[The segment dealing with Patel and Kashmir, following the pretty much
informed discussion on the Partition (for an elaborately documented and
argued view on this issue, one may look up: 'Sectarian Politics and the
Partition of India: The Targeting of Nehru and the Congress' at <
http://www.thehinducentre.com/the-arena/current-issues/article9149854.ece>),
is particularly noteworthy.

《"Opinions are free, but facts are sacred." All practitioners of journalism
are required to follow this dharma of their profession. But what happens
when the Prime Minister of a nation takes liberal liberties with facts?
That too in parliament, where speaking truthfully is a constitutional
obligation even for ordinary members? One thing happens: the Prime Minister
brings disrepute to himself, to the high office he holds, and to the
institution of parliament.》]

https://www.ndtv.com/opinion/modi-needs-education-on-patel-partition-and-kashmir-1810249

Modi's Dislike For Nehru Cannot Obliterate The Facts

Sudheendra Kulkarni

Published: February 09, 2018 11:19 IST

"Opinions are free, but facts are sacred." All practitioners of journalism
are required to follow this dharma of their profession. But what happens
when the Prime Minister of a nation takes liberal liberties with facts?
That too in parliament, where speaking truthfully is a constitutional
obligation even for ordinary members? One thing happens: the Prime Minister
brings disrepute to himself, to the high office he holds, and to the
institution of parliament.

Narendra Modi's antipathy for Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru is well known, as is
his admiration for Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. But neither antipathy nor
admiration for anyone should be based on disrespect for facts.

In what sounded more like a hyper-aggressive election campaign speech than
a sober reply to the debate on the motion of thanks to the President on
Wednesday, Modi spoke two patent falsehoods. One, he accused the Congress
of dividing the nation in 1947. "Even after 70 years, 125 crore Indians are
daily facing the consequences of the seeds of poison you sowed then," Modi
told the Congress leaders in the Lok Sabha. What was that poison that still
endures? Intriguingly, he did not elaborate. Two, once again exaggerating
the contribution of the Sangh Parivar's Partition-era icon, he claimed that
"all of Kashmir would have been India's, if Patel (instead of Nehru) had
been allowed to become India's first Prime Minister".

Those who listened to Modi's speech would have found the reference to
partition rather bizarre. The context in which it came was when he was
actually blaming the Congress for the hurried and messy manner in which the
UPA government divided Andhra Pradesh and carved out a separate Telangana
in 2014, just before the general elections. Obviously, he wanted to send a
conciliatory signal to Andhra Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu and his
party, Telugu Desam, which is threatening to break its alliance with the
BJP. Therefore, Modi contrasted the Congress way of establishing Telangana
with the "smooth" formation of Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Uttarakhand by
the NDA-I government a decade earlier. One may or may not agree with Modi
on this, but he was well within his rights to make this comparison.

However, what was weird was the PM's absolutely uncalled for reference to
the division of India in the same breath as he was talking about the
division of four Indian states. The latter is a mere reorganisation of
states, which brooks no comparison whatsoever with the tragic partition of
India in 1947 and the birth of two independent nations. But such is Modi's
visceral hatred for the Congress that falsifying the context and the
content comes naturally to him.

Was the Congress solely responsible for the blood-soaked division of India?
Books on partition can easily fill a large library, and all the authors who
are faithful to facts of history tell us that the Congress did not want
India to be divided. Even Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the architect of Pakistan,
did not want the kind of partition that eventually established India and
Pakistan as two separate and sovereign but deeply antagonistic nations. The
communal Muslim League's intransigence in demanding a separate Muslim state
(its Lahore Resolution of 1940 actually talked of 'Muslim states', with no
mention of Pakistan or the two-nation theory) and the British policy of
"divide-and-exit" combined to create a situation that forced the Congress
to accept the partition plan.

Of course, the Congress, too, cannot disown its share of blame. There were
several opportunities during the course of the freedom movement to prevent
partition, including opportunities for cooperation and reconciliation
between the Congress and the Muslim League, but these were not seized.
However, for those in the Sangh Parivar who have made Mahatma Gandhi and
Nehru the principal villains of India's partition, two points merit mention
here. First, in his classic "India Wins Freedom", Abul Kalam Azad clearly
establishes that Patel was the first and the strongest among all the major
Congress leaders to support the British plan for India's partition.
(Reluctant and sad Mahatma Gandhi was the last.) However, since Azad is not
really a Sangh Parivar favourite, Modi may get some education on this from
his own ministerial colleague MJ Akbar, who, in his masterly 1988 biography
"Nehru - The Making of India" writes: "Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the strong
man of India, had accepted the idea of partition even before Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru, the romantic." (page 406)

Therefore, when Modi holds the Congress guilty of dividing India, and of
"sowing the seeds of poison", he should acknowledge that he is also
blaming, first and foremost, Patel himself.

The second point is even more serious. Modi leads a party that is a member
of the Sangh Parivar, which swears by Hindutva, Hindu Rashtra and Akhand
Bharat. Was this ideology also not responsible for partition? On this, we
should listen to Dr Rammanohar Lohia, whom Modi has described as one of the
"three greatest Indians" who shaped Indian political thought in the 20th
century, Gandhi and Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya being the other two. Lohia,
a strong critic of Akhand Bharat and Hindu Rashtra, writes in his book
"Guilty Men of India's Partition": "The opposition of fanatical Hinduism to
partition did not and could not make any sense, for one of the forces that
partitioned the country was precisely this Hindu fanaticism. It was like
the murderer recoiling from his crime, after it had been done. Let there be
no doubt about it. Those who have shouted loudest about Akhand Bharat, the
present Jana Sangh and its predecessors of the curiously un-Hindu spirit of
Hinduism, have helped Britain and the Muslim League partition the country.
They did nothing whatsoever to bring the Muslim close to the Hindu within a
single nation. They did almost everything to estrange them from each other.
Such estrangement is the root cause of partition. To espouse the philosophy
of estrangement and, at the same time, the concept of Akhand Bharat is an
act of grievous self-deception, only if we assume that those who do so are
honest men."

Let's now see how facts are stacked up on Modi's claim about Patel and
Kashmir. Patel undoubtedly played a stellar role in the integration of over
560 princely states into the Indian Union after India won freedom. Nehru
himself has praised him as the "builder and consolidator of New India".
However, three princely states - Hyderabad, Junagadh and Jammu & Kashmir -
remained major sources of contention between India and Pakistan. Patel's
steely resolve ensured the merger of Junagadh (through plebiscite) and
Hyderabad (through police action) with India. Kashmir, however, continues
to bleed both India and Pakistan - morally, financially and in terms of
tens of thousands of lives - with no solution in sight.

All available facts of history disprove Modi's claim that Patel could have
secured a lasting and fully satisfactory solution to the Kashmir problem in
1947-48 itself. Indeed, far from wanting to get all of Kashmir for India,
Patel was, initially, prepared to give away all of Kashmir to Pakistan. To
know how, it is useful to listen to the unanimous voices of multiple
historians. Rajmohan Gandhi in his biography "Patel: A Life", tells us that
Patel was thinking of making an ideal bargain: if Jinnah let India have
Junagadh and Hyderabad, Patel would not object to Kashmir acceding to
Pakistan. He cites a speech by Patel at Bahauddin College in Junagadh,
following the latter's merger with India, in which he said: "We would agree
to Kashmir if they agreed to Hyderabad." (pages 407-8, 438)

Patel's other authoritative biographer Balraj Krishna writes in his book
"Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel" - "But for Nehru, he could settle the Kashmir
issue in no time by arranging that the Kashmir Valley go to Pakistan and
East Pakistan to India. Both countries would benefit from such an
arrangement." Why did he want such an arrangement? Citing a conversation on
this matter between Dr Rajendra Prasad and Jayaprakash Narayan, he writes:
"(According to the Sardar), when we had given away Punjab, Sind and NWFP,
of what value could the small valley of Kashmir have for us?" (pages 163-4)

Let us turn to a third biographer, Dr Dinkar Joshi, a renowned Gujarati
historian who is well known to Modi. On page 220 of his book "Sardar: The
Sovereign Saint", Dr Joshi writes: "Sardar knew the reasons behind Maharaja
Hari Singh's indecisiveness - the geographical and demographic conditions
of Kashmir (it being a Muslim-majority state neighbouring West Pakistan).
If Hari Singh decided to join Pakistan, Sardar had planned his own
strategies - he would ask for Jammu and Ladakh for India and hand over
Kashmir Valley to Pakistan."

This is corroborated by another acclaimed book "The Shadow of the Great
Game - The Untold History of India's Partition" by Narendra Singh Sarila.
The author writes (pages 343-4) that Mountbatten, the last viceroy, "told
me many years later" - "I explained to HH (Hari Singh) that his choice was
between acceding to India or Pakistan and made it clear that I had
assurances from the Indian leaders that if he acceded to Pakistan, they
would not take it amiss."

Who had given those assurances? Sarila writes: "According to VP Menon (an
important civil servant, and Patel's right-hand man who played a critical
role during India's partition and the integration of princely states)
'These assurances had been given by Sardar Patel, the Home Minister,
himself.'"

The authenticity of this has been has been certified by none other than HV
Seshadri, a former Number 2 in the RSS leadership hierarchy. In his book
"The Tragic Story of Partition", Seshadri, quoting Menon, states that Patel
had no objection to Kashmir going to Pakistan. (page 215)

If all this does not convince Modi and his followers, they would do well to
turn to pages 186-7 of "The Biography of Bharat Kesri Dr Syama Prasad
Mookerjee - With Modern Implications" by SC Das. Founder of the Bharatiya
Jana Sangh, Mookerjee is, after all, a BJP icon. Das tells us that Patel
was keen on giving Kashmir Valley to Pakistan in exchange for East
Pakistan. More significantly, he writes: "There was consensus between Dr
Mookerjee and India's Iron Man Sardar Patel on this grave issue."

Why did India's Loh Purush favour Kashmir's accession to Pakistan? Most
historians attribute it to Patel's pragmatism. Unlike Nehru, he was not
emotionally attached to Kashmir. He probably thought that a Muslim-majority
state bordering Pakistan could become a source of trouble for India. At the
same time, historians also record that after Pakistan tried to forcibly
seize Jammu & Kashmir by sending armed invaders, Patel became an
indefatigable crusader against Pakistan.

As is well known, India's first war with Pakistan in 1947-48 ended in a
stalemate, a UN-enforced ceasefire, and effective partition of J&K. It was
a war in which Britain connived with Pakistan's adventure in Kashmir. In
this, the erstwhile colonial masters were helped by a fact we would find
hard to believe today - even after India and Pakistan had become
independent, their opposing armies were still led by British nationals! The
moot question here is: Did Patel take a stand that the Indian army must
continue the fight until all of J&K came under Indian control?

Let us put the question in another way. "Most Indian political parties, BJP
being the most vociferous among them, assert that Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir
is an atoot ang (inseparable part) of Bharat. This is as much an agony as
it is an assertion, since no party and no leader can present a credible
strategy to get PoK back. Did Patel have one? Again, the answer would
disappoint Modi and his supporters.

On this, we should listen to the views of two eminent and erudite Indian
ambassadors. In his 2002 book "War and Diplomacy in Kashmir: 1947-48",
Chandrashekhar Dasgupta tells us (pages 79-80) that - (a) "Sardar Patel at
one stage declared that he would reject any proposal concerning a
plebiscite in Kashmir unless Pakistan accepted the principle of plebiscite
in Hyderabad also." In other words, Patel was not in principle opposed to a
plebiscite in Kashmir. (b) At one stage, Patel offered a complete
withdrawal (of Indian troops) from the Poonch area (to facilitate the
holding of a plebiscite). In other words, Patel was ready to halt the
Indian army's operations mid-way through the war in favour of a
diplomatic-democratic solution.

All of us know no such solution emerged. But very few know that Patel, the
realist, did not press for a military solution. Dasgupta's narration on
this is supported by TCS Raghavan, who retired as India's ambassador in
Islamabad in 2015. In his widely praised recent book "The People Next Door
- The Curious History of India's Relations with Pakistan", Raghavan writes
(page 9): "By the end of 1948, the war had run its course. While the tribal
levies and the Pakistan military personnel were evicted from many areas in
Poonch, Ladakh and Kargil, a narrow stretch bordering Pakistan and
including Muzaffarabad and Mirpur and in the large area of Gilgit and
Skardu further to the north remained in Pakistani control. Evicting
Pakistan forces from these would require a larger offensive, a move which
Prime Minister Nehru and his government, including Deputy Prime Minister
Vallabhbhai Patel, had little enthusiasm for."

These, in essence, are the irrefutable facts about Patel, partition and
Kashmir.

But why should we bother to educate the Prime Minister on all this? Because
this is not a mere academic debate on some events that took place long ago,
and on personalities who are long gone. This debate is about the grave and
current problem of Kashmir, which is daily crying out for a fair and
lasting solution. The LoC is on fire. Soldiers and civilians are dying on
both sides, in terrorist as well as state violence. Kashmir has been
subjected to unspeakable indignity and inhumanity. The Modi Government's
confused approach, be it internally in J&K or externally with Pakistan, is
proving to be fruitless.

Therefore, if both India and Pakistan have anything to learn from Patel, it
is the virtue of pragmatism, the readiness to be flexible and the
willingness to compromise in the interest of a permanent solution to the
Kashmir issue. Here was a leader willing to hand over the whole of Kashmir
to Pakistan, if it meant future peace between the two neighbours.

How anachronistic and thoroughly impractical then is the boastfulness of
today's 'patriots' who say, "Kashmir ki ek inch zameen nahin denge" (We'll
not give them an inch of our land in Kashmir). They should heed the
cautionary words of their own idol. Patel, as quoted in RSS leader
Seshadri's book (page 226), warns: "It will be a folly to ignore realities;
facts take their revenge if they are not faced squarely and well."

(The writer was an aide to India's former Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee.)
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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