Khilafat Movement::
Contest
Khilafat
Movement was a religio-political Movement launched by the Muslims of
the British India for the retention of the Ottoman Caliphate or
khilafat-e-usmania and for not letting for the Muslim holy places go
under the control of the Non-Muslims. During the 1st World War Turkey sided with Germany and as Germany started to loose Turkey also started loosing its territory. By the time 1st World War came to an end in 1918 Turkey had lost most of its territory. Therefore the issue at that time was how the allied powers would treat Turkey, the Ottoman Empire
or the Khilafat-e-usmania and most of its territory had been occupied
and this Movement was on its peak from 1919 to 1922, although it went on
during the later years.
Being
brothers, the Indian Muslims realized their religious duty to help the
Muslim country. It was the extra territorial attachments based on Islam.
Another factor same to the first was that the Indian Muslims considered
Ottoman Caliphate a symbol of unity of the Muslim world as Ummah.
Goals:
What were the goals of this Movement?
- Ottoman Khilafat should be kept intact.
- Territorial solidarity of Turkey should be preserved.
- Control of holy places of the Muslims should not be given to non-Muslims that were Non-Muslim powers.
Effects
This
was the first major political Movement in India which involved the
common man. Since the inception of the ML in 1906, the Muslims had
started demanding certain safeguards from the British. They were also
interacting with the other communities and the Congress party. However
politics during that time from 1906 to 1919 was the elitist politics.
That is politics of educated people and also people who are well off who
could spare time who could spare money were involved in politics.
Khilafat Movement was the 1st
movement where ordinary people were involved, or the ordinary Muslims
were involved, people in the streets were involved and therefore
politics at that time came down to the ordinary masses.
Another
important aspect of this Movement was that it showed the mobilization
capacity of Islam amongst the Muslims. It showed the extent to which the
Muslims of the British India held Islam
and how much Islamic institutions are dear to them. So it clearly
showed that Islam had a lot of mobilizational capacity and appeal for
the ordinary people.
Extra-territorial attachments
Another
aspect emphasizes the extra-territorial attachments of the Muslims of
India based on Islam. Extra-territorial means that people feel attached
to certain institutions and ideological framework that may be beyond the
territorial boundaries of their own countries that is extra-territorial
attachment. Amongst the Muslims extra-territorial attachments are
always been very strong and these extra-territorial attachments are
based on Islam. Two concepts of Islam are very strong force for the
Muslims of British India.
Concept of Ummah
The
concept of Ummah and this concept of Ummah that the Muslims living all
over the World weither in any country belong to an ideological
brotherhood of Islam. It’s a community or sense of community based on
principles and teachings of Islam, therefore the concept of ummah had a
lot of pull for the Muslims and that could be seen during the period of
the Khilafat Movement.
The institution of Khilafat
The
second aspect which created extra-territorial sentiments amongst the
Muslims of this region was the institution of Khilafat.The
Khilafat-e-Usmania whose primary seat was in Turkey and
Khilafat-e-Usmania was seen by the Muslims of the British India as a
kind of continuity from the original institution of Khilafat in Islam.
Therefore they always paid much attention to the institution of
Khilafat.You can go to the earlier periods and you will see that the
sentiment of attachment is based on Islam was very strong.
The Balkan wars
For example if you go back to 1911and1912 you will find the Balkan wars. There was a war between Turkey and Italy and Italy had also attacked Libya.
Therefore during that time when Balkan wars were going on the Muslims
of British India demonstrated strong sentiments for the Muslims, for
Turkey and a medical delegation was sent to Turkey to provide medical
assistance to people affected by war, and now in 1919 when the same
sentiment was emerging on the bases of Ummah and also on the bases of
emotional attachment which the people had with the institution of
Khilafat.Therefore there were lot of sentiments and lot of support for
the demand that is the retention of Khilafat and for this reason
Khilafat Movement becomes extremely important, If you want to know the
political developments of India.
Dimensions:
During first three decades of 20th century, there were poets
,there were writers who were focusing on common themes, like the
generation and the decline of the Muslims in general and Muslims of this
region in particular because the Muslims of this region were a matter
of their direct interest, so they were focusing on the generation and
the decline of the Muslims. The writings of the Muslim intellectuals
provoked the sentiments for the preservation of Khilafat and retention
of the Muslims control of the holy places. The Muslims journalism played
a vital role to steer the direction of the struggle.Secon theme which
you find there was how to revive or how to regenerate the past glory.
For example in the poetry of Allam Iqbal if you read Baal-e-jibril,if
you read Shikwa and Jawab-e-Shikwa,you read Masjid-e-Kartaba where all
these themes are very strong that Muslims could regain, recover from
their problems if they focus on Islam, if they develop the genuine
spirit of Islam. If you read Musaddas-e-Haali you will find the same
story that how the Muslims were declined and how they come out of their
problems which they were facing. So these kinds of sentiments were very
strong when this Movement started. Zamindar of Zafar Ali Khan, Comrade
and Hamdard of Maulana Muhammad Ali Jauhar, and Al-Hilal of Maulana Abul
Kalam Azad etc. were the prominent newspapers and magazines which
performed their duties to express their resentment. The Allies imposed
humiliating terms on vanquished Turkey. These news papers were pleading the cause of the Muslims. The 1st
WW
ended in 1918 and in 1919 the major peace treaty, Treaty of Versil was
signed and it was very obvious the kind of treaty that was that
ultimately the Turkey would loose all it had and then in 1920 conditions of this treaty for Turkey were known and those were very humiliating for Turkey. It had lost most of its territory even on the Main land Turkey that is where Turkey
stands today foreign forces were present and it was in this context
that the Muslims of this region started a movement that is described as
the Khilafat Movement.
Protests in India:
All India Khilafat Committee was formed at Bombay
in July 1919 and this gradually shaped up of the Muslims point of
activity regarding Khilafat and in this Khilafat committee session they
were discussing the issues of Khilafat which held the 1st Khilafat Conference in Delhi in November 1919. The first Khilafat Conference at Delhi
in November 1919 was arranged in which the Congress leaders like Gandhi
and Nehru participated. Congress also started to support the Khilafat
Movement for the reason that I will discuss later on. In this way, the
major political parties joined hands to assault the injustice with the
Muslim community. These steps were announced:
No participation in victory celebrations was the 1st important step taken by the participants of this Conference. The British and the Allies had won the war and they were celebrating even in India because India being a part of the British Empire
was on the side of the British therefore these people decided to
boycott the victory celebration to show displeasure on the state of
affairs and to express their point of view in an affective manner.
Second
decision which they made here was that they started boycotting the
British goods, in a way a kind of economic polices which they were
adopting that they will not buy the British good which will ultimately
affect their economy.
Non Cooperation with the Government was the 3rd
important decision which they made at that time. It meant that not at
this stage but at the later stage hey may also launch the Non
cooperation movement.
The second Khilafat Conference (Amritsar) was held in Dec. 1919 and this was very important occasion. Like the 1st
one all the major political parties participated in this conference and
the most significant thing was that Maulana Muhammad Ali and Shaukat
Ali who were in British detention for violating the British law in
protest against the British policies were released and they also joined
the session after being released from prison.Infact you can’t discuss
the KM without discussing the contribution of Maulana M.A aJauhar and
Maulana S.A.Jauhar and they were used to be described as the Ali
brothers. They played very significant role in mobilizing the masses,
they had formidable appeals at the common level and they also worked
with the Congress party. And both the brothers along with other leaders
went to jail for several times, they would come out demonstrate for
Khilafat cause, lead Muslims the British arrest them along with other
leaders but whenever they released they again come back and plead that
cause with conviction.
After that the Khilafat conference and the Congress party began to work together because there were issues in India
which were agitating others as well. Those issues were important for
Muslims but Muslims attention primarily focused on Khilafat.There were
other issues which were agitating the congress and the congress thought
that Muslims have a set of grievances against the British. They are
agitating for the retention of the Ottoman Empire
then the Congress also had grievances against the British. So hey
thought if they worked together they cooperate with each other then they
could have a more effective impact rather than the Movements working
separately and the issues which were agitating at that time were one was
the issue of the Rowlett Act,1919.
Rowlett Act, 1919:
Rowlett Act was a black law introduced in India.
To the law, the government got authority to persecute any Indian and
the arrested had no facility of legal assistance and right to appeal
just as the ‘Lettres de Cachet’ in France
before the French Revolution. Jinnah resigned from the central
legislature as a protest. This was a law which the British govt passed
for arresting, detaining people who would be involved in what they would
describe as the criminal activities but actually those were political
activities. Those people could be punished swearly and without trial, so
this Bill which was ultimately made into a law was protested both by
the Muslims as well as the Hindus. When this issue
developed.Quaid-e-Azam was very critical to this Act. He delivered
critical speeches in the legislative council and outside and ultimately
he resigned from his seat of the assembly in protest against this law,
because he thought that this Act is a humiliating Act, violates basic
cannons of justice and fairplay
Jallianwala Bagh Incident, April 1919:
The
second issue which was agitating was agitating the person across the
divide was the incident related to the Jallianwala Bagh.Jallianwala Bagh
was situated in the city of Amritsar and against the backdrop of the
Rowlett Act a big meeting was held in that Bagh.There were so many kinds
of people and the British govt was so agitated that they dispatched a
unit of the Army that went into the garden blocked all the entrance
points and began shooting directly on the people and several hundred
people were killed and seriously wounded which created a major uproar
throughout India. General Dyer opened fire to disperse the throng that
cast huge human casualties (379). It is considered one of the great
tragedies in India.
It is during this period that the British imposed martial law in
Amritsar and certain other cities of the province of Punjab including
Lahore, Gujranwala and a couple of other cities martial law was imposed.
So in a way that became the 1st martial law in this region in the 20th
century. So this Jallianwala Bagh incident also mobilized congress and
other groups to move ahead and to pull their resources and to challenge
the authority of the British govt.
Non-Cooperation:
Therefore
the famous Congress session was held at Nagpur in Dec 1920 when the
Congress at the instance of the Congress leaders Mahatma Gandhi adopted
his non violent and non cooperation movement. This was the first non
cooperation movement which Gandhi was launching. He launched couple of
other movements subsequently and the general agreement was that the.
- Indians would return all those titles which the British had given to them. For example one title which used to given to the Indians for their services was the title of Sir and the Indians used to use this title of Sir and there were several other titles. So the decision was to return these titles.
- Boycott of the courts and the educational institutions.
- Then they would resign their jobs.
- It was also decided that at a later stage they would also resign from the police and military jobs. It was something which they kept in reserved. This was not really launched but some thoughts could be implemented later on.
- Then they refused to pay taxes to the British govt.
Khilafat Conference, Karachi, July 1921:
A
Khilafat Conference was held in Karachi in July 1921 and in this
session the participants were predominantly Muslims expressed their
loyalty to Khilafat and the Turkish Sultan which by that time had been
disposed by its territory by the allied powers the British and the
others and they had also decided to keep the movement going on. They
welcomed Ataturk’s efforts to dislodge foreign forces from mainland. By
that time Ataturk was emerging as a leader and he was taking steps to
expel the foreign forces from Turkey
and it was very early stage but nevertheless they welcomed the. That
and they thought that it is something new that needs to be encouraged
and needs to be endorsed.
Hijrat Movement 1920-21:
While
this movement was going on with total Muslim commitment, with
dedication with full sincerity. The Muslims were making their point of
view known their loyalty their attachment by making all these kinds of
sacrifices. Now while all this was happening another movement started
here that was called the Hijrat Movement. That Movement primarily was
there between 1920 to 1921.What was the Hijrat Movemen.This Movement was
encouraged by the religious leaders. The Indian ulama (religious
leaders) declared India
‘Darul Harab where Muslims are not safe.’ Darul Harab means the place
(country) where Muslims are not allowed to perform their religious
practices. In the said situation, the Muslims should migrate to the
nearest safe place. The ulama issued verdicts that Muslims should move
from Dar ul Harb to Darul Islam and in this case Dar ul Islam was next
door country, Afghanistan. So the religious leaders encouraged Muslims from India to Afghanistan
that is Hijrat.There was another reason due to this, this Movement was
launched. There was an impression that King of Afghanistan would welcome
these people who would go from India to Afghanistan.
Therefore due to the encouragement which the Islamic leaders gave to
the common people and a perception that the Afghanistan would welcome
anybody who will go there, a very large number of people specially
belonging to lower strata of society, the common people the poor people
left from India to Afghanistan some on foot, some on carts because means
of transportation were not so developed at that time that you could
easily go to Afghanistan. Some of the people sold their property at very
cheap rates; they disposed of their property, because they were moving
from this place to another in the name of Islam, so the migration took
place at large scale. Initially Afghans welcomed them. But as their
number increased the Afghan govt closed the border because Afghanistan
was also a poor country, it had its own problems and it was not able to
cope with the migrants and pushed the migrants back to the Indian
territories. This created a major dilemma for the Muslims who were
migrating to Afghanistan It resulted in loss of lives and money. Many
died during this mission. Some went to Soviet Union from Afghanistan because they had nothing in India
now because they had sold what they had and where should they have go
back. So in a way this Hijrat Movement ended on miseries for the Muslims
because it was unplanned and it was based on emotions not taking into
account the realities in Afghanistan.
However the Hijrat Movement re-enforces the total commitment and
identification to Islam and their ability to make all kinds of
sacrifices for the ideology for the principles and teachings of Islam. I
mention one point as a kind of footnote to the Hijrat Movement; some of
the Muslims who were were able to cross over to Afghanistan gradually
moved to Soviet Union and they stayed there and some of them came back
to India subsequently while in the Soviet Union they were inspired by
the socialist and the Marxist philosophy and some of them when they came
back were active in socialist and Marxist movements in India. Overall
the Hijrat Movement did created problems and hardships for the Muslims
of this region
End of the Movement:
The Khilafat Movement that was started by the Muslims of the British India for the retention of the institution of the Ottoman Empire
and for retaining the control of the Muslims holy places, that movement
gradually fizzled out. How that did happened a number of developments
from 1921 to onward contributed to that. The first important development
that adversely affected the movement was the Mopla Revolt on the
Malabar area in the Kalicut.
Moplah Revolt Malabar Coast, near Kalicut
This
incident took place in 1921.Moplahs were the descendents of the Arab
Muslims settled in the Sub-Continent even before the arrival of Muhammad
Bin Qasim. In August 1921, they revolted against Hindu landlords whose
treatment was very brutal with them. The issue was not the religious.
The uprising was against the injustice against the suffering which the
Moplas were facing and as they revolted the police took the side of the
landlords. The local Hindu unions began to project to this as the kind
of Hindu Muslim issue, there was a lot of propaganda against the Muslims
with reference to this uprising and there were calls from some of the
Hindu organizations to wake up against to face the challenge which was
emerging Later this clash changed as Moplahs versus the Police and
Hindu. This embittered the Hindu-Muslim relations. This uprising had a
negative impact on the Hindu Muslim unity that was being demonstrated in
the Khilafat Movement. The Congress party and the Khilafat Committee
were very cooperative and were working together. The Muslim leaders were
addressing meetings along with Gandhi and others, so it was a rare
demonstration of Hindu Muslim unity and that cooperative sentiment was
undermined by this incident.
Increase in Violence 1921:
The
2nd incident that affected this Movement was the increase in violence
when in 1920 Non Cooperation Movement was launched by Gandhi it was
argued that this would be a peaceful Movement, this would be a non
violent movement but the Indians would demonstrate against the British
in a peaceful manner even the British will use force on them they will
not respond. However with the passage of time violence entered this non
cooperation there was an increase in violence day by day and the
Chorachori Incident (UP) in February 1922 worsened the situation.Chora
Chori is a small place in Uter Pradesh (UP) and here what happened was
the Congress activist attacked a police station as a part of agitation
against the British. The Congress volunteers set a police station on
fire and as a result about 21 policemen were burnt alive. There were
other violence and due to this increase in violence Gandhi suddenly
decided to call off the Non Cooperation movement.
Gandhi,
s decision did affect this movement firstly, it was a sudden and
individual decision not consulting the Khilafat Movement people because
they were working together and suddenly the Non Cooperation Movement was
called off which adversely affected the Movement and created distrust
between the two groups that were operative at that time. So this was an
incident that weakened the movement and they began to diverge or move in
different directions.
Developments in Turkey:
3rd and most significant development relates to Turkey itself, things began to change in Turkey. In 1922 Ataturk who was in the military service in the Ottoman Empire
emerged as a national leader. He collected his colleagues and undertook
the operation against the occupying foreign forces and he was able to
expel the foreign forces which strengthened his position. In Nov, 1922
the new political developments under Ataturk that had developed there
restricted the powers of the Sultan.Infact Sultan Abdul-Hamid was
replaced by another person, then in October 1922 Ataturk was elected as
the head of the state, he was appointed Chief of the state by Grand
National Assembly. Turkey became Republic and in March 1924 the Grand National Assembly the parliament of Turkey
abolished the institution of Khilafat.In March 1924, Khilafat was
abolished. So in a way the very institution for which the Muslims were
fighting had been replaced by Turkey’s new leadership that emerged, the present day Turkey that emerged in 1922.This caused a widespread resentment among the Indian Muslims. They sent delegations to Turkey
but failed to achieve their objectives. As the Institution was
abolished the movement became weak and disappeared gradually and this is
how Khilafat Movement ended.
Conclusions:
It can be concluded as under;
- It was re-affirmation of the reality that religion is a mobilizing force and especially Islam has mobilization capacity to organize masses.
- It was the movement launched on the basis of extra-territorialism. Later, no such movement but Pan-Islamic sentiments continued.
- It resulted in the sufferings of the Muslims
- Hindu-Muslim unity proved short-lived.
- Reactivation of the Muslim League and other Muslims organizations to restart their activities as a separate nation.
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