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FOCUS ON RELIGION AND LANGUAGE

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The era from 1937 to 1939 has its own importance as the British contended that an effective political system could bridge the communal differences but it hardly met this challenge. This study explores the state of communal riots in the British Punjab during the years 1937 to 1939 due to religious as well as language differences. In 1937, the government reminded the Deputy Commissioners through directives that generally, the people were free in their religious activities but law and order was paramount to be observed. If officers thought religious activities to be dangerous they must be dealt with a heavy hand in order to curtail danger. The Punjab Governor wrote that a clash between agitators and police would be inevitable in this situation “but the alternative is to allow provocative acts to continue with the consequent spread of communal trouble.”i The British policy on religious freedom and law and order seemed tangible and practical as well, nevertheless the state of communal trouble based on religion and language remained acute in the British Punjab. Many counter-moves like a secular setup of the Punjab Unionist Party, apparent evenhandedness of the officials and British patronage of the Hindu, Muslim and Sikh communities seemed to be working as resisting forces to the communal agony. Leadership might have friendly posture but masses remained divided on religious lines. Pestering enough the communal clashes convinced the Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs to accept the respective leaders to have geographical split ultimately. This endeavor aims to explore communal clashes in Punjab during the years of 1937 to 1939 that occurred mostly on lingual and religious grounds

Akhtar Hussain Sandhu , María Isabel Maldonado García . (2015) COMMUNALISM IN THE BRITISH PUNJAB DURING 1937 TO 1939 , Al-Hikmat: A Journal of Philosophy, Volume 35, Issue 01.
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