Maharaja Hari Singh and Maharani Tara Devi
Dr.Karan Singh and Sheikh Abdullah
Maharaja Hari Singh
felt betrayed
·
The Ruler wrote to Patel on 31 January 1948
wishing to withdraw the accession
·
Dogra King’s only son Dr. Karan Singh makes
a comparison with the Greek Tragedy
Dr. Hari Desai (E-mail: haridesai@gmail.com)
writes weekly column “Heritage History” for “Asian Voice”, the Newsweekly of
ABPL Group, London 15-21 December 2019
Since last more than seven decades Jammu
and Kashmir is frequently in the air. Even during the British reign Maharaja
Hari Singh (23 September 1885- 26 April 1961), the ruler of the Princely State
since 1925, was always suspected for his anti-British stance and even when the
British were to leave India for ever, he aspired to have his own ‘Switzerland’.
His State was attacked by the Pakistan army sponsored “tribal soldiers from the
Frontier areas to make the attack look like a rebellion from within” in October
1947. The Dogra Maharaja who was biding his time had to decide in favour of
India to save his State in such grave emergency period. Hari Singh had
appointed Justice Mehr Chand Mahajan as his Prime Minister in September 1947
following Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel’s advice. Mahajan had “approach the Prime
Minister of India Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru for help when Pakistan had begun to
exert pressure on the Maharaja by orchestrating economic blockade”.
Sheikh Abdullah, the most popular leader of
the State, was behind the bar as he had given a “Quit Kashmir” campaign against
the Maharaja in 1946.
For Pandit Nehru the issue was personal
being a Kashmiri Pandit himself as well as this a public matter. Both Nehru and
Sheikh were keen that unless the popular Government was installed in Srinagar,
no declaration of accession to India be made. The Maharaja wrote to Sardar
Patel “requesting him to provide him with guns, connected stores and material
to blow up the Kohala Bridge. He had anticipated the Pakistani move and was
preparing in the hope that better sense will prevail in New Delhi where even
Sardar Patel did not agree to immediate accession without transfer of authority
to Sheikh Abdullah”, records Harbans Singh in his most authoritative biography
“Maharaja Hari Singh: The Troubled Years”. Finally, on the advice of the Sardar
the Maharaja released Sheikh as a gesture who had expressed his loyalty being
his subject.
When most of the Maharaja’s trusted Muslim
Army officers and soldiers deserted him and the attack from Pakistan side had
reached Baramulla with a design to abduct Hari Singh, on advice of V.P. Menon,
the Secretary of the States Ministry headed by Patel, the Maharaja left for
Jammu driving his car the whole night. The Maharaja signed the Instrument of
Accession to India on 26 October 1947 and the planes loaded with Indian army
officials and soldiers were flown to Srinagar.
Unfortunately, the Sheikh started showing
his true colours after he became Head of the Emergency Administration. Hari
Singh wrote to Patel on 1, January 1948 complaining about Sheikh and G. M. Shah
behaving as “virtual dictators and they have complete power”. Sheikh continued
“to poison already prejudiced mind of Nehru”. He was successful in making Maharaja
Hari Singh leave his own State in May-June 1949 appointing 18 year Yuvraj Karan
Singh as his Regent during his absence in the State. He was convinced by the
Sardar to leave the State. Even before that Maharaja had a second thought about
his decision to sign the Instrument of Accession to India. He wrote to Patel on
31, January 1948 with so much pain: “Sometimes I feel that I should withdraw
the accession that I have made to Indian Union.” In May 1949 when he was
invited to Delhi by Patel, in whom he put total faith, “had administered the
hammer blow to Maharaja”. Harbans writes: “Sardar Patel suggested that he
should announce he was leaving the State for a few months on the ground of
health.” On 20 June 1949, Maharaja Hari Singh signed a proclamation declaring
his Yuvraj Shri Karansinghji Bahadur as his Regent and left for Mumbai forever.
Even in his memorandum from Pune to the President of India Dr. Rajendra Prasad
in August 1952, the Maharaja described his painful experiences. Hari Singh
never could return to his State alive.
Former Sadr-e-Riyasat of Jammu and Kashmir
and the only son of the Maharaja Dr Karan Singh in his one of the interviews to
“Greater Kashmir” Daily in September 2016 asserted that pre-conditions for
holding a Plebiscite in Jammu and Kashmir were never fulfilled despite the fact
that a US admiral was appointed to monitor the process “My father was
considering which of the two dominions to join, but the tribal invasion changed
everything. Actually, the invasion forced my father to side with Union of
India. My father sought help, and India put condition of accession before my
father,” he said.
As far as the promise of plebiscite by
Nehru is concerned, the former Sadr-e-Riyasat said the promise was rebutted by
Nehru himself. “I believe plebiscite is an advisory and not a binding
resolution. Though a few clauses of the resolution are a binding like Pakistan
must withdraw its forces and then Indian army would also gradually pull out its
forces,” he said. While launching the biography of Maharaja Hari Singh written
by Harbans Singh in 2011, Dr. Singh compared his father’s story with the Greek
Tragedy. He could not open up his with anyone and if some sort of compromise
could have taken place between the Maharaja and Sheikh, the history of entire Asian
continent must have been different.
Next Column: Brothers-Sisters dominate
Indian Politics
Maharaja Hari Singh felt betrayed
Reviewed by Dr.Hari Desai
on
December 12, 2019
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