Nehru was rabidly anti-Jammu, anti-Ladakh

Did Nehru and his advisers consider Kashmir Muslims as special? How even for Constituent Assembly nominations, it was one man, whose choice won over all else.

Did Nehru and some of his advisers consider Kashmir Muslims a race apart? Prof Hari Om Mahajan shares details of debate in J&K Assembly
Did Nehru and some of his advisers consider Kashmir Muslims a race apart? Prof Hari Om Mahajan shares details of debate in J&K Assembly

It is widely held that Jammu and Kashmir came in for discussion in the Indian Constituent Assembly only on October 17, 1949, when Article 306-A (Article 370) was adopted and the solitary State of Jammu and Kashmir was permitted to have a special kind of relationship with the Union Government as well as a special dispensation totally different from what other States of the Union obtained under the Indian Constitution, which came into force on January 26, 1950. This assessment is only partly correct.

A close scrutiny of the proceedings of the Constituent Assembly reveals that the issues concerning Jammu and Kashmir were discussed twice – first on May 27, 1949,  and finally on October 17, 1949. It also shows that the focus on this state on May 27 was far more sharp and revealing than what it was on October 17, despite the fact that the issue under discussion was highly sensitive and controversial and that the subjects discussed were two and not just one. (Article 370 was sensitive in the sense that it was designed to give Jammu and Kashmir the right to have its own constitution and a flag other than the national flag. This Article was adopted in no time, despite the fact that a Muslim member of the Constituent Assembly Maulana Hasat Mohani had warned that the grant of special status to Kashmir (on the score of religion) would enable it “assume independence afterwards” (Constituent Assembly Debates, Book No 5, Vol. Nos. X-XII, 6 Oct 1949 to 24 Jan 1950, reprinted by Lok Sabha Secretariat, New Delhi, Second Edition, 1989, p. 428).

It would be only desirable to ignore what transpired during the rather brief and virtually smooth discussion on Article 370 as the matter is too-well-known and reflect on the May 27 less-known, but very relevant issue, which kept the Constituent Assembly really engrossed in squabbles and tortuous discussions for hours together. Such an exercise is imperative to understand the reasons behind the 70-year-old complaint of the people of Jammu and Ladakh that “they have no place whatever in the country’s polity” and that “it is New Delhi which is responsible for their socio-cultural and politico-economic degeneration and under-development”.

            In October 1947, when Jammu and Kashmir acceded to the Indian Dominion, it was hoped that the Congress Government at the Centre will recognize the natural right of the people of the State to return representatives of their choice to the Indian Constituent Assembly. The hope stemmed from the June 17-18, 1934, Congress Working Committee resolution, as well as the April 1936 resolution adopted by the Congress at its Lucknow session.

            The 1934 resolution had told the British Government in clear terms that “the constitution must be framed by a Constituent Assembly elected on an adult franchise or a franchise which approximated to it as nearly as possible”. As for the one adopted at Lucknow, it had rejected the Indian Councils Act of 1935 as “a charter of bondage” and declared that no constitution “imposed by an outside authority and no constitution which curtails the sovereignty of the people can be accepted”. The belief of the people of the State, that they would have a real say in the matter, had been further strengthened in 1946, when the Congress urged the Cabinet Mission to permit all the male and female adults to elect the Indian Constituent Assembly and to accept the Muslim League’s sectarian demand which sought election on the basis of a separate register (suggestion not accepted).

            Paradoxically, the Congress Government did not come up to the expectations of the people of Jammu and Kashmir. The people of Jammu and Kashmir could not send representatives of their own choice to the Constituent Assembly. The Congress-dominated Constituent Assembly did not at all involve the people of the state in the process of Indian Constitution-making. Nor did it follow those election rules which the 1946 Cabinet Mission Plan had laid down for the princely states. On the contrary, it vouched for a formula which was nothing but a negation of what the Congress had all along stood for. It only pleased one person, Sheikh Abdullah, and his religio-political formation, the NC.

            How else would one interpret the adoption on May 27, 1949 of the motion moved by the Minister of Kashmir Affairs, Gopalaswami Ayyangar, and the speech he made while introducing it? The motion read: “Notwithstanding anything contained in paragraph 4 of the Constituent Assembly Rules all the seats in the Assembly allotted to the State of Kashmir may be filled by nomination and the representatives of the State to be chosen to fill such seats may be nominated by the ruler of Kashmir on the advice of his Prime Minister”.

            Ayyangar’s speech went like this: “we have to choose a method by which we could get representatives into this Assembly. We are today in a position to bring to this House four persons who could be said to be fairly representative of the population of Kashmir. The point that I wish to urge is that, while two of the representatives would in any case under the present rules be persons who could be nominated by the ruler, we are suggesting that all the four persons should be nominated by the ruler on the advice of his Prime Minister. The Prime Minister happens to represent the largest political party in the State…Apart from that, we have got to remember that the Prime Minister and his government (NC Government) are not based upon the Jammu and Kashmir Praja Sabha (Legislative Assembly) but based rather upon the fact that they represent the largest political party. Therefore, it is only appropriate that the head of this party, who is also the Prime Minister, should have the privilege of advising the ruler as to who would be proper representatives of Kashmir in the Constituent Assembly…”

            It may be pointed out that this motion had generated a lot of heat in the Constituent Assembly which debated upon this issue for hours as objection after objection was raised against the suggested formula. Members of the Assembly such as Pandit Lakshmi Kanta Maitra (west Bengal), H V Kamath (CP and Berar) and K T Shah (Bihar) vehemently opposed the official motion on five counts. First, it provided for a mechanism which was not in conformity with “such rules as contained in Rule 4 of the Constituent Assembly Rules”. According to Rule 4, the seats allotted to the princely States had to be filled up not less than half by the elected members of the legislature of the States concerned and the remainder to be nominated by the ruler himself.

            Second, it made an unjust and invidious distinction between Jammu and Kashmir and other princely States. Third, it was designed to empower one individual, Sheikh Abdullah, to take a decision on who should or should not represent the State in the Constituent Assembly, as also the future politico-constitutional ties between the State and New Delhi. Fourth, for its general distrust of the people and the duly-constituted Praja Sabha. The motion was, undoubtedly, designed to render the people and their elected Assembly ineffective. Finally, for its potential of harming the Indian interest in Kashmir and giving a cause to the forces inimical to the country to challenge its stand that the people of the state were solidly behind it.

            Shah, it must be noted, was more severe in his criticism of the motion in the sense that he urged the Constituent Assembly to repudiate the motion outright. In addition, he fervently solicited the support of the elected Praja Sabha. Justifying his suggestion, Shah said: “Had the situation been in the State as normal and peaceful as in other cases, I would have certainly followed the same precedent, and required that at least part of the representatives should be representatives of the people chosen by their representatives in a proper form. But as the situation is there today, with all the complications that have arisen, all the representatives of the people must be elected…”

            “I am not asking too much when I say that we shall not be departing from democratic principles or idea of justice or prudence or wisdom in this matter if we say that the people of Kashmir, and the people of Kashmir alone, shall elect all the representatives to this House. If this party, the National Conference, claims to represent the entire or at least a large majority of the people of Kashmir, then there is no reason to fear that they cannot send representatives according to their wishes. They need not therefore shirk the suggestion I am making…”

            This shows that Shah had two basic arguments. One, that Sheikh Abdullah and his political formation did not represent the general will. Two, that the suggestion of Ayyangar, if accepted, might harm the country’s vital interests. Prof K T Shah’s first point that Sheikh Abdullah and his political formation did not represent the general will of the Kashmiri people, was elaborated by him in these words: “I am constraint to point out that the developments in the history of Jammu and Kashmir in three and half years should not be overlooked. You must not overlook the agitation that was started in February 1946, whereby a responsible party or the leader of that responsible party, had started a campaign of ‘quit Kashmir’ and in consequence thereof events developed and created difficulties that have since ensued. I do not like the House to be a party to anything that might look as if it was a surrender to one man’s wishes, that nothing can be done until the Maharaja is removed or complete power is handed over to him (the Sheikh had told Prime Minister Nehru that he would not be in a position to run the administration effectively until Maharaja Hari Singh was removed from his position). Whether or not he holds the complete confidence of all the people has yet to be proved. I am aware he may have a large following; but at the same time, if you want proof beyond the possibility of doubt, there is no reason why you should not send the invitation for an election even under the limited franchise that is prevailing. If you have an adult franchise that would be better. But even under the limited franchise of 1946, if you hold an election, you will get the true representatives of the people”.

            As for the other issue, Shah opined: “You must also not forget that the events that have happened have invested the other countries (United States and United Kingdom) and the sister Dominion (Pakistan) and those outside with interest in the matter. That being so they will not take any decision unilaterally made by us without demur. If you want to have peace restored, if you want to live in peace with your neighbour, you should not give needless occasion for them to say that here you are purchasing a design and committing an act and taking steps whereby your own declarations, and what is more, whatever interests the others (the people of Jammu and Ladakh) may have are being jeopardized. If that is going to be a slur on the good name of this country, and its claim to stand always for the people or for those who are oppressed, then I think that it is not too much to demand that the representatives in this case should be wholly elected, and should be the true reflex of the people…”

            It is important to note that all of Prof. Shah’s pleas, coupled with an unambiguous warning regarding the grave evils that would follow on the introduction of the formula as suggested by the official motion, were turned down by Ayyangar and Prime Minister Nehru. Both of them defended the motion, which, in a sense, was designed to undermine the importance of the people, the Praja Sabha, and the State ruler. And, all this, despite the fact that both of them had candidly acknowledged that the process they had suggested for the State was “not ideal”.

It would be only desirable to quote what Prime Minister said in defence of the motion. He said: “It amazed me to hear Shah propose that the so-called Praja Sabha of Kashmir should send representatives to this House. He should know that there is nothing more bogus than the Praja Sabha…He ought to know that the whole circumstances under which the last elections were held in 1946-1947 were fantastic and farcical. He ought to know that it was boycotted by all decent people…And the type of people who got in the Praja Sabha was the type who had opposed the freedom movement throughout, who had done every injury possible to the idea of freedom of Kashmir till then…”

“…That is the kind of body referred to; it is the bogus body, it is really no body at all; it is the disembodied spirit…I admit that it is not desirable for any member of this House to come by nomination or be selected by some narrow process. Though the process suggested for Kashmir is not ideal, yet I do think that it is the better process…It is the process where you get a popular government with representative of the popular party at the head of it recommending to the ruler that certain names should go. Even from the view of democracy, that is not an incorrect process. It is hundred per cent correct.”

However, what was most surprising was the attitude of other members of the Constituent Assembly. All (or nearly all) of them either sided with Ayyangar and Jawaharlal Nehru or adopted an indifferent attitude to the otherwise heated debate on a subject of far-reaching importance. As a result, the Ayyangar formula was adopted. The immediate fall-out of this decision was the entry into the Constituent Assembly of Sheikh Abdullah and his nominees, Mirza Afzal Beg, Maulana Masoodi and Moti Ram Baigra.

Thus, commenced an era in which the people’s democracy became the first casualty. One may or may not agree, but it is a fact that all the elections, with a couple of exceptions, have been rigged by the Valley’s ruling class, with the Election Commission of India taking no cognizance. If one really wishes to determine the extent of rigging, one has only to look at the statistics relating to the 1951 elections to the Jammu and Kashmir Constituent-cum-Legislative Assembly. Statistics show that 73 of the 75 National Conference candidates were returned to the House unopposed. It could happen only because the state administration rejected wholesale the nomination papers of all the non-NC candidates, who also wanted to contest elections to this supreme body, which was not only to frame a constitution for the State but also to legislate on matters, politico-administrative and socio-cultural. The details on other polls reveal the same thing.

What provoked a sort of furore in the Constituent Assembly on May 27 was the motion moved by Gopalaswami Ayangar, then controlling the Ministry of Kashmir Affairs, to the effect that “notwithstanding anything contained in paragraph 4 (of the Schedule to the Constituent Assembly Rules), all the seats in the Assembly allotted to the State of Kashmir may be filled by the ruler of Kashmir on the advice of his Prime Minister”.

Several objections were raised against this official motion. However, the one which irritated some of the members most was the omission of Jammu from the nomenclature of the State. Again, prominent among those who opposed the motion were Pandit Lakshmi Kanta Maitra and Prof. K T Shah. Prof. K T Shah possessed first-hand knowledge about the State and its people as well as the kind of political upheavals it had witnessed since 1931. He remained associated with the affairs of this princely State for 15 long years and was its Planning Advisor for a few years before October 1947. He was also aware of the shape things would assume in Jammu and Kashmir in the days to come as he had a 15-day long interaction with NC president Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, who had gone all the way from Srinagar to Mumbai to discuss with him his New Kashmir Plan. (The NC adopted “New Kashmir” programme in September, 1944 and demanded that “the Treaty of Amritsar dated March 16, 1846, signed between Maharaja Gulab Singh and the then British Government of India, which was in the nature of sale deed and was thus an insult to the people the State (Kashmir) must go lock, stock and barrel. This became the theme” of the ‘Quit Kashmir’ movement”, which ‘was launched in early 1946 — April-May” (Report of the State Autonomy Committee, Jammu, April, 1999, P. 11).

While Pandit Maitra put question after question to know “if the word ‘Kashmir’ includes both Jammu and Kashmir”, Prof. Shah moved an amendment to the official motion and made an appeal to the Constituent Assembly to ensure that the words “Jammu and” also figure before the word “Kashmir wherever it occurs”.

Moving the amendment, Prof Shah said: “…There is some significance in this matter, which makes it more than ever necessary that you (Ayyangar) should not omit the other part (Jammu), and, if one may say so, the first part of the title of that ancient State. By calling it the State of Kashmir only you are perpetrating an error…May I ask…if we have made a mistake in the first instance, if we have been carried away by the importance of one sect (Sunni Muslims) of the State, by the importance of personages (the Sheikh and his colleagues) connected with that part of the State, is that any reason why we should forget the other side and no less important part of the State; and in this formal document continue to perpetuate that mistake and speak only of Kashmir, when we really mean Jammu and Kashmir? It is a fact not denied by the mover that is the correct name of the State”.

Prof. Shah also told the Constituent Assembly that the relations between Kashmir and Jammu were not very cordial. To make his point, Prof Shah said: “Those at any rate who remember the campaign of the present Prime Minister (Sheikh Abdullah) of the State in connection with (the 1946) Quit Kashmir movement will realize that in the sequence of events that have happened, it is liable, if you describe it in this manner, to be gravely misunderstood wherever such nomenclature is allowed to be used; and our public records will be disfigured to that extent…The State of Jammu and Kashmir is correctly described as Jammu and Kashmir, so to say, there are two States in one kingdom, just as Scotland and England were two States under the first of the Stuarts. The king was the King James the sixth of England and King James the First of England. There were two crowns worn by one person. In regard to the State of Jammu and Kashmir until about the communal rising in 1931, it was for all practical administrative purposes actually divided into two provinces more or less distinct, though under the same ruler…”

He did not stop here. Prof. Shah went on cautioning the Constituent Assembly, saying “the matter of nomenclature is not merely a matter of verbal emendation that it has behind it a significance, a significance, in the sequence of events, not confined only to this House or this country. It has repercussions outside this country…Therefore, we must be careful in every word that we use, so that our expression, our nomenclature, our whole wording is in conformity with the situation and the correct facts”.

In reply to Pandit Maitra, Ayyangar said: “Kashmir means Jammu and Kashmir”. He also justified his motion saying “in the Draft Constitution, the Schedule mentions the State of Kashmir” and “in the list that is attached to the Constituent Assembly Rules, it is already described as Kashmir”. He urged the members not to make this an issue and “let this description of the State of Kashmir stand, because if you change it, we will have to change other things which are already in our Statutes and Rules”. In other words, Ayyangar expressed his unwillingness to insert the words “Jammu and” before Kashmir for reasons better known to him and which failed to carry conviction with Pandit Maitra and Prof. Shah. This is evident from the questions they raised in response to the lengthy statement of Ayyangar on the nomenclature of the State.

Convinced that Ayyangar would not be in a position to convince Pandit Maitra and Prof. Shah, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru himself took the stage. He defended Ayyangar and said that his stand was “correct”. He said that “I have been connected with Kashmir in many ways, and, in a sense, I belong to Kashmir more particularly than to any part of India. I have been connected with the fight of freedom in Kashmir…And so, if I venture to say anything in this House, I do so with greater authority than Prof. Shah can presume to have on the subject…” After saying so, he made a lengthy statement to counter the arguments of Prof. Shah and in praise of Sheikh Abdullah and his NC and the Quit Kashmir Movement. At the same time, he suggested “a small change in the wording of the motion” with a view to “removing” what he called “a slight confusion in the people’s mind”. What he actually suggested was that the “State be described as Kashmir State, and then putting within brackets, the words otherwise known as the State of Kashmir and Jammu”.

It needs to be recalled that the State at no point of time during 1846-1949 was styled as the “State of Kashmir and Jammu”. It was always known as the State of Jammu and Kashmir, with Jammu as its permanent capital. It should also be underlined that the practice of moving the State Secretariat from Jammu to Kashmir and back was started during the time of Maharaja Ranbir Singh (1857-1885) for reasons political, the most noteworthy being the British design to cause anti-maharaja stir in the Valley and establish their foothold there and in and around Gilgit in order to check the Russian activities across the border.

Anyway, Prime Minister Nehru’s formula did not click. Nor did it discourage Prof. Shah in his efforts to enlist the support of the Constituent Assembly in favour of his amendment. With the result, the deadlock continued. Ultimately, Ayyangar moved an amendment to his motion and suggested that the name of the State be read as the State of Kashmir (otherwise known as the State of Jammu and Kashmir)”. The Constituent Assembly adopted the amended motion. Thus, Jammu, which had ruled over Kashmir for 101 years, found space in the nomenclature of the State, though within brackets. This happened primarily because of the efforts put in by the unyielding Prof. Shah, with Pandit Maitra extending him full support. Had they, like other members of the Constituent Assembly, remained mum or toed the official line, Jammu would have totally disappeared from the nomenclature of the State (Constituent Assembly Debates, Book No 3, Vol VIII, May 16, 1949 to June 16, 1949, Reprinted by Lok Sabha Secretariat, New Delhi, Second Reprint, 1989, pp. 357-373).

            All this should put things in perspective and establish that Nehru and his Congress considered the Kashmiri Muslims a race apart and the people of Jammu and Ladakh as no factor in the state’s political situation. Sadly, the present BJP dispensation in New Delhi has also been pursuing the same policy. Nay, it has left the Congress far behind and given unbridled and extraordinary political, constitutional and religious powers to the People’s Democratic Party, its ally in Jammu and Kashmir. That’s the reason a sense of insecurity of extreme form has gripped the people of Jammu and Ladakh and the internally-displaced Kashmiri Hindus.

6 COMMENTS

  1. The authour, knowing so much about what Nehru and his party did, worked with Congress and proved himself a political turn-coat of the worst kind! He has been vociferous recently on Twitter in particular, about the need of Hindus to go for NOTA, because Modi government has not done anything for Kashmiris, and also for Hindus in India! and backtracked after the ensuring that consistent campaign has worked among those who can’t see beyond the tips of their noses!

  2. Dear Author, you wanted voters to not vote for BJP in Jammu n Ladakh. Well, its happening in states across India. Ask these questions in leisure, once the congress party comes to power in the center post-2019.

  3. Very good write up with deeper and hidden details given to understand. After going through the maze of details, it’s understood that all the above Kashmir, NC winning 75 % unopposed and drama of adding Jammu later and vetoing by foxy Nehru and Sheikh dynasties that Sardar Vallabhai Patel was removed from Kashmir affairs. Rajasthan Election results proves ugly things to happen at a future date. State of Telangana elections too proved that “deletion of names” of BJP voters also suggests how things are being shaped by vested interests, enemies within and family based political parties in the country. It seems BJP is slowly developing fatigueness due to ignoring talented leaders to support PM Modi.

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