Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Syama Prasad as the Finance Minister of Bengal, 1941−1942
- 2 Syama Prasad and Hindu Mahasabha’s Ascendancy in Indian Politics, 1938−1944
- 3 Syama Prasad and Hindu Mahasabha’s Transitory Resuscitation after Reverses, 1945−1947
- 4 Syama Prasad’s Achievements as the Central Cabinet Minister, 1947−1950
- 5 Syama Prasad and the Establishment of Bharatiya Jana Sangh, 1950−1953
- 6 Conclusion
- Appendix I Proceedings of the Hindu Mahasabha Working Committee under the Presidency of Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee which laid down Mahasabha Policy Towards the Congress, January 1945
- Appendix II The Great Calcutta Killing – Who is Responsible
- Appendix III Asutosh Lahiry, General Secretary, All-India Hindu Mahasabha, to Governor of Bengal and Secretary of State of India, on Noakhali Riot
- Appendix IV Indian Legislative Assembly Debates,Vol. 8 (1946) pp. 1053–55
- Appendix V Letter to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru dated 15 April 1950 by Dr S. P. Mookerjee tendering resignation from the Central Cabinet and replies dated 15 April 1950 from Prime Minister and Speaker
- Appendix VI Presidential speech by Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee at the Annual Function of R.S.S. (Rastriya Swayamsevak Sangh) New Delhi on 3rd December, 1950
- Appendix VII Programme of Bharatiya Jana Sangh
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Conclusion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Syama Prasad as the Finance Minister of Bengal, 1941−1942
- 2 Syama Prasad and Hindu Mahasabha’s Ascendancy in Indian Politics, 1938−1944
- 3 Syama Prasad and Hindu Mahasabha’s Transitory Resuscitation after Reverses, 1945−1947
- 4 Syama Prasad’s Achievements as the Central Cabinet Minister, 1947−1950
- 5 Syama Prasad and the Establishment of Bharatiya Jana Sangh, 1950−1953
- 6 Conclusion
- Appendix I Proceedings of the Hindu Mahasabha Working Committee under the Presidency of Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee which laid down Mahasabha Policy Towards the Congress, January 1945
- Appendix II The Great Calcutta Killing – Who is Responsible
- Appendix III Asutosh Lahiry, General Secretary, All-India Hindu Mahasabha, to Governor of Bengal and Secretary of State of India, on Noakhali Riot
- Appendix IV Indian Legislative Assembly Debates,Vol. 8 (1946) pp. 1053–55
- Appendix V Letter to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru dated 15 April 1950 by Dr S. P. Mookerjee tendering resignation from the Central Cabinet and replies dated 15 April 1950 from Prime Minister and Speaker
- Appendix VI Presidential speech by Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee at the Annual Function of R.S.S. (Rastriya Swayamsevak Sangh) New Delhi on 3rd December, 1950
- Appendix VII Programme of Bharatiya Jana Sangh
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
From the sphere of education, Dr Mookerjee moved to the realm of politics in 1938 when, following disagreement with the Congress policy to boycott the Legislature, he resigned and was re-elected as an independent candidate. From then onwards, he was actively involved in politics till his death in 1953. His struggle against the Muslim League in Bengal began with his opposition to the Secondary Education Bill that communalised education. He also found it necessary to protest against defilement of Hindu images, molestation of Hindu women and discrimination in government employment. In contrast, the Congress maintained a discreet silence on these issues, both in and outside the Legislative Assembly, lest a word against injustice or outrage on Hindus should offend Muslims. He, therefore, thought it necessary, in the wider interests of Bengal and India, to keep the Muslim League out of power by mustering together all the non-Congress Hindu forces in the Legislature. His efforts bore fruit first with the forming of the Progressive Coalition with the Krishak Praja Party under the leadership of Fazlul Haq's new coalition cabinet (12 December 1941) that included Dr Mookerjee as Finance Minister. A leading member of the Cabinet, Syama Prasad emerged as the new spokesman of the Hindu cause, inveighing against the communal policy followed by the previous Haq Ministry under the influence of its coalition partner, the League. However, referring to the Governor repeatedly pressing them to abandon Haq and to settle with the League, Dr Mookerjee confessed that working as a minister in such a situation was ‘a strange experience’. According to him, the two dominant features of Bengal's unsympathetic administration were ‘fanning of the communal flame and bowing to the will of Clive Street’. On 20 November 1942, the pillar of the Progressive Coalition resigned from the Ministry in protest against the Governor's continuous encroachment upon provincial autonomy, the ‘Scorched Earth’ policy (1942) that caused much hardship to the people, and the highly oppressive measures adopted in the district of Midnapore to suppress the popular rising of the ‘August Movement’. Dr Mookerjee's one year of active association with the Bengal Government had given him an intimate picture of the working of the British mind and also an opportunity to clearly explicate the viewpoint of nationalist India before the men in power.
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- Syama Prasad Mookerjee and Indian Politics , pp. 328 - 334Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2010