MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · March 23 · 1940

ON THIS DAY · 23 MARCH 1940

Lahore — the Pakistan Resolution

Map: Lahore — the Pakistan Resolution
23 MARCH 1940 · INDIAN INDEPENDENCE & PARTITION, 1905–1948

23 Mar 1940 — At Minto Park, under the Badshahi Mosque’s walls, the League resolves that Muslim-majority zones shall be “autonomous and sovereign.” The word Pakistan is not in the text; within years it is the only word that matters.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

On 3 September 1939, in New Delhi (the marker), Viceroy Linlithgow declares that India is at war with Germany. He consults no Indian. Constitutionally he needs no one’s consent; politically the omission is a detonation. Congress’s position is intricate and honest — its leaders loathe fascism (Nehru had refused to meet Mussolini; Congress had sent a medical mission to China) and offer cooperation in exchange for a simple price: a promise of independence after victory, a share of the centre now. London, with Churchill soon at its head, refuses to purchase the cooperation of the empire’s largest possession with the empire’s dissolution. So in October–November 1939 the eight Congress ministries resign — watch the red drain from the map as elected India walks out of office — and the political stage empties for whoever will fill it. Jinnah declares a “Day of Deliverance” from Congress rule, and the Viceroy discovers the war has given him a priceless ally: a Muslim League whose cooperation costs only recognition, and whose claims usefully divide the demand for freedom.

From Chapter 8 — The War Claims India of Indian Independence & Partition, 1905–1948 (MAR 1940).

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Then ask the room: The Lahore Resolution never mentions “Pakistan” and calls for “independent states,” plural, of ambiguous sovereignty. Does the ambiguity support the view that Partition was a bargaining position rather than a goal? The argued answer is on the chapter page →

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Indian Independence & Partition, 1905–1948
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