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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 29, 2019
The people’s Jinnah

JINNAH House on Mount Pleasant Road in Mumbai has won deserved fame.
Sadly, the People’s Jinnah Memorial Hall in the same city has been
ignored. It stands, however neglected, as a testimony to Quaid-i-Azam
Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s achievement and standing as a staunch fighter
against British rule.
Two successive governors of Bombay, Willingdon and George Lloyd, were
inclined to recommend his deportation out of India. In 1918, the British
labelled Jinnah an ‘extremist’ and even, horror of horrors, a
‘Bolshevik’.
Explore: The Legacy of Mr Jinnah 1876-1948
The campaign that inspired the memorial began the day of Willingdon’s
insult to B.G. Tilak at a provincial war conference on June 10, 1918.
Tilak, Jinnah, Bombay Chronicle editor B.G. Horniman and others were
invited. Tilak walked out; Jinnah stayed back and delivered a blistering
attack, silencing the governor’s interruption.
As Willingdon’s term expired, The Times of India editor Sir Stanley Reed
and some others decided to hold a meeting to vote for a memorial in his
honour on behalf of the city. Jinnah and 29 others wrote to him on Nov
8, warning him that "should any such meeting be called we shall attend
the same for the purpose of opposing" the proposal.
Within a month, 65,000 citizens had donated a rupee each to the fund.
At 7 a.m. on Dec 11, the leaders of the anti-requisitionists arrived at
the town hall. They were received with loud cheers by 200 or 300
supporters, who had arrived earlier and were waiting on the roadside. At
10 a.m., the doors were opened. The opposition leaders immediately took
their places in the queue, which their supporters had held for them.
Thus, the first persons to enter were Jinnah, Horniman, Umar Sobhani,
K.M. Munshi, P.K. Telang, Syed Hussain, other leaders, and a large
following of supporters.
They succeeded in resisting an audacious attempt to thrust them into the
back seats. Headed by Jinnah, they insisted on their right as
first-comers to take whichever seats they chose, and after some argument
their claim to occupy the central seats was conceded. Ruttie Jinnah was
on the steps to the hall managing the volunteers.
Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy was voted to the chair on a motion by Dinshaw
Wacha, seconded by Fazalbhoy Currimbhoy. Horniman’s protests and his
motion that Telang be chairman were ignored. Bedlam ensued. The police
commissioner came in to clear the hall. Jinnah was among those assaulted
by the police. However, he and his colleagues were received with loud,
continued roars of applause. Jinnah and a couple of others addressed
them from the windows of an insurance company. They met that night at a
meeting at Shantaram Chawl, where Jinnah and Tilak used to address
people. Jinnah was already a mass leader by then. Munshi said of Jinnah
that he had never seen the likes of him before.
A Bombay solicitor, B.D. Lam, wrote a letter published in the Chronicle
on Dec 10: "If, as a result of the meeting, anybody deserves a memorial
it is Jinnah, whose fine leadership and fearless courage have marked a
great epoch in the public life of Bombay. He has shown the spirit of our
late lamented leaders like Dadabhai Naoroji and Gopal Krishna Gokhale.
"We should mark our great appreciation of Mr Jinnah’s service by raising
a fund in which each of his supporters should contribute one rupee.
That rupee will come not from a man’s pocket but from his heart. If we
had our own way we would raise a statute of Jinnah to be placed in the
Town Hall of Bombay, for Jinnah has forever laid low the tyranny of town
hall meetings held in the name of the public. His name will be
cherished forever as the great Indian who is a symbol of their true
public spirit. That spirit never existed in Bombay, but Jinnah has
established it on firm basis in yesterday’s proceedings. We ought not to
allow this occasion to pass without a fitting tribute to Jinnah. A
souvenir ought to be presented to him to mark the everlasting services
he has rendered not only to Bombay but to the whole of India."
Within a month, 65,000 citizens had donated a rupee each to the fund.
Annie Besant came down from London specifically to inaugurate the
People’s Jinnah Memorial Hall. Jinnah was 42 then.
In 1985, I wrote an article on Jinnah for The Illustrated Weekly of
India for which I requested the editor, Pritish Nandy, to have his
plaque cleaned of accumulated dirt before he took photos of it.
Inscribed on it were these words: "This Hall has been raised by the
citizens of Bombay to commemorate their historic triumph of the 11
December 1918 under the brave and brilliant leadership of Mohmed [sic]
Ali Jinnah". By 2018, the plaque was gone.
History cannot be wiped out thus. From 1906 to 1947, Bombay witnessed
Jinnah’s contribution to India’s struggle for freedom, and for respect
for civil liberties. He is an important part of its history. Pakistan is
a monument to Jinnah’s tenacity and skill. India is a mute witness to
his greatness. His dreams lie buried in India as well as in Pakistan.
(The DAwn/Asia News Network)
The writer is an author and a lawyer based in Mumbai.

