Abul Hashim | |
---|---|
Born |
Kashiara Purba Bardhaman, West Bengal, British India |
January 27, 1905
Died | October 5, 1974 | (aged 69)
Organization |
Muslim League, Khelafat Rabbani Party |
Title | General Secretary, Bengal Provincial Muslim League |
Movement |
Indian Independence Movement; Bengali Language Movement; Movement against Ayub Khan. |
Abul Hashim (Bengali: আবুল হাশিম; 25 January 1905 – 5 October 1974) was a Bengali politician.
Hashim was born in the village of Kashiara in Purba Bardhaman district of West Bengal. He graduated from Burdwan Raj College in 1928, which was then affiliated with the University of Calcutta, and earned a law degree in 1931 from the same university. Then he started his law practice at the court of Burdwan.
He took part in the election to the Bengal Legislative Council in 1936, and participated in the All India Muslim League conference at Allahabad in 1938. He also participated in Muslim League's Lahore conference in 1940. Hashem, a clandestine communist successfully infiltrated into the Indian Muslim League and, using his family connections, got elected as the general secretary of the Bengal Provincial Muslim League in 1943. In his memoirs, Hashim mentions that at the meeting where he was elected to the post, he was clad in a dhoti. He opposed the creation of Jinnah's vision of East Pakistan, the modern day Bangladesh. But his hopes for stalling League's progress were short-lived. The success of the Muslim League soon came through in the 1946 election. He maintained a political proximity with Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy.
But, he participated in the United Bengal movement in 1947, and on May 12, 1947 he together with Sarat Bose met Mahatma Gandhi to discuss the United Bengal scheme and received his blessings. But the day after, on May 13, 1947, the president of the Indian National Congress, J. B. Kripalani, dismissed any notions to "save the unity of Bengal". In reply to the plea, made by Ashrafuddin Chowdhury, a Muslim nationalist and peasant leader from Tippera, Kripalini wrote: "All that the Congress seeks to do today is to rescue as many areas as possible from the threatened domination of the League and Pakistan. It wants to save as much territory for a Free Indian Union as is possible under the circumstances. It therefore insists upon the division of Bengal and Punjab into areas for Hindustan and Pakistan respectively."