On August
21, 1945 the viceroy announced that elections would be held that Winter to the
Central and Provincial Legislative Assemblies. They were to precede the convention of a constitution-making body for British India. The Muslim League had to
succeed in this crucial test if its popular support of its demand for Pakistan
was to be credible. In particular, it had to succeed in Punjab as there
could be no Pakistan without that province. But in Punjab's last elections
held in 1937 the League had fared disastrously. It had put forward a mere seven
candidates for the 85 Muslim seats and only two had been successful. One of
those candidates, Raja Ghazanfar Ali Khan also deserted the Punjab Muslim
League, so there was only one Successful candidate of Punjab Muslim League.
On 23
February 1946, all the results of the elections were known and the Punjab Press
reported with big headlines the crushing defeat of the Unionist party. Only 13
Muslims were elected on the Unionist ticket, even some of their minister lost
their securities in the elections. The Muslim League won a grand victory by
capturing 73 seats of a total of 86. Even at this stage, the Congress was all
out to install a Unionist ministry in order to keep the Muslim League out of
power.
The 1946 elections
proved to be a turning point in the history of the Punjab Muslim League. In the
1946 election campaign, the Muslim League was able to publicize its views
widely. It claimed that Islam was threatened by Congress. "Pirs" and
"Sajjada Nashin" helped the Muslim League to attract Muslim voters.
By early 1946, the Muslim League had been able to secure the support of many
leading families of Punjab and also eminent Pirs and Sajjada Nasheens.
To give one
example of his own area Khizr Hayat Tiwana faced strong opposition from the
descendants of Pirs and Sajjad Nashins. In district Shahpur, Khwaja Qamar ul
Din Sialvi, Qazi Zafar Hussain, and Qazi Mazhar Qayyum gave tough competition
to Tiwanas. Khwaja Qamar ul Din Sialvi of Sial Sharif, a descendant of great Pir Khawaja Sham-ud-Din was president of the District Shahpur Muslim League. He was
very influential in his region. Likewise, Qazis of Soon Valley and descendants
of Sufi Qazi Mian Muhammad Amjad commanded great respect in their areas. They
appealed to their people to vote against Tiwanas. With regard to the exertion
of religious influence over the people, the grandfather of Khizar Hayat
Tiwana, Malik Sahib Khan could not compete with the great grandfather of Qazi
Zafar Hussain, and Qazi Mazhar Qayyum, Qazi Kalim Allah, and their father Qazi
Mian Muhammad Amjad. According to SARAH F. D. ANSARI, the Sajjada Nashin or Pir
families were not so rich in terms of land as the great landlords of Punjab
but these Sajjada Nashin or Pir families exerted great political and religious
influence over the people.
According to
Ayesha Jalal, David Gimartin believes that a number of Pirs developed a personal stake in the League's election campaign; not because this was the most
appropriate tactical response to the prospect of a British transfer of power
but because the Pirs saw in the Pakistan movement an opportunity to break out
of the colonial structures that had for so long thwarted their religious
interests.
Pakistan
came into being on 14 August 1947, "Pakistan would never have come into
being", Talbot argues, "had the Unionist Party held on to the support
of Muslim rural elites during the 1946 Punjab Provincial Assembly Election. The
Muslim Landlords and Pirs joined the Muslim League before the 1946 election,
without its victory in Punjab in that election", Talbot asserts, "the
Muslim League would not have gotten Pakistan".
Penderel
Moon simply attributes the League's rise to power to the alluring and
irresistible appeal of Pakistan's cry to the Muslim masses. Peter Hardy's
explained that the Muslim League gained its electoral success in Punjab by
making a religious appeal over the heads of the professional politicians.
Pakistani historians have explained the League's success in Punjab, as
elsewhere in the subcontinent, solely in terms of the Religious Emotions.
Whatever
the historians may suggest, one thing is clear that League's success was due to
the political vision, farsightedness of Muhammad Ali Jinnah. He was a
Grandmaster of the game by his cleverness and clever calculations.
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