been unnecessarily demonized. He was a great man and
not wholly responsible for the Partition of the subcontinent. 2) Pandit Nehru
was primarily responsible for the Partition because he believed in a centralized
India which left no space for the Muslims to protect themselves against Hindu
domination. 3) Mahatma Gandhi, and other Congress leaders were opposed to
the Partition and would not have allowed it if it were not for Nehru.
The view about Nehru's role in the Partition
is not new. This scribe wrote about it in a book of just 107 text pages, not
over 600 pages, which were published twenty years ago.
Others, such as former ADC to Lord Mountbatten
and later India's ambassador abroad, Narendra Singh Sarila, wrote on the subject
of the Partition at greater length. Let us consider the three main postulates
of Jaswant Singh's views outlined above.
1) Jinnah wasnota `great'man. He was articulate,
highly intelligent and focused. He missed greatness by a wide margin because
he willingly colluded with the British to create a Pakistan about which he
had not even determined boundaries or shape. He mainly fulfilled British goals
while satisfying his own vanity.
Independence came first; the boundaries of
the divided nations came later. The British had decided on Partition to serve
their own strategic ends. On 29 March 1945, after Viceroy Lord Wavell met
Prime Minister Churchill in London he recorded: "He (Churchill) seems
to favour partition of India into Pakistan, Hindustan and Princestan."Sir
Martin Gilbert, the British biographer of Winston Churchill revealed that
Churchill had asked Jinnah to dispatch secret letters to him by addressing
them to a lady, Elizabeth Giliat, who had been Churchill's secretary. This
secret interaction continued for years. Jinnah's key decisions between 1940
and 1946, including the demand for Pakistan in 1940, were taken after getting
the nod from Churchill or Lord Linlithgow and Wavell, both Churchill's admirers.
Jinnah admitted during the Simla Conference in 1945 that he was receiving
advice from London.
In other words, Jinnah was as much the British
puppet on a string as were the top Indian leaders.
2) Yes, Pandit Nehru was primarily responsible
for the Partition. This was not because he was emotionally committed to a
centralized India but because he too was thoroughly programmed by the British
since his school days. His proximity to Lord Mountbatten has been recorded
by Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and historian Shashi Joshi among others.
Even before Mountbatten's arrival in India
Lord Wavell had complained that Nehru was often informed by Whitehall before
he was! Mahatma Gandhi and other Congress leaders may have been unhappy about
the Partition. They did not oppose it.
When the resolution to accept Partition was
taken by the Congress on June 3, 1947 Gandhi observed his day of silence.
He assured Mountbatten on June 2 that he would not oppose Partition. It can
be nobody's case that Nehru was so powerful that he could override Gandhi
and the rest. The truth was that Gandhi lacked the gumption to oppose Partition
when it came to the crunch because he knew that his adversary was not Nehru
but Britain. At Mountbatten's bidding he could undertake a fast unto death
to compel the Indian government to pay adequate compensation to Pakistan.
He made no such protest when his life's work
of creating a united independent India was being destroyed.
Gandhi's belated attempt to undo his mistake
by wanting to settle in Pakistan and by demanding the dissolution of the Congress
in his last will and testament was aborted by his death. These judgments may
appear cruel. Truth is seldom kind.
Any assessment about the causes that led to
the Partition of India would be flawed unless the central role of the British
in creating it and the compliant role of the Indian and Pakistani leaders
in accepting it are recognized. The most clinching evidence of this is provided
by the recorded views of Christopher Beaumont who was private secretary to
Sir Cyril Radcliffe, chairman of the Indo-Pakistan Boundary Commission. His
private papers were recently released by his son, Robert Beaumont. The elder
Beaumont wrote in 1947: "The viceroy, Mountbatten, must take the blame
though not the sole blame for the massacres in the Punjab in which between
500,000 to a million men, women and children perished."
The handover of power was done too quickly."
Christopher Beaumont was most scathing about how partition affected the Punjab.
He wrote: "The Punjab partition was a disaster...Geography,canals, railways
and roads all argued against dismemberment...The trouble was that Muslims,
Hindus and Sikhs were an integrated population so that it was impossible to
make a frontier without widespread dislocation...Thousands of people died
or were uprooted from their homes in what was in effect a civil war... By
the end of 1947 there were virtually no Hindus or Sikhs living in west Punjab
now part of Pakistan and no Muslims in the Indian east... The British government
and Mountbatten must bear a large part of the blame for this tragedy."
A few Britons are beginning to confront the
truth. Will Indians ever start doing the same?