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The Foreshadowing of Bangladesh : bengal muslim league and muslim politics 1906-1947 / Harun-or-Rashid.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Dhaka : The University Press Limited, 2003.Edition: 1st edDescription: xviii, 382p. : illus. ; 22cmISBN:
  • 9840516884 :
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 320.9054 19
Subject: This study covers, what Leonard A. Gordon calls, the neglected history of Bengali Muslims before 1947. It provides a detailed account of the Bengal Muslim League during the period from 1906 to1947. It covers its various aspects, such as, problems of organisation, policies and mobilisation , nature of leadership, inner party conflict, bases of support and relations with the parent all-India body. A special attempt has been made to show how the formerly popular Krishak Praja Party disappeared from the political scene of Bengal, ironically, during the Chief Ministership of its architect, A.K. Fazlul Huq, and how the Muslim League emerged as the Muslim nationalist movement in eastern India within a decade. The book makes a distinctive contribution in revealing the fact that, throughout the Pakistan movement there was existing a national variation among the Bengali Muslims and that the statehood ideal of the larger section of the Bengali Muslim leaders was completely different from that of Jinnah. The Bengali Muslim leaders developed the ideal of an independent Eastern Pakistan or some kind of Greater Bengal comprising the whole of Bengal and Assam and some portion of the Purnea district in Bihar under the 1940 Lahore Resolution. For the majority of the Bengali Muslim leaders the Lahore Resolution was meant to have recognized the national variations of the two Muslim majority zones in North-West and North-East India and the establishment of two separate states in those two regions. The book provides an in-depth discussion of the move for United Independent Bengal in 1947 as initiated by the League Chief Minister H.S. Suhrawardy along with some Bengali Hindu leaders, and examines critically the attitude of Jinnah, the Congress High Command and the British towards the move. The study argues that the national variation of the Bengali Muslims could be subdued temporarily in the 1940s by the general Muslim fear of Hindu domination in united India and concludes that the emergence of Bangladesh as an independent state in 1971 may be regarded as the partial fulfillment of the dream in the 1940s for an independent Greater Bengal. The Postscript added to the revised edition gives a bird's eye view of the subsequent developments in the post-1947 Pakistani period up to 1971 showing how the pre-1947 foreshadowing of Bangladesh did turn into a reality during this phase.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Library, Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB) General Stacks 320.9054 H338f (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 015223
Books Books Library, Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB) General Stacks 320.9054 H338f 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 02 Available 022471
Total holds: 0

This study covers, what Leonard A. Gordon calls, the neglected history of Bengali Muslims before 1947. It provides a detailed account of the Bengal Muslim League during the period from 1906 to1947. It covers its various aspects, such as, problems of organisation, policies and mobilisation , nature of leadership, inner party conflict, bases of support and relations with the parent all-India body. A special attempt has been made to show how the formerly popular Krishak Praja Party disappeared from the political scene of Bengal, ironically, during the Chief Ministership of its architect, A.K. Fazlul Huq, and how the Muslim League emerged as the Muslim nationalist movement in eastern India within a decade. The book makes a distinctive contribution in revealing the fact that, throughout the Pakistan movement there was existing a national variation among the Bengali Muslims and that the statehood ideal of the larger section of the Bengali Muslim leaders was completely different from that of Jinnah. The Bengali Muslim leaders developed the ideal of an independent Eastern Pakistan or some kind of Greater Bengal comprising the whole of Bengal and Assam and some portion of the Purnea district in Bihar under the 1940 Lahore Resolution. For the majority of the Bengali Muslim leaders the Lahore Resolution was meant to have recognized the national variations of the two Muslim majority zones in North-West and North-East India and the establishment of two separate states in those two regions. The book provides an in-depth discussion of the move for United Independent Bengal in 1947 as initiated by the League Chief Minister H.S. Suhrawardy along with some Bengali Hindu leaders, and examines critically the attitude of Jinnah, the Congress High Command and the British towards the move. The study argues that the national variation of the Bengali Muslims could be subdued temporarily in the 1940s by the general Muslim fear of Hindu domination in united India and concludes that the emergence of Bangladesh as an independent state in 1971 may be regarded as the partial fulfillment of the dream in the 1940s for an independent Greater Bengal. The Postscript added to the revised edition gives a bird's eye view of the subsequent developments in the post-1947 Pakistani period up to 1971 showing how the pre-1947 foreshadowing of Bangladesh did turn into a reality during this phase.

2004-11-02

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