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THE INTERVIEWS
IMPRESSIONS
50 INDIANS
MEMORIES

Patel went out of his way to assure Muslims
that he was, indeed, their true friend

Sardar Patel Fifty years after India won freedom, the myth that Sardar Patel was anti-Muslim persists. In this fascinating essay,Dr Rafiq Zakaria, the respected scholar, reveals the truth about Patel and India's Muslims.

But somehow the impression persisted that the Sardar continued to be a Hindu communalist at heart; it was much stronger before the assassination of the Mahatma. Patel had thereafter considerably mellowed and was much more careful in his utterances. He went out of his way to assure Muslims that he was, indeed, their true friend. Moreover, there were other pressing problems, particularly the consolidation of princely states, which had occupied most of his time. His health had also begun to fail.

Much of the differences with Nehru had been smoothened, the Sardar's stand in favour of the Nehru-Liaquat pact had strengthened the relationship. A few months before the Sardar's death, the communal problem surfaced again, in an entirely different context into which Patel, somehow, got dragged. Tandon, with his anti-Muslim views, decided to contest the Congress presidentship; Nehru though this would give a fillip to Hindu communal forces.

In a frank letter to Tandon ( a copy of which he endorsed to Patel) dated August 8, 1950, Nehru wrote: 'We have many major problems in India, but I feel more and more that perhaps the most important of them is how to hold fast to certain basic ideals of the Congress as it used to be. One of these, which is of supreme importance today, is to fight against communalism. I see this communal spirit growing and spreading in India, together with something that I would call revivalism. I know all that has happened in Pakistan and that this is the reaction to it in India. But that is partly an explanation; it does not help. I has brought out all the intolerance, pettiness and narrow-mindedness in our people and I fear that India can near progress if we think and function in this way.'

Nehru made a pointed reference to Tandon's presidentship of the refugees conference in Delhi which 'gave expression to views which struck me as excessively intolerant, communal and impractical.' These could easily, he wrote, 'lead us into wrong directions' He added, 'I think the major issue in this country today, if it is to progress and to remain united, is to solve satisfactorily our own minority problem. Instead of that, we become more intolerant towards our minorities and give as our excuse that Pakistan behaves badly. What happens to Pakistan is not my primary concern. But I am most intimately concerned with what happens to India, and this progressive decline in some of the basic thins of life distressing.'

Tandon was quick in his reply. He refuted the communal charge against him in his letter to Nehru dated August 12, 1950. 'Obviously you have the Hindu-Muslim question in mind when you speak of communalism. You were present at the last political conference of our province when I spoke for about an hour and a half as president. I expressed then clearly my views on the Hindu-Muslim question in general and on the cultural relationship between the two communities in particular.

'I have never deviated from the views then expressed. I do not recognise any Islamic culture or any Hindu culture. I do not recognise that there is any book in the world which has said the last word on what man should be. Neither the Veda nor the Quran is the last word for me in human thought.

'Muslim divines take umbrage at my expressing this view and say I am anti-Muslim. I thought you would at least would rise above that outlook. The old-world Pandits of Banaras also dislike my views and attack me freely in their organs -- the Hindi daily Sanmarg is an exponent of their views. My leading thought in politics is an all round unity in the country as far as it can be achieved with unavoidable and necessary diversities being kept within proper limits. I have openly advocated Hindu-Muslim marriages and, as you know, caste orthodoxy has played little part in my life. I am, therefore, surprised at your connecting me with a communal outlook.'

Excerpted from Sardar Patel and Indian Muslims, by Rafiq Zakaria, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1996, Rs 125, with the author's permission. Readers interested in buying a copy of the book may write to Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Kulapati K M Munshi Marg, Bombay 400 007.

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