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Thursday, 1 September 2016

Hijrat movement, 1920 – What really happened





Peshawar became the hub of the Hijrat movement because it was at the tail-end where qafilas were received, entertained, and after final preparations, sent off to Afghanistan. The idea was ridiculous and foolish because the wholesale exodus of Muslims of India to Afghanistan was impossible upon economic grounds alone. Politically, it was irrational, economically foolish and socially devastating. This ' foolish scheme ' of Hijrat from India to Afghanistan, was supported by Bacha Khan, Gandhi , Abdu Kalam Azad and the ulemas while Jinnah resolutely denied it.

In order to properly receive, accommodate and absorb the Indian Muhajireen into Afghanistan, King Amanullah Khan complied the Nizam-nama (Rules and Regulations for Muhajireen) and sent it to the secretary of Hijrat committee, Delhi . The original text of Nizam-nama was issued both in Persian and Pashto. There are some 31 clauses in it which first deal with the definition of term Muhajirin and their status , and then sets forth the conditions on the basis of which the Afghan government would accept them. It also details the process of their entry into Afghanistan , their stay over there , their rights and duties, the concession which the Afghan government will accede to them , their conversion into Afghan nationality and restriction on them to participate in politics without the permission of Afghan authorities etc.

On 26th May the King issued further instructions regarding the conveyance and boarding of the Muhajireen at Jabal as-Saraj (a district in Parwan province north of Kabul). These instructions were sent to the secretaries of  committees at Delhi , Rawalpindi and Peshawar for the guidance of , and observance by the , intending emigrants.

Moreover, the King placed a sum of 30,000 Rupees at the disposal of General Muhammad Nadir Khan who was instructed to receive and entertain the Muhajireen at Jalalabad. It is said that the General took keen interest in resolving the day to day problems of the Muhajireen. A younger brother of the General , Sardar Muhammad Aziz Khan was appointed to assist him. Besides, the General deputed a military officer, Abdul Qayyum by name , at Dakka (located on western end of Khyber pass, in Afghanistan) for the reception of Indian Muhajireen.

Just after their entry into Afghanistan, the Muhajireen were dispersed in different parts of the Afghan Kingdom. Among these Kabul, Jalalabad, Jabal as-Saraj, Khanabad, Zangi, Chapriab, Kunduz, Bagram, Charobi, Balkh, and Khost Bazar were worth mentioning. In the early days of the Hijrat, a firman (order) was issued by the King that a few youth among the Muhajireen should be admitted in the Maktab-i-Harbia (battle school). In fulfillment of this order ten educated Indian Muhajirs were admitted, but after a few days seven of those left the school and went to Tashkent.

King Amanullah donated one lakh rupees in cash and plots from his ancestral cultivable lands for the Muhajireen. He also allowed the construction of a Muhajir colony at Qataghan with all the basic necessities of life. At a time when the number of Muhajireen became overwhelming in Kabul, Amir Amanullah demanded of them to abide by the Nizam-nama-i-Muhajireen, in which it was stipulated that all Muhajireen would be settled in Jabal as-Saraj for some time. In compliance with the order of Amir , however, only a few Qafilas started for Jabal as-Saraj and settled over there. Among others, Aziz Hindi was one of the prominent Salars who shifted to Jabal-as-Saraj. Having reached there, Aziz Hindi proposed to the Muhajireen to join the King's army but majority of them turned a deaf ear to his proposal. Majority of Muhajireen, having heard that there were snakes and scorpions and scarcity of facilities at Jabal-as-Saraj, openly refused to go and settle over there. They preferred to stay either at Kabul or other places of their choice. This ultimately led to misunderstanding between the Muhajireen and the 'Ansars' i.e Afghans. Upon this violation of Nizam-nama, the King ordered that those who were not willing to go to Jabal as-Saraj , should proceed to Turkistan (Afghanistan's Turkistan) , while those who would not obey his orders because of the lack of the money should go back to their own country. This paved the way for a large number of Muhajireen who were desirous to trek back to their country. Consequently, it was in the first week of August, 1920, when King Amanullah , suspended the Hijrat and issued the following the following five clauses to supplement his instructions which had been issued regarding the Indian Muhajireen ;

1- That all Muhajireen should prior to their departure obtain a passport from the Afghan agent at Peshawar.

2- The Peshawar Hijrat Committee should, before dispatching a Qafila , intimate its followers and all details in its connection to the Afghan officer at Jalalabad through the agent at Peshawar. The Afghan officer will fix the number to be dispatched and the date of dispatch.

3-  The emigrants , as has already been announced, will be accommodated at Jabal as-Saraj , but in the event of insufficient accommodation will have to proceed to Turkistan (Afghanistan's Turkistan).   
4- In case of emergency such of the emigrants as are fit will be enlisted in the army and sent to places where there is a need for them. They will be given the same pay and allowances as is given to Afghan subjects and will abide by the same rules.

5- Hindustani Muhajireen will, on entering Afghanistan , be treated as Afghan subjects and will not be allowed to return but with the Amir's special permission and necessary passports.

To the above mentioned five clauses , the Kabul Muhajireen committee, added several other points with the object to encourage the Muhajireen to stay on and develop in them resistance against the hardships.

The suspension of Hijrat movement deeply shocked the advocates and preachers of Hijrat in India. They took it as a bolt from the blue. A careful analysis of Nizam-nama-i-Muhajireen and other farmans issued by King Amanullah from time to time during the Hijrat movement would provide enough evidence to convince an impartial reader that it was the gross violation of these by a vast majority of the Muhajireen , that compelled the Afghan King to stop the movement. A couple of days after the suspension of Hijrat, Amanullah issued another farman on 13th August , 1920, which stopped the Hijrat completely. This was the logical conclusion of an ill-conceived movement which had no preplanned agenda, no proper strategy and no capable leadership. At least 75% of Muhajireen returned to their homes. Some of them left Afghanistan form Anatolia, while some others went to Tashkent via Petakesar and Bukhara, and a very small number stayed back in Afghanistan.

According to a returned Muhajir, alone in Khanabad 150 Muhajireen died of cold and starvation. Arrival of Muhajirs also created problems for locals. The residents of Khost were deprived of their lands in favor of Muhajireen. Through a Telegram to D.C Bannu , Khostwals sought permission for their migration to India but the British discouraged the counter Hijrat of the hungry Khostwals. Moreover it was in Khost when a general of the Afghan army mad up a battalion of 500 Muhajireen, fixing their remuneration at Rs. 14/- per month. But the battalion fell through for within a short period the serving Muhajirs began to return to their homes . The General as a result got disappointed with their conduct and disbanded the battalion.

The Muhajireen who were left behind in Afghanistan and who obeyed the orders of the King were offered Jira (refundable loan) Rs.15 per month for one year, 6 Jaribs =2 acres of land per head. Through a farman published in Itihad-i-Mashriqi , dated 29th July , 1920, Amanullah Khan donated 15,000 Jaribs of land to the Muhajireen , the cost of which was estimated by the revenue department of Afghanistan was Rupees 75,000,00 . In  some places the King gave great tracts of lands to some prominent Muhajireen. For example Arbab Raza Khan of Tehkal , Peshawar , was given 100 Jaribs in Khush Gumbat. It is significant to note here that it were the poor peasants , landless laborers, and artisans who formed more than 80% of the total Muhajireen who left British India.


Book consulted: "A Khilafitist Hijrat to Afghanistan", by Noshad Khan (PHD thesis)



Routes followed by Indian Muhajireen during the Hijrat movement , 1920




1 comment:

  1. History is sweet and bitter at the same time.Reality cannot be hidden for eternity.Lies and Hatred in return do haunt and come back to slap one in the face.This article was indeed well written and expect more to be shared.I am a Niazai Pathan from Mianwali.It is requested to share the ancestral roots of this N-I-A-Z-A-I Tribe on this Historyofpashtun.Blogspot.Many Mistake it to be Niazi instead.The Forum editors are hereby requested to please award their precious attention to this request.Jazak Allah.

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