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Justice Party (India)

The Justice Party, officially the South Indian Liberal Federation, was a political party in the Madras Presidency of British India. It was established on 20 November 1916 in Victoria Public Hall in Madras by Dr C. Natesa Mudaliar and co-founded by T. M. Nair, P. Theagaraya Chetty and Alamelu Mangai Thayarammal as a result of a series of non-Brahmin conferences and meetings in the presidency. Communal division between Brahmins and non-Brahmins began in the presidency during the late-19th and early-20th century, mainly due to caste prejudices and disproportionate Brahminical representation in government jobs. The Justice Party's foundation marked the culmination of several efforts to establish an organisation to represent the non-Brahmins in Madras and is seen as the start of the Dravidian Movement.[2][3][4][5]

Justice Party
LeaderC. Natesa Mudaliar
PresidentTheagaroya Chetty


Raja of Panagal
B. Munuswamy Naidu
Raja of Bobbili
E. V. Ramasamy


P. T. Rajan
General SecretaryArcot Ramasamy Mudaliar[1]
FounderC. Natesa Mudaliar
T. M. Nair
Theagaroya Chetty
Founded1917
Dissolved27 August 1944
Preceded byMadras Dravidian Association
Succeeded byDravidar Kazhagam
HeadquartersMadras
NewspaperJustice
Dravidian
Andhra Prakasika
P. Balasubramania Mudaliar’s Sunday Observer
IdeologySocialism
Anti-Brahminism

During its early years, the party was involved in petitioning the imperial administrative bodies and British colonial officials demanding more representation for non-Brahmins in government. When a diarchial system of administration was established due to the 1919 Montagu–Chelmsford reforms, the Justice Party took part in presidential governance. In 1920, it won the first direct elections in the presidency and formed the government. For the next seventeen years, it formed four out of the five ministries and was in power for thirteen years. It was the main political alternative to the nationalist Indian National Congress in Madras. After it lost to the Congress in the 1937 election, it never recovered. It came under the leadership of Periyar E. V. Ramaswamy and his Self-Respect Movement. In 1944, Periyar transformed the Justice Party into the social organisation Dravidar Kazhagam and withdrew it from electoral politics. A rebel faction that called itself the original Justice Party, survived to contest one final election, in 1952.

The Justice Party was isolated in contemporary Indian politics by its many controversial activities. It opposed Brahmins in civil service and politics, and this anti-Brahmin attitude shaped many of its ideas and policies. It opposed Annie Besant and her Home rule movement, because it believed home rule would benefit the Brahmins. The party also campaigned against the non-cooperation movement in the presidency. It was at odds with M. K. Gandhi, primarily due to his praise for Brahminism. Its mistrust of the "Brahmin–dominated" Congress led it to adopt a hostile stance toward the Indian independence movement. The Justice Party's period in power is remembered for the introduction of caste-based reservations, and educational and religious reform. In opposition it is remembered for participating in the anti-Hindi agitations of 1937–40. The party had a role in creation of Andhra and Annamalai universities and for developing the area around present-day Theagaroya Nagar in Madras city. The Justice Party and the Dravidar Kazhagam are the ideological predecessors of present-day Dravidian parties like the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the All-India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, which have ruled Tamil Nadu (one of the successor states to Madras Presidency) continuously since 1967.

Background

Brahmin/non-Brahmin divide

The Brahmins in Madras Presidency enjoyed a higher position in India's social hierarchy. By the 1850s, Telugu and Tamil Brahmins comprising only 3.2% of the population began to increase their political power by filling most of the jobs which were open to Indian men at that time.[6] They dominated the administrative services and the newly created urban professions in the 19th and early 20th century.[7] The higher literacy and English language proficiency among Brahmins were instrumental in this ascendancy. The political, social, and economical divide between Brahmins and non-Brahmins became more apparent in the beginning of the 20th century. This breach was further exaggerated by Annie Besant and her Home Rule for India movement. The following table shows the distribution of selected jobs among different caste groups in 1912 in Madras Presidency.[6][8]

Caste group Deputy collectors Sub judges District Munsifs % of total
male population
Brahmins 77 15 93 3.2
non-Brahmin Hindus 30 3 25 85.6
Muslims 15 nil 2 6.6
Indian Christians 7 nil 5 2.7
Europeans and Eurasians 11 nil 3 .1

The dominance of Brahmins was also evident in the membership of the Madras Legislative Council. During 1910–20, eight out of the nine official members (appointed by the Governor of Madras) were Brahmins. Apart from the appointed members, Brahmins also formed the majority of the members elected to the council from the district boards and municipalities. During this period the Madras Province Congress Committee (regional branch of the Indian National Congress) was also dominated by Brahmins. Of the 11 major newspapers and magazines in the presidency, two (The Madras Mail and Madras Times) were run by Europeans sympathetic to the crown, three were evangelical non–political periodicals, four (The Hindu, Indian Review, Swadesamithran and Andhra Pathrika) were published by Brahmins while New India, run by Annie Besant was sympathetic to the Brahmins. This dominance was denounced by the non-Brahmin leaders in the form of pamphlets and open letters written to the Madras Governor. The earliest examples of such pamphlets are the ones authored by the pseudonymous author calling himself "fair play" in 1895. By the second decade of the 20th century, the Brahmins of the presidency were themselves divided into three factions.[9] These were the Mylapore faction comprising Chetpet Iyers and Vembakkam Iyengars, the Egmore faction led by the editor of The Hindu, Kasturi Ranga Iyengar and the Salem nationalists led by C. Rajagopalachari. A fourth non-Brahmin faction rose to compete with them and became the Justice party.[10]

British policies

Historians differ about the extent of British influence in the evolution of the non-Brahmin movement. Kathleen Gough argues that although the British played a role, the Dravidian movement had a bigger influence in South India.[11] Eugene F. Irschick (in Political and Social Conflict in South India; The non-Brahmin movement and Tamil Separatism, 1916–1929) holds the view that British colonial officials in India sought to encourage the growth of non-Brahminism, but does not characterise it as simply a product of that policy.[12][13] David. A. Washbrook disagrees with Irschick in The Emergence of Provincial Politics: The Madras Presidency 1870–1920, and states "Non-Brahminism became for a time synonymous with anti-nationalism—a fact which surely indicates its origins as a product of government policy."[14] Washbrook's portrayal has been contested by P. Rajaraman (in The Justice Party: a historical perspective, 1916–37), who argues that the movement was an inevitable result of longstanding "social cleavage" between Brahmins and non-Brahmins.[9]

The British role in the development of the non-Brahmin movement is broadly accepted by some historians. The statistics used by non-Brahmin leaders in their 1916 manifesto were prepared by senior Indian Civil Service officials for submission to the public services commission.[15] The Mylapore Brahmin faction rose to prominence in the early 20th century. The British, while acknowledging its usefulness, was wary and supported non-Brahmins for several government posts. They sought to counter the influence of the Mylaporean Brahmins by incorporating non-Brahmins in several government posts. An early example was the appointment of C. Sankaran Nair to a high court bench job in 1903 by Lord Ampthill solely because Nair was a non-Brahmin. The job fell vacant after Bashyam Iyengar left. V. Krishnaswami Iyer was expected to succeed him. He was a vocal opponent of the Mylapore Brahmins and advocated the induction of non-Brahmin members in the government. In 1912, under the influence of Sir Alexander Cardew, the Madras Secretariat, for the first time used Brahmin or non-Brahmin as a criterion for job appointments. By 1918, it was maintaining a list of Brahmins and non-Brahmins, preferring the latter.[14]

Early non-Brahmin associations in south india

Identity politics among linguistic groups was common in British India. In every area, some groups considered British rule more favourable than a Congress–led independent government.[16] In 1909, two lawyers, P. Subrahmanyam and M. Purushotham Naidu, announced plans to establish an organisation named "The Madras Non-Brahmin Association" and recruit a thousand non-Brahmin members before October 1909. They elicited no response from the non-Brahmin populace and the organisation never saw the light of the day. Later in 1912, disaffected non-Brahmin members of the bureaucracy like Saravana Pillai, G. Veerasamy Naidu, Doraiswami Naidu and S. Narayanaswamy Naidu established the "Madras United League" with C. Natesa Mudaliar as Secretary. The league restricted itself to social activities and distanced itself from contemporary politics. On 1 October 1912, the league was reorganised and renamed as the "Madras Dravidian Association". The association opened many branches in Madras city. Its main achievement was to establish a hostel for non-Brahmin students. It also organised annual "At-home" functions for non-Brahmin graduates and published books presenting their demands.[9]

Formation

 
Image taken in 1920s : Theagaroya Chetty is seated at the centre (to the immediate right of the girl). To his right is Arcot Ramaswamy Mudaliar. Also present are Raja of Panagal and Raja of Venkatagiri

In the 1916 elections to the Imperial Legislative Council, the non-Brahmin candidates T. M. Nair (from southern districts constituency) and P. Ramarayaningar (from landlords constituency) were defeated by the Brahmin candidates V. S. Srinivasa Sastri and K. V. Rangaswamy Iyengar. The same year P. Theagaraya Chetty and Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu lost to Brahmin candidates with Home Rule League support in local council elections. These defeats increased animosity and the formation of a political organisation to represent non-Brahmin interests.

On 20 November 1916, a gathering of non-Brahmin leaders and dignitaries met at the Advocate T.Ethirajulu Mudaliyar's residence in Vepery, Chennai. Diwan Bahadur Pitti Theagaraya Chettiar, Dr. T. M. Nair, Diwan Bahadur P. Rajarathina Mudaliyar, Dr. C. Nadesa Mudaliyar, Diwan Bahadur P. M. Sivagnana Mudaliar, Diwan Bahadur P. Ramaraya Ningar, Diwan Bahadur M. G. Aarokkiasami Pillai, Diwan Bahadur G. Narayanasamy Reddy, Rao Bahadur O. Thanikasalam Chettiar, Rao Bahadur M. C. Raja, Dr. Mohammed Usman Sahib, J. M. Nallusamipillai, Rao Bahadur K. Venkataretti Naidu (K. V. Reddy Naidu), Rao Bahadur A. B. Patro, T. Ethirajulu Mudaliyar, O. Kandasamy Chettiar, J. N. Ramanathan, Khan Bahadur A. K. G. Ahmed Thambi Marikkayar, Alarmelu Mangai Thayarmmal, A. Ramaswamy Mudaliyar, Diwan Bahadur Karunagara Menon, T. Varadarajulu Naidu, L. K. Thulasiram, K. Apparao Naidugaru, S. Muthaiah Mudaliyar and Mooppil Nair were among those present at the meeting.[17]

They established the South Indian People's Association (SIPA) to publish English, Tamil and Telugu newspapers to publicise grievances of non-Brahmins. Chetty became the secretary. Chetty and Nair had been political rivals in the Madras Corporation council, but Natesa Mudaliar was able to reconcile their differences. The meeting also formed the "South Indian Liberal Federation" (SILF) as a political movement. Dr. T. M. Nair and Pitti Theagaraya Chettiar were the co-founders of this movement. Rajarathna Mudaliyar was selected as the president. Ramaraya Ningar, Pitti Theagaraya Chettiar, A. K. G. Ahmed Thambi Marikkayar and M. G. Aarokkiasami Pillai were also selected as the vice-presidents. B. M. Sivagnana Mudaliyar, P. Narayanasamy Mudaliar, Mohammed Usman, M. Govindarajulu Naidu were selected as the secretaries. G. Narayanasamy Chettiar acted as treasurer. T. M. Nair was elected as one of the executive committee members.[17] Later, the movement came to be popularly called the "Justice Party", after the English daily Justice published by it. In December 1916, the association published "The Non Brahmin Manifesto", affirmed its loyalty and faith in the British Raj, but decried Brahminic bureaucratic dominance and urged for non-Brahmins to "press their claims as against the virtual domination of the Brahmin Caste".[9] The manifesto was harshly criticised by the nationalist newspaper The Hindu (on 20 December 1916):

It is with much pain and surprise that we have perused this document. It gives a manifestly unfair and distorted representation of many of the matters to which it makes reference. It can serve no purpose but it is bound to create bad blood between persons belonging to the Great Indian Community.[9]

 
The masthead of the English daily – Justice

The periodical Hindu Nesan, questioned the timing of the new association. The New Age (Home Rule Movement's newspaper) dismissed it and predicted its premature death. By February 1917, the SIPA joint stock company had raised money by selling 640 shares of one hundred rupees each. The money purchased a printing press and the group hired C. Karunakara Menon to edit a newspaper which was to be called Justice. However, negotiations with Menon broke down and Nair himself took over as honorary editor with P. N. Raman Pillai and M. S. Purnalingam Pillai as sub–editors. The first issue came out on 26 February 1917. A Tamil newspaper called Dravidan, edited by Bhaktavatsalam Pillai, was started in June 1917. The party also purchased the Telugu newspaper Andhra Prakasika (edited by A. C. Parthasarathi Naidu). Later in 1919, both were converted to weeklies due to financial constraints.[9]

On 19 August 1917, the first non-Brahmin conference was convened at Coimbatore under the presidency of Ramarayaningar. In the following months, several non-Brahmin conferences were organised. On 18 October, the party published its objectives (as formed by T. M. Nair) in The Hindu:

1) to create and promote the education, social, economic, political, material and moral progress of all communities in Southern India other than Brahmins 2)to discuss public questions and make a true and timely representation to Government of the views and interests of the people of Southern India with the object of safeguarding and promoting the interests of all communities other than Brahmins and 3) to disseminate by public lectures, by distribution of literature and by other means sound and liberal views in regard to public opinion.[18]

Between August and December 1917 (when the first confederation of the party was held), conferences were organised all over the Madras Presidency—at Coimbatore, Bikkavole, Pulivendla, Bezwada, Salem and Tirunelveli. These conferences and other meetings symbolised the arrival of the SILF as a non-Brahmin political organisation.[19]

Early history (1916–1920)

During 1916–20, the Justice party struggled against the Egmore and Mylapore factions to convince the British government and public to support communal representation for non-Brahmins in the presidency. Rajagopalachari's followers advocated non-cooperation with the British.[10]

Conflict with Home Rule Movement

In 1916, Annie Besant, the leader of the Theosophical Society became involved in the Indian independence movement and founded the Home Rule League. She based her activities in Madras and many of her political associates were Tamil Brahmins. She viewed India as a single homogeneous entity bound by similar religious, philosophical, cultural characteristics and an Indian caste system. Many of the ideas she articulated about Indian culture were based on puranas, manusmriti and vedas, whose values were questioned by educated non Brahmins. Even before the League's founding, Besant and Nair had clashed over an article in Nair's medical journal Antiseptic, questioning the sexual practices of the theosophist Charles Webster Leadbeater. In 1913, Besant lost a defamation suit against Nair over the article.[9][20]

Besant's association with Brahmins and her vision of a homogeneous India based on Brahminical values brought her into direct conflict with Justice. The December 1916 "Non-Brahmin Manifesto" voiced its opposition to the Home Rule Movement. The manifesto was criticised by the Home rule periodical New India. Justice opposed the Home Rule Movement and the party newspapers derisively nicknamed Besant as the "Irish Brahmini". Dravidan, the Tamil language mouthpiece of the party, ran headlines such as Home rule is Brahmin's rule. All three of the party's newspapers ran articles and opinions pieces critical of the home rule movement and the league on a daily basis. Some of these Justice articles were later published in book form as The Evolution of Annie Besant. Nair described the home rule movement as an agitation carried on "by a white woman particularly immune from the risks of government action" whose rewards would be reaped by the Brahmins.[9][20]

Demand for communal representation

On 20 August 1917, Edwin Montagu, the Secretary of State for India, proposed political reforms to increase representation of Indians in the government and to develop self-governing institutions. This announcement increased the division among the non-Brahmin political leaders of the Presidency. Justice organised a series of conferences in late August to support its claims. Theagaraya Chetty, cabled Montagu asking for communal representation in the provincial legislature for non-Brahmins. He demanded a system similar to the one granted to Muslims by the Minto–Morley Reforms of 1909—separate electorates and reserved seats. The non-Brahmin members from Congress formed the Madras Presidency Association (MPA) to compete with Justice. Periyar E. V. Ramasamy, T. A. V. Nathan Kalyanasundaram Mudaliar, P. Varadarajulu Naidu and Kesava Pillai were among the non-Brahmin leaders involved in creating MPA. MPA was supported by the Brahmin nationalist newspaper The Hindu. Justice denounced MPA as a Brahmin creation intended to weaken their cause.[9][19][21] On 14 December 1917, Montagu arrived at Madras to listen to comments on the proposed reforms. O. Kandaswami Chetty (Justice) and Kesava Pillai (MPA) and 2 other non-Brahmin delegations presented to Montagu. Justice and MPA both requested communal reservation for Balija Naidus, Pillais and Mudaliars (Vellalas), Chettis and the Panchamas—along with four Brahmin groups. Pillai convinced the Madras Province Congress Committee to support the MPA/Justice position. British colonial authorities, including Governor Baron Pentland and theMadras Mail supported communal representation. But Montagu was not inclined to extend communal representation to subgroups. The Montagu–Chelmsford Report on Indian Constitutional Reforms, issued on 2 July 1918, denied the request.[9][19][21]

At a meeting held in Thanjavur, the party dispatched T. M. Nair to London to lobby for extending communal representation. Dr. Nair arrived in June 1918 and worked into December, attended various meetings, addressed Members of Parliament (MPs), and wrote articles and pamphlets. However, the party refused to cooperate with the Southborogh committee that was appointed to draw up the franchise framework for the proposed reforms, because Brahmins V. S. Srinivasa Sastri and Surendranath Banerjee were committee members. Justice secured the support of many Indian and non–Indian members of Indian Civil Service for communal representation.[19][22]

The Joint Select Committee held hearings during 1919–20 to finalise the Government of India Bill, which would implement the reforms. A Justice delegation composed of Arcot Ramasamy Mudaliar, Kurma Venkata Reddi Naidu, Koka Appa Rao Naidu and L. K. Tulasiram, attended the hearings. Ramarayaningar also represented the All India Landholder association and the Madras Zamindar association. Reddi Naidu, Mudaliar and Ramarayaningar toured major cities, addressed meetings, met with MPs, and wrote letters to the local newspapers to advance their position. Nair died on 17 July 1919 before he could appear. After Nair's death, Reddi Naidu became the spokesman. He testified on 22 August. The deputation won the backing of both Liberal and Labour members. The committee's report, issued on 17 November 1919, recommended communal representation in the Madras Presidency. The number of reserved seats was to be decided by the local parties and the Madras Government. After prolonged negotiations between Justice, Congress, MPA and the British colonial government, a compromise (called "Meston's Award") was reached in March 1920. 28 (3 urban and 25 rural) of the 63 general seats in plural member constituencies were reserved for non-Brahmins.[19][22]

Opposition to non-cooperation movement

Unsatisfied with the Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms and the March 1919 Rowlatt Act, Mahatma Gandhi launched his non-cooperation movement in 1919. He called for a boycott of the legislatures, courts, schools and social functions. Non-cooperation did not appeal to Justice, which sought to leverage continued British presence by participating in the new political system. Justice considered Gandhi to be an anarchist threatening social order. The party newspapers Justice, Dravidan and Andhra Prakasika persistently attacked non-cooperation. Party member Mariadas Ratnaswami wrote critically of Gandhi and his campaign against industrialisation in a pamphlet named The political philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi in 1920. K. V. Reddi Naidu also fought non-cooperation.[23][24]

This stance isolated the party—most political and social organisations supported the movement. Justice Party's believed that he associated mostly with Brahmins, though he was not a Brahmin himself. It also favoured industrialisation. When Gandhi visited Madras in April 1921, he spoke about the virtues of Brahminism and Brahmin contributions to Indian culture.[24] Justice responded:

The meeting was presided over by local Brahmin politicians of Gandhi persuasion, and Mr. Gandhi himself was surrounded by Brahmins of both sexes. A band of them came to the meeting singing hymns. They broke coconut in front of Gandhi, burnt camphor and presented him with holy water in silver basin. There were other marks of deification and, naturally, the vanity of the man was flattered beyond measure. He held forth on the glories of Brahminism and Brahminical culture. Not even knowing even the elements of Dravidian culture, Dravidian philosophy, Dravidian literature, Dravidian languages, and Dravidian history, this Gujarati gentleman extolled the Brahmins to the skies at the expense of non-Brahmins; and the Brahmins present must have been supremely pleased and elated.[24]

Kandaswamy Chetty sent a letter to the editor of Gandhi's journal Young India, advising him to stay away from Brahmin/non-Brahmin issues. Gandhi responded by highlighting his appreciation of Brahmin contribution to Hinduism and said, "I warn the correspondents against separating the Dravidian south from Aryan north. The India today is a blend not only of two, but of many other cultures." The party's relentless campaign against Gandhi, supported by the Madras Mail made him less popular and effective in South India, particularly in southern Tamil districts. Even when Gandhi suspended the movement after the Chauri Chaura incident, party newspapers expressed suspicion of him. The party softened on Gandhi only after his arrest, expressing appreciation for his "moral worth and intellectual capacity".[24]

In office

The Government of India Act 1919 implemented the Montagu-Chelmsford reforms, instituting a Diarchy in Madras Presidency. The diarchial period extended from 1920 to 1937, encompassing five elections. Justice party was in power for 13 of 17 years, save for an interlude during 1926–30.

1920–26

During the non-cooperation campaign, the Indian National Congress boycotted the November 1920 elections.[25] Justice won 63 of the 98 seats.[26] A. Subbarayalu Reddiar became the first Chief Minister, soon resigning due to declining health. Ramarayaningar (Raja of Panagal), the Minister of Local Self-Government and Public Health replaced him.[27] The party was far from happy with the diarchial system.[23] In his 1924 deposition to the Muddiman committee, Cabinet Minister Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu expressed the party's displeasure:

I was a Minister of Development without the forests. I was a Minister of Agriculture minus Irrigation. As a Minister of Agriculture I had nothing to do with the Madras Agriculturists Loan Act or the Madras Land Improvement Loans Act... The efficacy and efficiency of a Minister of Agriculture without having anything to do with irrigation, agricultural loans, land improvement loans and famine relief, may better be imagined than described. Then again, I was Minister of Industries without factories, boilers, electricity and water power, mines or labor, all of which are reserved subjects.[23]

Internal dissent emerged and the party split in late 1923, when C. R. Reddy resigned and formed a splinter group and allied with Swarajists who were in opposition. The party won the second council elections in 1923 (though with a reduced majority). On the first day (27 November 1923) of the new session, a no-confidence motion was defeated 65–44 and Ramarayaningar remained in power until November 1926.[23][28][29] The party lost in 1926 to Swaraj. The Swaraj party refused to form the government, leading the Governor to set up an independent government under P. Subbarayan.[30][31]

1930–37

 
Image taken in 1930s : (starting fifth from left after the woman) Periyar E. V. Ramasamy, C. Natesa Mudaliar, Raja of Bobbili and S. Kumaraswami Reddiar

After four years in opposition, Justice returned to power. Chief Minister B. Munuswamy Naidu's tenure was beset with controversies.[32] The Great Depression was at its height and the economy was crumbling. Floods inundated the southern districts. The government increased the land tax to compensate for the fall in revenues.[33] The Zamindars (landowners) faction was disgruntled because two prominent landlords—the Raja of Bobbili and the Kumara Raja of Venkatagiri— were excluded from the cabinet. In 1930, P. T. Rajan and Naidu has differences over the presidency and Naidu did not hold the annual party confederation for three years. Under M. A. Muthiah Chettiar, the Zamindars organised a rebel "ginger group" in November 1930. In the twelfth annual confederation of the party held on 10–11 October 1932, the rebel group deposed Naidu and replaced him with the Raja of Bobbili. Fearing that the Bobbili faction would move a no-confidence motion against him in the council, Naidu resigned in November 1932 and the Rao became Chief Minister.[33] After his removal from power, Munuswamy Naidu formed a separate party with his supporters. It was called Justice Democratic Party and had the support of 20 opposition members in the legislative council. His supporters rejoined the Justice party after his death in 1935. During this time, party Leader L. Sriramulu Naidu served as Mayor of Madras.[23][34][35][36]

Decline

Increasing nationalist feelings and factional infighting caused the party to shrink steadily from the early 1930s. Many leaders left to join Congress. Rao as inaccessible to his own party members and tried to curtail the powers of district leaders who had been instrumental in the party's previous successes. The party was seen as collaborators, supporting the British colonial government's measures to counter the independence movement. Its economic policies were also very unpopular. Its refusal to decrease land taxation in non-Zamindari areas by 12.5% provoked peasant protests led by Congress. Rao, a Zamindar, cracked down on protests, fueling popular rage. The party lost the 1934 elections, but managed to retain power as a minority government because Swaraj (the political arm of the Congress) refused to participate.[23][35]

In its last years in power, the party's decline continued. The Justice ministers drew a large monthly salary (Rs. 4,333.60, compared to the Rs. 2,250 in the Central Provinces) at the height of the Great Depression which was sharply criticised by the Madras press including Madras Mail, a traditional backer of the party, attacked its ineptitude and patronage.[37] The extent of the discontent against the Justice government is reflected in an article of Zamin Ryot:

The Justice Party has disgusted the people of this presidency like plague and engendered permanent hatred in their hearts. Everybody, therefore, is anxiously awaiting the fall of the Justice regime which they consider tyrannical and inauguration of the Congress administration...Even old women in villages ask as to how long the ministry of the Raja of Bobbili would continue.[37]

Lord Erskine, the governor of Madras, reported in February 1937 to then Secretary of State Zetland that among the peasants, "every sin of omission or commission of the past fifteen years is put down to them [Bobbili's administration]". Faced with a resurgent Congress, the party was trounced in the 1937 council and assembly elections. After 1937 it ceased to be a political power.[23][37]

Justice's final defeat has been ascribed variously to[38] its collaboration with the British colonial government; the elitist nature of the Justice party members,[39] loss of scheduled caste and Muslim support and flight of the social radicals to the Self-Respect Movement or in sum,[40] "...internal dissension, ineffective organisation, inertia and lack of proper leadership".[23][37]

In opposition

Justice was in opposition from 1926 to 1930 and again from 1937 until it transformed itself to Dravidar Kazhagam in 1944.

1926–30

In the 1926 elections, Swaraj emerged as the largest party, but refused to form the government because of its opposition to dyarchy. Justice declined power because it did not have enough seats and due to clashes with governor Viscount Goschen over issues of power and patronage. Goschen turned to the nationalist independent members. Unaffiliated, P. Subbarayan was appointed Chief Minister. Goschen nominated 34 members to the council to support the new ministry. Initially Justice joined Swaraj in opposing "government by proxy". In 1927, they moved a no confidence motion against Subbarayan that was defeated with the help of the Governor–nominated members. Halfway through the ministry's term, Goschen convinced Justice to support the ministry. This change came during the Simon Commission's visit to assess the political reforms.[23] After the death of Ramarayaningar in December 1928, Justice broke into two factions: the Constitutionalists and the Ministerialists. The Ministerialists were led by N. G. Ranga and favoured allowing Brahmins to join the party.[41] A compromise was reached at the eleventh annual confederation of the party and B. Munuswamy Naidu was elected as the president.[18]

1936–44

After its crushing defeat at the hands in 1937, Justice lost political influence. The Raja of Bobbili temporarily retired to tour Europe.[42] The new Congress government under C. Rajagopalachari introduced compulsory Hindi instruction. Under A. T. Panneerselvam (one of the few Justice leaders to have escaped defeat in the 1937 elections)[43] Justice joined Periyar E. V. Ramasamy's Self-Respect Movement (SRM) to oppose the government's move. The resulting anti-Hindi agitation, brought the party effectively under Periyar's control. When Rao's term ended, Periyar became president on 29 December 1938. Periyar, a former Congressman, had a previous history of cooperation with the party. He had left Congress in 1925 after accusing the party of Brahminism. SRM cooperated closely with Justice in opposing Congress and Swaraj. Periyar had even campaigned for Justice candidates in 1926 and 1930. For a few years in the early 1930s, he switched from Justice to the communists. After the Communist party was banned in July 1934, he returned to supporting Justice.[23][44] The anti-Hindi agitations revived Justice's sagging fortunes. On 29 October 1939, Rajagopalachari's Congress government resigned, protesting India's involvement in World War II. Madras provincial government was placed under governor's rule. On 21 February 1940 Governor Erskine cancelled compulsory Hindi instruction.[45]

Under Periyar's leadership, the party embraced the secession of Dravidistan (or Dravida Nadu). At the 14th annual confederation (held in December 1938), Periyar became party leader and a resolution passed pressing Tamil people's right to a sovereign state, under the direct control of the Secretary of State for India.[46] In 1939, Periyar organised the Dravida Nadu Conference for the advocacy of a "separate, sovereign and federal republic of Dravida Nadu". Speaking on 17 December 1939, he raised the slogan "Dravida Nadu for Dravidians" replacing the "Tamil Nadu for Tamils" that had been used earlier (since 1938).[47] The demand for "Dravidistan" was repeated at the 15th annual confederation in August 1940.[48] On 10 August 1941, Periyar stopped the agitation for Dravida Nadu to help the government in its war efforts. When the Cripps Mission visited India, a Justice delegation, comprising Periyar, W. P. A. Soundarapandian Nadar, N. R. Samiappa Mudaliar and Muthiah Chettiar, met the mission on 30 March 1942 and demanded a separate Dravidian nation. Cripps responded that secession would be possible only through a legislative resolution or through a general referendum.[49][50] During this period, Periyar declined efforts in 1940 and in 1942 to bring Justice to power with Congress' support.[51]

Transformation into Dravidar Kazhagam

Periyar withdrew the party from electoral politics and converted it into a social reform organisation. He explained, "If we obtain social self-respect, political self-respect is bound to follow".[51] Periyar's influence pushed Justice into anti-Brahmin, anti-Hindu and atheistic stances. During 1942–44, Periyar's opposition to the Tamil devotional literary works Kamba Ramayanam and Periya Puranam, caused a break with Saivite Tamil scholars, who had joined the anti-Hindi agitations. Justice had never possessed much popularity among students, but started making inroads with C. N. Annadurai's help.[52][53] A group of leaders became uncomfortable with Periyar's leadership and policies and formed a rebel group that attempted to dethrone Periyar. This group included P. Balasubramanian (editor of The Sunday Observer), R. K. Shanmugam Chettiar, P. T. Rajan and A. P. Patro, C. L. Narasimha Mudaliar, Damodaran Naidu and K. C. Subramania Chettiar. A power struggle developed between the pro and anti-Periyar factions. On 27 December 1943, the rebel group convened the party's executive committee and criticised Periyar for not holding an annual meeting after 1940. To silence his critics Periyar decided to convene the confederation.[54]

On 27 August 1944, Justice's sixteenth annual confederation took place in Salem[55] where the pro-Periyar faction won control. The confederation passed resolutions compelling party members to: renounce British honours and awards such as Rao Bahadur and Diwan Bahadur, drop caste suffixes from their names, resign nominated and appointed posts. The party also took the name Dravidar Kazhagam (DK). Annadurai, who had played an important role in passing the resolutions, became the general secretary of the transformed organisation. Most members joined the Dravidar Kazhagam.[56][57] A few dissidents like P. T. Rajan, Manapparai Thirumalaisami and M. Balasubramania Mudaliar did not accept the new changes.[42] Led at first by B. Ramachandra Reddi and later by P. T. Rajan, they formed a party claiming to be the original Justice party. This party made overtures to the Indian National Congress and supported the Quit India Movement. The Justice Party also lent its support to Congress candidates in the elections to the Constituent Assembly of India. It contested nine seats in the 1952 Assembly elections. P. T. Rajan was the sole successful candidate.[58] The party also fielded M. Balasubramania Mudaliar from the Madras Lok Sabha constituency in the 1952 Lok Sabha elections. Despite losing the election to T. T. Krishnamachari of the Indian National Congress, Mudaliar polled 63,254 votes and emerged runner-up. This new Justice party did not contest elections after 1952. In 1968, the party celebrated its Golden Jubilee at Madras.[59]

Electoral performance

Elections Total seats up for election[60] Seats won Total seats available for nomination[61] Members nominated Result Party President
1920 98 63 29 18 Won Theagaroya Chetty
1923 98 44 29 17 Won Theagaroya Chetty
1926 98 21 34 0 Lost Raja of Panagal
1930 98 35 34 Won B. Munuswamy Naidu
1934 98 34 Lost[62] Raja of Bobbili
1937 215 18 46 7 Lost Raja of Bobbili
1939–1946 No elections held E. V. Ramasamy
1946 215 0 46 0 Did not participate P. T. Rajan
1952 375[63] 1 NA NA Lost P. T. Rajan

Organisation

The Justice party's first officeholders were elected in October 1917. Arcot Ramaswamy Mudaliar was the party's first general secretary. The party began writing a constitution in 1920, adopting it on 19 December 1925 during its ninth confederation. An 18 October 1917 notice in The Hindu, outlining the party's policies and goals was the nearest it had to a constitution in its early years.[18][64]

Madras City was the centre of the party's activities. It functioned from its office at Mount Road, where party meetings were held. Apart from the head office, several branch offices operated in the city. By 1917, the party had established offices at all the district headquarters in the presidency, periodically visited by the Madras–based leaders. The party had a 25–member executive committee, a president, four vice-presidents, a general secretary and a treasurer. After the 1920 elections, some attempts were made to mimic European political parties. A chief whip was appointed and Council members formed committees. Article 6 of the constitution made the party president the undisputed leader of all non-Brahmin affiliated associations and party members in the legislative council. Article 14 defined the membership and role of the executive committee and tasked the general secretary with implementing executive committee decisions. Article 21 specified that a "provincial confederation" of the party be organised annually, although as of 1944, 16 confederations had been organised in 27 years.[18][64]

The following is the list of presidents of the Justice Party and their terms:[18][64]

President of Justice Party[65] Term start Term end
Sir P. Theagaroya Chetty 1917 23 June 1925
Raja of Panagal 1925 16 December 1928
P. Munuswamy Naidu 6 August 1929 11 October 1932
Raja of Bobbili 11 October 1932 29 December 1938
E. V. Ramaswami 29 December 1938 27 August 1944
B. Ramachandra Reddi 1944 1945
P. T. Rajan 1945 1957

Works

Legislative initiatives

 
A cartoon from 19 March 1923, evaluating the first Justice Ministry. It mentions Prohibition, Andhra University, irrigation schemes, industrial development and more local self-government among the unfulfilled expectations of the people.

During its years in power, Justice passed a number of laws with lasting impact. Some of its legislative initiatives were still in practice as of 2009. On 16 September 1921, the first Justice government passed the first communal government order (G. O. # 613), thereby becoming the first elected body in the Indian legislative history to legislate reservations, which have since become standard.[66][67][68] The Madras Hindu Religious Endowment Act, introduced on 18 December 1922 and passed in 1925, brought many Hindu Temples under the direct control of the state government. This Act set the precedent for later Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowment (HR & CE) Acts and the current policy of Tamil Nadu.[68][69]

The Government of India Act of 1919 prohibited women from becoming legislators. The first Justice Government reversed this policy on 1 April 1921. Voter qualifications were made gender neutral. This resolution cleared the way for Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddi's nomination to the council in 1926, when she became the first woman to become a member of any legislature in India. In 1922, during the first Justice ministry (before relationships with Scheduled Castes soured), the Council officially replaced the terms "Panchamar" or "Paraiyar" (which were deemed derogatory) with "Adi Dravidar" to denote the Scheduled Castes of the presidency.[68]

The Madras Elementary Education Act of 1920 introduced compulsory education for boys and girls and increased elementary education funding. It was amended in 1934 and 1935. The act penalised parents for withdrawing their children from schools. The Madras University Act of 1923 expanded the administrative body of the University of Madras and made it more representative. In 1920 the Madras Corporation introduced the Mid-day Meal Scheme with the approval of the legislative council. It was a breakfast scheme in a corporation school at Thousand Lights, Madras. Later it expanded to four more schools. This was the precursor to the free noon meal schemes introduced by K. Kamaraj in the 1960s and expanded by M. G. Ramachandran in the 1980s.

The State Aid to Industries Act, passed in 1922 and amended in 1935, advanced loans for the establishment of industries. The Malabar Tenancy Act of 1931 (first introduced in September 1926), controversially strengthened the legal rights of agricultural tenants and gave them the "right to occupy (land) in some cases".[68]

Universities

Rivalry between the Tamil and Telugu members of Justice party led to the establishment of two universities. The rivalry had existed since the party's inception and was aggravated during the first justice ministry because Tamil members were excluded from the cabinet. When the proposal to set up Andhra University (long demanded by leaders like Konda Venkatapayya and Pattabi Sitaramaya) was first raised in 1921, it was opposed by Tamil members including C. Natesa Mudaliar. The Tamils argued that it was hard to define Andhras or the Andhra University. To appease the disgruntled Tamil members like J. N. Ramanathan and Raja of Ramnad, Theagaraya Chetty inducted a Tamil member T. N. Sivagnanam Pillai in the second Justice ministry in 1923. This cleared the way for the passage of Andhra University Bill on 6 November 1925, with Tamil support. The institution opened in 1926 with C. R. Reddy as its first vice-chancellor.[70] This led to calls for the establishment of a separate, Tamil, university, because the Brahmin–dominated Madras University did not welcome non-Brahmins. On 22 March 1926, a Tamil University Committee chaired by Sivagnanam Pillai began to study feasibility and in 1929 Annamalai University opened. It was named for Annamalai Chettiar who provided a large endowment.[70][71]

Infrastructure

 
Map of Madras city in 1921, before the draining of Long Tank
 
Madras city in 1955, after Long Tank had been drained out

The second Justice Chief Minister, Ramarayaningar's years in power saw improvements to the infrastructure of the city of Madras – particularly the development of the village of Theagaroya Nagar. His administration implemented the Madras Town Planning Act of 7 September 1920, creating residential colonies to cope with the city'srapid population growth.[72]

The Long Tank, a 5 km (3.1 mi) long and 2 km (1.2 mi) wide water body, formed an arc along the city's western frontier from Nungambakkam to Saidapet and was drained in 1923.[73] Development west of the Long Tank had been initiated by the British colonial government in 1911 with the construction of a railway station at the village of Marmalan/Mambalam.[73] Ramarayaningar created a residential colony adjoining this village. The colony was named "Theagaroya Nagar" or T. Nagar after just–deceased Theagaroya Chetty.[73] T. Nagar centered around a park named Panagal Park after Ramarayaningar, the Raja of Panagal.[73] The streets and other features in this new neighbourhood were named after prominent officials and party members, including Mohammad Usman, Muhammad Habibullah, O. Thanikachalam Chettiar, Natesa Mudaliar and W. P. A. Soundarapandian Nadar).[73][74][75] Justice governments also initiated slum clearance schemes and built housing colonies and public bathing houses in the congested areas. They also established the Indian School of Medicine in 1924 to research and promote Ayurveda, Siddha and Unani schools of traditional medicine.[68][76]

Political legacy

The Justice party served as a non-Brahmin political organisation. Though non-Brahmin movements had been in existence since the late 19th century, Justice was the first such political organisation. The party's participation in the governing process under dyarchy taught the value of parliamentary democracy to the educated elite of the Madras state . Justice and Dravidar Kazhagam were the political forerunners of the present day Dravidian parties such as Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, which have ruled Tamil Nadu (a successor state Madras Presidency) without interruption since 1967.[12][13][23]

Controversies

Attitude towards Brahmins

The Justice party began as a political organisation to represent the interests of non-Brahmins. Initially it did not accept Brahmins as party members. However, along with other groups including Europeans, they were allowed to attend meetings as observers.[77] After the defeat in 1926, calls were made to make the party more inclusive and more nationalist in character. Opponents, especially Periyar E. V. Ramasamy's self-respect faction protected the original policy. At a tripartite conference between Justice, Ministerialists and Constitutionalists in 1929, a resolution was adopted recommending the removal of restrictions on Brahmins joining the organisation. In October 1929, the executive committee placed a resolution to this effect for approval before the party's eleventh annual confederation at Nellore.[41] Supporting the resolution, Munuswamy Naidu spoke as follows:

So long as we exclude one community, we cannot as a political speak on behalf of or claim to represent all the people of our presidency. If, as we hope, provincial autonomy is given to the provinces as a result of the reforms that may be granted, it should be essential that our Federation should be in a position to claim to be a truly representative body of all communities. What objection can there be to admit such Brahmins as are willing to subscribe to the aims and objects of our Federation? It may be that the Brahmins may not join even if the ban is removed. But surely our Federation will not thereafter be open to objection on the ground that it is an exclusive organization.[41]

Former education minister A. P. Patro supported Naidu's view. However this resolution was vehemently opposed by Periyar and R. K. Shanmukham Chetty and failed. Speaking against letting Brahmins into the party, Periyar explained:

At a time when non-Brahmins in other parties were gradually coming over to the Justice Party, being fed up with the Brahmin's methods and ways of dealing with political questions, it was nothing short of folly to think of admitting him into the ranks of the Justice Party.[41]

The party began to accept Brahmin members only in October 1934.[44]

The pressure to compete with the Justice party forced the Congress party to let more non-Brahmins into the party power structure. The party's policies disrupted the established social hierarchy and increased the animosity between the Brahmin and non-Brahmin communities.[13]

Nationalism

The Justice party was loyal to the British Empire. In its early years, Justice opposed the Indian Home Rule movement. It did not send representatives to the Central Legislative Assembly, the national parliamentary body. During 1916–20, it focused on obtaining communal representation and participating in the political process. During the non-cooperation period, it joined with the Madras Mail in opposing and denouncing Gandhi and the nationalists.[20][64] Sir Theagaraya Chetty, President of the party from 1916 to 1924, publicly expressed his view on the floor of the assembly that "political prisoners were worser than dacoits and robbers" amidst opposition from nationalists including members of his own party as A. P. Patro.[78] The then Justice Party government headed by the Raja of Panagal banned the publication and distribution of poems written by Indian nationalist Subramanya Bharathy.[79] However, by the mid-1920s, the party adopted more nationalist policies. It discarded its earlier disdain of spinning thread by hand and Swadeshi economics. In 1925, the party's annual confederation passed a resolution supporting "indigenous industries" and "swadeshi enterprise". This shift enabled Justice to better compete against Swaraj to whom Justice was slowly losing ground.[80] The term "Swaraj" (or self-rule) itself was included in the constitution. Madras branch president C. R. Reddy led this change. To Justicites, Swaraj meant partial self-government under British rule, not independence. The constitution stated: ".. to obtain Swaraj for India as a component of the British Empire at as early a date as possible by all peaceful and legitimate and constitutional means.."

The historical record does not clearly indicate whether Justice condemned the Jallianwala Bagh massacre.[18][24][81] The party's shift toward nationalist policies was reversed in the 1930s, during the terms of Munusamy Naidu and Raja of Bobbili. During the civil disobedience campaign, the Justice governments did not protest the polices' harsh measures.[37] However, with nationalism growing in the country and a string of Congress victories in local elections in 1934, the party reversed course again towards nationalism. Justice turned to Periyar E. V. Ramaswamy as its champion. Ramaswamy had drifted away in the early 1930s. In exchange for their support in campaigning and propaganda, the Justicites included the Self-Respect movement's socialist "Erode" program in their election manifesto. The new program had much in common with Congress' nationalist policies such as Prohibition.[35]

Rumors about Justice Party

Justice party, which had captured power in 1920, claiming to represent all non-Brahmins in the presidency gradually lost the support of many communities. Under Theagaraya Chetty and later Panaganti Ramarayaningar, the party came to represent a few non-Brahmin Shudra castes, alienating Scheduled Castes and Muslims. During the first Justice ministry, Muslim council members supported the government, but withdrew in a disagreement over appointments.[82] Explaining the Muslim disillusionment with the Justice party, Abbas Ali Khan, a Muslim member said in late 1923:

I have found out from actual experience that whenever the question of experience came in, they always preferred a Mudaliar, a Nayudu, a Chettiar, or a Pillai but not a Muhamaddan[82]

Justice party never regained Muslim support, because it failed to convince the group that high-caste Hindus had not received a disproportionate allocation of jobs opened up by communal reservation.[83]

The fracture with Scheduled Castes came during the same time period. After T. M. Nair's death, Adi Dravidas were slowly pushed out of the party. The "Pulianthope incidents" (also called as the "B&C Mill strike") soured the relationship of non-Brahmin Sudra castes like Vellalas, Beri Chettis, Balija Naidus, Kammas and Kapus with Paraiyars. On 11 May 1921, bots and caste Hindus went on strike in the Carnatic textile mill. On 20 June, workers in Buckingham Mill followed. The Paraiyars were quickly persuaded to end the strike, but the caste Hindus continued to strike. This created animosity between the two groups. In an ensuing clash between the police and caste Hindus, several were killed. Justice leaders accused the Government of creating problems by pampering the Paraiyars.[24] The party paper Justice claimed:

Public opinion...holds the present deplorable state of affairs has been brought about partly at all events by the undue pampering of the Adi-Dravidas by the officials of the Labour department, and partly by the, perhaps, unconscious encouragement given to them by some police officers.[24]

O. Thanikachala Chetty raised this issue in Madras Legislative Council on 12 October, which led to an acrimonious debate between Justice members and S. Srinivasa Iyengar, a Brahmin law member of the Governor's executive council and Lionel Davidson, the Home member. Davidson blamed Justice, saying, "it is no longer merely a labour dispute confined to strikers and non-strikers, but a faction fight inflamed by caste prejudices." M. C. Rajah, the main representative of Scheduled Castes in the Council agreed with Davidson. An Adi Dravida reader of the Madras Mail condemned Justice in the same way that T. M. Nair had once condemned the Brahmins. Soon after the Pulianthope incidents, Rajah and Paraiyars left the party.[24][84]

Notes

  1. ^ Encyclopedia of Political parties. p.152
  2. ^ Kavitha Muralidharan (20 November 2016). "100 years of Justice Party, a movement which defined Tamil Nadu politics". The NewsMinute. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  3. ^ Joshua Fishman; Ofelia Garcia (2010). Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity:The Success-Failure Continuum in Language and Ethnic Identity Efforts (Volume 2): The Success-Failure Continuum in Language and Ethnic Identity Efforts. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 230–. ISBN 978-0-19-539245-6. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  4. ^ Manuraj Shunmugasundaram (22 November 2016). "A century of reform The Dravidian movement has left its progressive imprint on Tamil Nadu". The Indian Express. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  5. ^ "The Inner Grammar of Dissent Lives". K.S. Chalam. Outlook India. 12 December 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b Irschick 1969, pp. 1–26
  7. ^ Myron Weiner and Ergun Ozbudun (1987). Competitive elections in developing countries. American Enterprise Institute. p. 61. ISBN 0-8223-0766-9.
  8. ^ K. Nambi Arooran (1980). Tamil renaissance and Dravidian nationalism, 1905–1944. p. 37.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rajaraman 1988, ch. 2 (The Genesis of the Justice Party)
  10. ^ a b Irschick 1986, pp. 30–31
  11. ^ Kathleen Gough (1981). Rural society in Southeast India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 144. ISBN 978-0-521-23889-2.
  12. ^ a b Rajaraman 1988, ch. 8 (Conclusion)
  13. ^ a b c Irschick 1969, pp. 351–357
  14. ^ a b Washbrook, David A. (1977). The Emergence of Provincial Politics: The Madras Presidency 1870–1920. Cambridge University Press. pp. 283–285. ISBN 978-0-521-05345-7.
  15. ^ Baker, Christopher John (1976). The Politics of South India 1920–1937. Cambridge University Press. pp. 31–32. ISBN 978-0-521-20755-3.
  16. ^ John R. McLane (1970). The political awakening in India. Prentice-Hall. Inc, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. p. 161.
  17. ^ a b R., Muthukumar (1 December 2010). "3.தென்னிந்திய நலவுரிமைச் சங்கம்". Dravida Iyakka Varalaru – Part 1 (in Tamil). Chennai: Kizhakku Pathippagam. ISBN 9788184935981.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Rajaraman 1988, ch. 4 (Ideology, Organisation and Programme of the Justice Party)
  19. ^ a b c d e Rajaraman 1988, ch. 3 (The Era of Dr. T. M. Nair)
  20. ^ a b c Irschick 1969, pp. 27–54
  21. ^ a b Irschick 1969, pp. 55–88
  22. ^ a b Irschick 1969, pp. 89–136
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rajaraman 1988, ch. 5 (History of the Justice Party from 1920 to 1937)
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h Irschick 1969, pp. 182–193
  25. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 179
  26. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 180
  27. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 182
  28. ^ Sundararajan 1989, pp. 334–339
  29. ^ Krishnaswamy, S. (1989). The role of Madras Legislature in the freedom struggle, 1861–1947. Indian Council of Historical Research). pp. 126–131. OCLC 300514750.
  30. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 190
  31. ^ Irschick 1969, pp. 136–171
  32. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 196
  33. ^ a b Ralhan 2002, p. 197
  34. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 199
  35. ^ a b c Irschick 1986, pp. 104–105
  36. ^ Hamsapriya, A (1981). (PDF). Madras University. p. 85. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2011.
  37. ^ a b c d e Manikumar, K. A. (2003). A colonial economy in the Great Depression, Madras (1929–1937). Orient Blackswan. pp. 180–198. ISBN 978-81-250-2456-9.
  38. ^ N. Ram, Editor-in-Chief of The Hindu and Robert L. Hardgrave, Professor Emeritus in the Humanities, Government and Asian Studies at the University of Texas, Austin Robert L. Hardgrave Faculty page, University of Texas Archived 7 July 2012 at archive.today
  39. ^ David A. Washbrook, and Andre Beteille
  40. ^ Marguerite Ross Barnett
  41. ^ a b c d Ralhan 2002, pp. 164–166
  42. ^ a b Malarmannan 2009, pp. 34–35
  43. ^ Joseph, George Gheverghese (2003). George Joseph, the life and times of a Kerala Christian nationalist. Orient Blackswan. pp. 240–241. ISBN 978-81-250-2495-8.
  44. ^ a b Irschick 1986, pp. 102–103
  45. ^ Sundararajan 1989, p. 546
  46. ^ More 1997, p. 163
  47. ^ Kannan 2010, p. 56
  48. ^ Patwardhan, Achyut; Asoka Mehta (1942). The Communal Triangle in India. Allahabad: Kitabistan. p. 172. OCLC 4449727.
  49. ^ Kannan 2010, pp. 60
  50. ^ Chatterjee, Debi (2004). Up against caste: comparative study of Ambedkar and Periyar. Rawat Publications. p. 43. ISBN 978-81-7033-860-4.
  51. ^ a b Kannan 2010, p. 41
  52. ^ Kannan 2010, pp. 63–71
  53. ^ Ravichandran & Perumal 1982, pp. 5–18
  54. ^ Ravichandran & Perumal 1982, pp. 19–21
  55. ^ The anti-Periyar faction tried to preempt their opponents' moves by declaring that the resolution passed in the Salem confederation did not bind them. They did this at a meeting convened on 20 August. They argued that since Periyar had not been properly elected president per the party constitution, any resolutions passed in the Salem conference were ultra vires.Ravichandran & Perumal 1982, pp. 22–23
  56. ^ Malarmannan 2009, p. 72
  57. ^ Irschick 1969, p. 347
  58. ^ "Statistical Reports of 1951/52 Madras State Election" (PDF). Election Commission of India. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  59. ^ Justice Party Golden Jubilee Souvenir, 1968.
  60. ^ From 1920 to 1934, 98 seats were available for election in the Madras Legislative Council under the dyarchial system. The legislature was a unicameral body. In 1937 and 1946, 215 seats were available for election in the Legislative Assembly. After the Government of India Act of 1935, the legislature had become bicameral with the Assembly being the lower chamber (with primacy over the Council).
  61. ^ In 1920 and 23, 29 members were nominated to the Legislative Council. During 1926–34, the number increased to 34 with the addition of 5 more members to represent the female franchise. In 1937 and 1946, the Legislature had become bicameral with the Council being the upper house. A total of 46 council seats were filled by election.
  62. ^ But still formed a minority government, as the Swaraj party which had won the election refused to participate in the governing process.
  63. ^ The Justice party led by P. T. Rajan contested only nine seats. The Dravidar Kazhagam led by Periyar did not contest the elections.
  64. ^ a b c d Irschick 1969, pp. 172–178
  65. ^ Justice party was renamed as Dravidar Kazhagam in 1944. After 1944, a rebel faction claiming to be the original Justice party existed till the mid-1950s.
  66. ^ Irschick 1969, pp. 368–369
  67. ^ Murugan, N. (9 October 2006). . National. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 22 December 2009.
  68. ^ a b c d e Rajaraman 1988, ch. 6 (Performance of the Justice Party)
  69. ^ . Department of HR & CE. Government of Tamil Nadu. Archived from the original on 6 January 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2009.
  70. ^ a b Irschick 1969, pp. 244–251
  71. ^ Raj Kumar (2003). Essays on Indian renaissance. p. 265. ISBN 978-81-7141-689-9.
  72. ^ "Madras Town Planning Act 1920". Kerala Institute of Local Administration. Retrieved 28 October 2008.[permanent dead link]
  73. ^ a b c d e Varghese, Nina (29 August 2006). "T.Nagar: Shop till you drop, and then shop some more". Business Line. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  74. ^ . The Hindu. 18 September 2008. Archived from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  75. ^ S. Muthiah (22 December 2008). . The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  76. ^ Arnold, David (2000). The new Cambridge history of India: Science, technology and medicine in Colonial India, Volume 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 185. ISBN 978-0-521-56319-2.
  77. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 465
  78. ^ Parthasarathy, R. (1979). Builders of modern India:S. Satyamurti. Publications Division, Government of India. p. 42.
  79. ^ Parthasarathy, R. (1979). Builders of modern India:S. Satyamurti. Publications Division, Government of India. p. 43.
  80. ^ Irschick 1969, pp. 262–263
  81. ^ Ralhan 2002, p. 170
  82. ^ a b Irschick 1969, pp. 258–260
  83. ^ More 1997, pp. 109–110
  84. ^ Mendelsohn, Oliver; Marika Vicziany (1998). The untouchables: subordination, poverty, and the state in modern India. Contemporary South Asia. Vol. 4. Cambridge University Press. pp. 94–95. ISBN 978-0-521-55671-2.

References

  • Irschick, Eugene F. (1969). Political and Social Conflict in South India; The non-Brahmin movement and Tamil Separatism, 1916–1929. University of California Press. OCLC 249254802.
  • Irschick, Eugene F. (1986). (PDF). Madras: Cre-A. OCLC 15015416. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 June 2010. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  • More, J. B. Prashant (1997). The Political Evolution of Muslims in Tamilnadu and Madras, 1930–1947. Orient Longman. ISBN 978-81-250-1011-1. OCLC 37770527.
  • Kannan, R. (2010). Anna: The life and times of C. N. Annadurai. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-670-08328-2.
  • Malarmannan (2009). Thimuka Uruvanadhu Aen? (in Tamil). Kizhakku Pathippagam. ISBN 978-81-8493-265-2.
  • Ralhan, O. P. (2002). Encyclopaedia of Political Parties. Anmol Publications PVT. LTD. ISBN 978-81-7488-865-5.
  • Rajaraman, P. (1988). . Poompozhil Publishers. OCLC 20453430. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011.
  • Ravichandran, R.; Perumal, C. A. (1982). "Chapter 1". (PDF). Madras: Madras University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
  • Sundararajan, Saroja (1989). March to freedom in Madras Presidency, 1916–1947. Lalitha Publications. OCLC 20222383.

Further reading

  • Chirol, Sir Valentine (1921). India Old and New Chapter XII:Cross Currents in Southern India. London: Macmillan & Co.

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This article is about the South Indian political party For party founded by Udit Raj see Indian Justice Party The Justice Party officially the South Indian Liberal Federation was a political party in the Madras Presidency of British India It was established on 20 November 1916 in Victoria Public Hall in Madras by Dr C Natesa Mudaliar and co founded by T M Nair P Theagaraya Chetty and Alamelu Mangai Thayarammal as a result of a series of non Brahmin conferences and meetings in the presidency Communal division between Brahmins and non Brahmins began in the presidency during the late 19th and early 20th century mainly due to caste prejudices and disproportionate Brahminical representation in government jobs The Justice Party s foundation marked the culmination of several efforts to establish an organisation to represent the non Brahmins in Madras and is seen as the start of the Dravidian Movement 2 3 4 5 Justice PartyLeaderC Natesa MudaliarPresidentTheagaroya Chetty Raja of PanagalB Munuswamy NaiduRaja of BobbiliE V Ramasamy P T RajanGeneral SecretaryArcot Ramasamy Mudaliar 1 FounderC Natesa Mudaliar T M Nair Theagaroya ChettyFounded1917Dissolved27 August 1944Preceded byMadras Dravidian AssociationSucceeded byDravidar KazhagamHeadquartersMadrasNewspaperJusticeDravidianAndhra Prakasika P Balasubramania Mudaliar s Sunday ObserverIdeologySocialismAnti BrahminismPolitics of IndiaPolitical partiesElectionsDuring its early years the party was involved in petitioning the imperial administrative bodies and British colonial officials demanding more representation for non Brahmins in government When a diarchial system of administration was established due to the 1919 Montagu Chelmsford reforms the Justice Party took part in presidential governance In 1920 it won the first direct elections in the presidency and formed the government For the next seventeen years it formed four out of the five ministries and was in power for thirteen years It was the main political alternative to the nationalist Indian National Congress in Madras After it lost to the Congress in the 1937 election it never recovered It came under the leadership of Periyar E V Ramaswamy and his Self Respect Movement In 1944 Periyar transformed the Justice Party into the social organisation Dravidar Kazhagam and withdrew it from electoral politics A rebel faction that called itself the original Justice Party survived to contest one final election in 1952 The Justice Party was isolated in contemporary Indian politics by its many controversial activities It opposed Brahmins in civil service and politics and this anti Brahmin attitude shaped many of its ideas and policies It opposed Annie Besant and her Home rule movement because it believed home rule would benefit the Brahmins The party also campaigned against the non cooperation movement in the presidency It was at odds with M K Gandhi primarily due to his praise for Brahminism Its mistrust of the Brahmin dominated Congress led it to adopt a hostile stance toward the Indian independence movement The Justice Party s period in power is remembered for the introduction of caste based reservations and educational and religious reform In opposition it is remembered for participating in the anti Hindi agitations of 1937 40 The party had a role in creation of Andhra and Annamalai universities and for developing the area around present day Theagaroya Nagar in Madras city The Justice Party and the Dravidar Kazhagam are the ideological predecessors of present day Dravidian parties like the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam which have ruled Tamil Nadu one of the successor states to Madras Presidency continuously since 1967 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Brahmin non Brahmin divide 1 2 British policies 1 3 Early non Brahmin associations in south india 2 Formation 3 Early history 1916 1920 3 1 Conflict with Home Rule Movement 3 2 Demand for communal representation 3 3 Opposition to non cooperation movement 4 In office 4 1 1920 26 4 2 1930 37 4 3 Decline 5 In opposition 5 1 1926 30 5 2 1936 44 6 Transformation into Dravidar Kazhagam 7 Electoral performance 8 Organisation 9 Works 9 1 Legislative initiatives 9 2 Universities 9 3 Infrastructure 9 4 Political legacy 10 Controversies 10 1 Attitude towards Brahmins 10 2 Nationalism 10 3 Rumors about Justice Party 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further readingBackground EditBrahmin non Brahmin divide Edit The Brahmins in Madras Presidency enjoyed a higher position in India s social hierarchy By the 1850s Telugu and Tamil Brahmins comprising only 3 2 of the population began to increase their political power by filling most of the jobs which were open to Indian men at that time 6 They dominated the administrative services and the newly created urban professions in the 19th and early 20th century 7 The higher literacy and English language proficiency among Brahmins were instrumental in this ascendancy The political social and economical divide between Brahmins and non Brahmins became more apparent in the beginning of the 20th century This breach was further exaggerated by Annie Besant and her Home Rule for India movement The following table shows the distribution of selected jobs among different caste groups in 1912 in Madras Presidency 6 8 Caste group Deputy collectors Sub judges District Munsifs of total male populationBrahmins 77 15 93 3 2non Brahmin Hindus 30 3 25 85 6Muslims 15 nil 2 6 6Indian Christians 7 nil 5 2 7Europeans and Eurasians 11 nil 3 1The dominance of Brahmins was also evident in the membership of the Madras Legislative Council During 1910 20 eight out of the nine official members appointed by the Governor of Madras were Brahmins Apart from the appointed members Brahmins also formed the majority of the members elected to the council from the district boards and municipalities During this period the Madras Province Congress Committee regional branch of the Indian National Congress was also dominated by Brahmins Of the 11 major newspapers and magazines in the presidency two The Madras Mail and Madras Times were run by Europeans sympathetic to the crown three were evangelical non political periodicals four The Hindu Indian Review Swadesamithran and Andhra Pathrika were published by Brahmins while New India run by Annie Besant was sympathetic to the Brahmins This dominance was denounced by the non Brahmin leaders in the form of pamphlets and open letters written to the Madras Governor The earliest examples of such pamphlets are the ones authored by the pseudonymous author calling himself fair play in 1895 By the second decade of the 20th century the Brahmins of the presidency were themselves divided into three factions 9 These were the Mylapore faction comprising Chetpet Iyers and Vembakkam Iyengars the Egmore faction led by the editor of The Hindu Kasturi Ranga Iyengar and the Salem nationalists led by C Rajagopalachari A fourth non Brahmin faction rose to compete with them and became the Justice party 10 British policies Edit Historians differ about the extent of British influence in the evolution of the non Brahmin movement Kathleen Gough argues that although the British played a role the Dravidian movement had a bigger influence in South India 11 Eugene F Irschick in Political and Social Conflict in South India The non Brahmin movement and Tamil Separatism 1916 1929 holds the view that British colonial officials in India sought to encourage the growth of non Brahminism but does not characterise it as simply a product of that policy 12 13 David A Washbrook disagrees with Irschick in The Emergence of Provincial Politics The Madras Presidency 1870 1920 and states Non Brahminism became for a time synonymous with anti nationalism a fact which surely indicates its origins as a product of government policy 14 Washbrook s portrayal has been contested by P Rajaraman in The Justice Party a historical perspective 1916 37 who argues that the movement was an inevitable result of longstanding social cleavage between Brahmins and non Brahmins 9 The British role in the development of the non Brahmin movement is broadly accepted by some historians The statistics used by non Brahmin leaders in their 1916 manifesto were prepared by senior Indian Civil Service officials for submission to the public services commission 15 The Mylapore Brahmin faction rose to prominence in the early 20th century The British while acknowledging its usefulness was wary and supported non Brahmins for several government posts They sought to counter the influence of the Mylaporean Brahmins by incorporating non Brahmins in several government posts An early example was the appointment of C Sankaran Nair to a high court bench job in 1903 by Lord Ampthill solely because Nair was a non Brahmin The job fell vacant after Bashyam Iyengar left V Krishnaswami Iyer was expected to succeed him He was a vocal opponent of the Mylapore Brahmins and advocated the induction of non Brahmin members in the government In 1912 under the influence of Sir Alexander Cardew the Madras Secretariat for the first time used Brahmin or non Brahmin as a criterion for job appointments By 1918 it was maintaining a list of Brahmins and non Brahmins preferring the latter 14 Early non Brahmin associations in south india Edit Identity politics among linguistic groups was common in British India In every area some groups considered British rule more favourable than a Congress led independent government 16 In 1909 two lawyers P Subrahmanyam and M Purushotham Naidu announced plans to establish an organisation named The Madras Non Brahmin Association and recruit a thousand non Brahmin members before October 1909 They elicited no response from the non Brahmin populace and the organisation never saw the light of the day Later in 1912 disaffected non Brahmin members of the bureaucracy like Saravana Pillai G Veerasamy Naidu Doraiswami Naidu and S Narayanaswamy Naidu established the Madras United League with C Natesa Mudaliar as Secretary The league restricted itself to social activities and distanced itself from contemporary politics On 1 October 1912 the league was reorganised and renamed as the Madras Dravidian Association The association opened many branches in Madras city Its main achievement was to establish a hostel for non Brahmin students It also organised annual At home functions for non Brahmin graduates and published books presenting their demands 9 Formation Edit Image taken in 1920s Theagaroya Chetty is seated at the centre to the immediate right of the girl To his right is Arcot Ramaswamy Mudaliar Also present are Raja of Panagal and Raja of Venkatagiri In the 1916 elections to the Imperial Legislative Council the non Brahmin candidates T M Nair from southern districts constituency and P Ramarayaningar from landlords constituency were defeated by the Brahmin candidates V S Srinivasa Sastri and K V Rangaswamy Iyengar The same year P Theagaraya Chetty and Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu lost to Brahmin candidates with Home Rule League support in local council elections These defeats increased animosity and the formation of a political organisation to represent non Brahmin interests On 20 November 1916 a gathering of non Brahmin leaders and dignitaries met at the Advocate T Ethirajulu Mudaliyar s residence in Vepery Chennai Diwan Bahadur Pitti Theagaraya Chettiar Dr T M Nair Diwan Bahadur P Rajarathina Mudaliyar Dr C Nadesa Mudaliyar Diwan Bahadur P M Sivagnana Mudaliar Diwan Bahadur P Ramaraya Ningar Diwan Bahadur M G Aarokkiasami Pillai Diwan Bahadur G Narayanasamy Reddy Rao Bahadur O Thanikasalam Chettiar Rao Bahadur M C Raja Dr Mohammed Usman Sahib J M Nallusamipillai Rao Bahadur K Venkataretti Naidu K V Reddy Naidu Rao Bahadur A B Patro T Ethirajulu Mudaliyar O Kandasamy Chettiar J N Ramanathan Khan Bahadur A K G Ahmed Thambi Marikkayar Alarmelu Mangai Thayarmmal A Ramaswamy Mudaliyar Diwan Bahadur Karunagara Menon T Varadarajulu Naidu L K Thulasiram K Apparao Naidugaru S Muthaiah Mudaliyar and Mooppil Nair were among those present at the meeting 17 They established the South Indian People s Association SIPA to publish English Tamil and Telugu newspapers to publicise grievances of non Brahmins Chetty became the secretary Chetty and Nair had been political rivals in the Madras Corporation council but Natesa Mudaliar was able to reconcile their differences The meeting also formed the South Indian Liberal Federation SILF as a political movement Dr T M Nair and Pitti Theagaraya Chettiar were the co founders of this movement Rajarathna Mudaliyar was selected as the president Ramaraya Ningar Pitti Theagaraya Chettiar A K G Ahmed Thambi Marikkayar and M G Aarokkiasami Pillai were also selected as the vice presidents B M Sivagnana Mudaliyar P Narayanasamy Mudaliar Mohammed Usman M Govindarajulu Naidu were selected as the secretaries G Narayanasamy Chettiar acted as treasurer T M Nair was elected as one of the executive committee members 17 Later the movement came to be popularly called the Justice Party after the English daily Justice published by it In December 1916 the association published The Non Brahmin Manifesto affirmed its loyalty and faith in the British Raj but decried Brahminic bureaucratic dominance and urged for non Brahmins to press their claims as against the virtual domination of the Brahmin Caste 9 The manifesto was harshly criticised by the nationalist newspaper The Hindu on 20 December 1916 It is with much pain and surprise that we have perused this document It gives a manifestly unfair and distorted representation of many of the matters to which it makes reference It can serve no purpose but it is bound to create bad blood between persons belonging to the Great Indian Community 9 The masthead of the English daily Justice The periodical Hindu Nesan questioned the timing of the new association The New Age Home Rule Movement s newspaper dismissed it and predicted its premature death By February 1917 the SIPA joint stock company had raised money by selling 640 shares of one hundred rupees each The money purchased a printing press and the group hired C Karunakara Menon to edit a newspaper which was to be called Justice However negotiations with Menon broke down and Nair himself took over as honorary editor with P N Raman Pillai and M S Purnalingam Pillai as sub editors The first issue came out on 26 February 1917 A Tamil newspaper called Dravidan edited by Bhaktavatsalam Pillai was started in June 1917 The party also purchased the Telugu newspaper Andhra Prakasika edited by A C Parthasarathi Naidu Later in 1919 both were converted to weeklies due to financial constraints 9 On 19 August 1917 the first non Brahmin conference was convened at Coimbatore under the presidency of Ramarayaningar In the following months several non Brahmin conferences were organised On 18 October the party published its objectives as formed by T M Nair in The Hindu 1 to create and promote the education social economic political material and moral progress of all communities in Southern India other than Brahmins 2 to discuss public questions and make a true and timely representation to Government of the views and interests of the people of Southern India with the object of safeguarding and promoting the interests of all communities other than Brahmins and 3 to disseminate by public lectures by distribution of literature and by other means sound and liberal views in regard to public opinion 18 Between August and December 1917 when the first confederation of the party was held conferences were organised all over the Madras Presidency at Coimbatore Bikkavole Pulivendla Bezwada Salem and Tirunelveli These conferences and other meetings symbolised the arrival of the SILF as a non Brahmin political organisation 19 Early history 1916 1920 EditDuring 1916 20 the Justice party struggled against the Egmore and Mylapore factions to convince the British government and public to support communal representation for non Brahmins in the presidency Rajagopalachari s followers advocated non cooperation with the British 10 Conflict with Home Rule Movement Edit In 1916 Annie Besant the leader of the Theosophical Society became involved in the Indian independence movement and founded the Home Rule League She based her activities in Madras and many of her political associates were Tamil Brahmins She viewed India as a single homogeneous entity bound by similar religious philosophical cultural characteristics and an Indian caste system Many of the ideas she articulated about Indian culture were based on puranas manusmriti and vedas whose values were questioned by educated non Brahmins Even before the League s founding Besant and Nair had clashed over an article in Nair s medical journal Antiseptic questioning the sexual practices of the theosophist Charles Webster Leadbeater In 1913 Besant lost a defamation suit against Nair over the article 9 20 Besant s association with Brahmins and her vision of a homogeneous India based on Brahminical values brought her into direct conflict with Justice The December 1916 Non Brahmin Manifesto voiced its opposition to the Home Rule Movement The manifesto was criticised by the Home rule periodical New India Justice opposed the Home Rule Movement and the party newspapers derisively nicknamed Besant as the Irish Brahmini Dravidan the Tamil language mouthpiece of the party ran headlines such as Home rule is Brahmin s rule All three of the party s newspapers ran articles and opinions pieces critical of the home rule movement and the league on a daily basis Some of these Justice articles were later published in book form as The Evolution of Annie Besant Nair described the home rule movement as an agitation carried on by a white woman particularly immune from the risks of government action whose rewards would be reaped by the Brahmins 9 20 Demand for communal representation Edit On 20 August 1917 Edwin Montagu the Secretary of State for India proposed political reforms to increase representation of Indians in the government and to develop self governing institutions This announcement increased the division among the non Brahmin political leaders of the Presidency Justice organised a series of conferences in late August to support its claims Theagaraya Chetty cabled Montagu asking for communal representation in the provincial legislature for non Brahmins He demanded a system similar to the one granted to Muslims by the Minto Morley Reforms of 1909 separate electorates and reserved seats The non Brahmin members from Congress formed the Madras Presidency Association MPA to compete with Justice Periyar E V Ramasamy T A V Nathan Kalyanasundaram Mudaliar P Varadarajulu Naidu and Kesava Pillai were among the non Brahmin leaders involved in creating MPA MPA was supported by the Brahmin nationalist newspaper The Hindu Justice denounced MPA as a Brahmin creation intended to weaken their cause 9 19 21 On 14 December 1917 Montagu arrived at Madras to listen to comments on the proposed reforms O Kandaswami Chetty Justice and Kesava Pillai MPA and 2 other non Brahmin delegations presented to Montagu Justice and MPA both requested communal reservation for Balija Naidus Pillais and Mudaliars Vellalas Chettis and the Panchamas along with four Brahmin groups Pillai convinced the Madras Province Congress Committee to support the MPA Justice position British colonial authorities including Governor Baron Pentland and theMadras Mail supported communal representation But Montagu was not inclined to extend communal representation to subgroups The Montagu Chelmsford Report on Indian Constitutional Reforms issued on 2 July 1918 denied the request 9 19 21 At a meeting held in Thanjavur the party dispatched T M Nair to London to lobby for extending communal representation Dr Nair arrived in June 1918 and worked into December attended various meetings addressed Members of Parliament MPs and wrote articles and pamphlets However the party refused to cooperate with the Southborogh committee that was appointed to draw up the franchise framework for the proposed reforms because Brahmins V S Srinivasa Sastri and Surendranath Banerjee were committee members Justice secured the support of many Indian and non Indian members of Indian Civil Service for communal representation 19 22 The Joint Select Committee held hearings during 1919 20 to finalise the Government of India Bill which would implement the reforms A Justice delegation composed of Arcot Ramasamy Mudaliar Kurma Venkata Reddi Naidu Koka Appa Rao Naidu and L K Tulasiram attended the hearings Ramarayaningar also represented the All India Landholder association and the Madras Zamindar association Reddi Naidu Mudaliar and Ramarayaningar toured major cities addressed meetings met with MPs and wrote letters to the local newspapers to advance their position Nair died on 17 July 1919 before he could appear After Nair s death Reddi Naidu became the spokesman He testified on 22 August The deputation won the backing of both Liberal and Labour members The committee s report issued on 17 November 1919 recommended communal representation in the Madras Presidency The number of reserved seats was to be decided by the local parties and the Madras Government After prolonged negotiations between Justice Congress MPA and the British colonial government a compromise called Meston s Award was reached in March 1920 28 3 urban and 25 rural of the 63 general seats in plural member constituencies were reserved for non Brahmins 19 22 Opposition to non cooperation movement Edit Unsatisfied with the Montagu Chelmsford Reforms and the March 1919 Rowlatt Act Mahatma Gandhi launched his non cooperation movement in 1919 He called for a boycott of the legislatures courts schools and social functions Non cooperation did not appeal to Justice which sought to leverage continued British presence by participating in the new political system Justice considered Gandhi to be an anarchist threatening social order The party newspapers Justice Dravidan and Andhra Prakasika persistently attacked non cooperation Party member Mariadas Ratnaswami wrote critically of Gandhi and his campaign against industrialisation in a pamphlet named The political philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi in 1920 K V Reddi Naidu also fought non cooperation 23 24 This stance isolated the party most political and social organisations supported the movement Justice Party s believed that he associated mostly with Brahmins though he was not a Brahmin himself It also favoured industrialisation When Gandhi visited Madras in April 1921 he spoke about the virtues of Brahminism and Brahmin contributions to Indian culture 24 Justice responded The meeting was presided over by local Brahmin politicians of Gandhi persuasion and Mr Gandhi himself was surrounded by Brahmins of both sexes A band of them came to the meeting singing hymns They broke coconut in front of Gandhi burnt camphor and presented him with holy water in silver basin There were other marks of deification and naturally the vanity of the man was flattered beyond measure He held forth on the glories of Brahminism and Brahminical culture Not even knowing even the elements of Dravidian culture Dravidian philosophy Dravidian literature Dravidian languages and Dravidian history this Gujarati gentleman extolled the Brahmins to the skies at the expense of non Brahmins and the Brahmins present must have been supremely pleased and elated 24 Kandaswamy Chetty sent a letter to the editor of Gandhi s journal Young India advising him to stay away from Brahmin non Brahmin issues Gandhi responded by highlighting his appreciation of Brahmin contribution to Hinduism and said I warn the correspondents against separating the Dravidian south from Aryan north The India today is a blend not only of two but of many other cultures The party s relentless campaign against Gandhi supported by the Madras Mail made him less popular and effective in South India particularly in southern Tamil districts Even when Gandhi suspended the movement after the Chauri Chaura incident party newspapers expressed suspicion of him The party softened on Gandhi only after his arrest expressing appreciation for his moral worth and intellectual capacity 24 In office EditThe Government of India Act 1919 implemented the Montagu Chelmsford reforms instituting a Diarchy in Madras Presidency The diarchial period extended from 1920 to 1937 encompassing five elections Justice party was in power for 13 of 17 years save for an interlude during 1926 30 1920 26 Edit During the non cooperation campaign the Indian National Congress boycotted the November 1920 elections 25 Justice won 63 of the 98 seats 26 A Subbarayalu Reddiar became the first Chief Minister soon resigning due to declining health Ramarayaningar Raja of Panagal the Minister of Local Self Government and Public Health replaced him 27 The party was far from happy with the diarchial system 23 In his 1924 deposition to the Muddiman committee Cabinet Minister Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu expressed the party s displeasure I was a Minister of Development without the forests I was a Minister of Agriculture minus Irrigation As a Minister of Agriculture I had nothing to do with the Madras Agriculturists Loan Act or the Madras Land Improvement Loans Act The efficacy and efficiency of a Minister of Agriculture without having anything to do with irrigation agricultural loans land improvement loans and famine relief may better be imagined than described Then again I was Minister of Industries without factories boilers electricity and water power mines or labor all of which are reserved subjects 23 Internal dissent emerged and the party split in late 1923 when C R Reddy resigned and formed a splinter group and allied with Swarajists who were in opposition The party won the second council elections in 1923 though with a reduced majority On the first day 27 November 1923 of the new session a no confidence motion was defeated 65 44 and Ramarayaningar remained in power until November 1926 23 28 29 The party lost in 1926 to Swaraj The Swaraj party refused to form the government leading the Governor to set up an independent government under P Subbarayan 30 31 1930 37 Edit Image taken in 1930s starting fifth from left after the woman Periyar E V Ramasamy C Natesa Mudaliar Raja of Bobbili and S Kumaraswami Reddiar After four years in opposition Justice returned to power Chief Minister B Munuswamy Naidu s tenure was beset with controversies 32 The Great Depression was at its height and the economy was crumbling Floods inundated the southern districts The government increased the land tax to compensate for the fall in revenues 33 The Zamindars landowners faction was disgruntled because two prominent landlords the Raja of Bobbili and the Kumara Raja of Venkatagiri were excluded from the cabinet In 1930 P T Rajan and Naidu has differences over the presidency and Naidu did not hold the annual party confederation for three years Under M A Muthiah Chettiar the Zamindars organised a rebel ginger group in November 1930 In the twelfth annual confederation of the party held on 10 11 October 1932 the rebel group deposed Naidu and replaced him with the Raja of Bobbili Fearing that the Bobbili faction would move a no confidence motion against him in the council Naidu resigned in November 1932 and the Rao became Chief Minister 33 After his removal from power Munuswamy Naidu formed a separate party with his supporters It was called Justice Democratic Party and had the support of 20 opposition members in the legislative council His supporters rejoined the Justice party after his death in 1935 During this time party Leader L Sriramulu Naidu served as Mayor of Madras 23 34 35 36 Decline Edit Increasing nationalist feelings and factional infighting caused the party to shrink steadily from the early 1930s Many leaders left to join Congress Rao as inaccessible to his own party members and tried to curtail the powers of district leaders who had been instrumental in the party s previous successes The party was seen as collaborators supporting the British colonial government s measures to counter the independence movement Its economic policies were also very unpopular Its refusal to decrease land taxation in non Zamindari areas by 12 5 provoked peasant protests led by Congress Rao a Zamindar cracked down on protests fueling popular rage The party lost the 1934 elections but managed to retain power as a minority government because Swaraj the political arm of the Congress refused to participate 23 35 In its last years in power the party s decline continued The Justice ministers drew a large monthly salary Rs 4 333 60 compared to the Rs 2 250 in the Central Provinces at the height of the Great Depression which was sharply criticised by the Madras press including Madras Mail a traditional backer of the party attacked its ineptitude and patronage 37 The extent of the discontent against the Justice government is reflected in an article of Zamin Ryot The Justice Party has disgusted the people of this presidency like plague and engendered permanent hatred in their hearts Everybody therefore is anxiously awaiting the fall of the Justice regime which they consider tyrannical and inauguration of the Congress administration Even old women in villages ask as to how long the ministry of the Raja of Bobbili would continue 37 Lord Erskine the governor of Madras reported in February 1937 to then Secretary of State Zetland that among the peasants every sin of omission or commission of the past fifteen years is put down to them Bobbili s administration Faced with a resurgent Congress the party was trounced in the 1937 council and assembly elections After 1937 it ceased to be a political power 23 37 Justice s final defeat has been ascribed variously to 38 its collaboration with the British colonial government the elitist nature of the Justice party members 39 loss of scheduled caste and Muslim support and flight of the social radicals to the Self Respect Movement or in sum 40 internal dissension ineffective organisation inertia and lack of proper leadership 23 37 In opposition EditJustice was in opposition from 1926 to 1930 and again from 1937 until it transformed itself to Dravidar Kazhagam in 1944 1926 30 Edit In the 1926 elections Swaraj emerged as the largest party but refused to form the government because of its opposition to dyarchy Justice declined power because it did not have enough seats and due to clashes with governor Viscount Goschen over issues of power and patronage Goschen turned to the nationalist independent members Unaffiliated P Subbarayan was appointed Chief Minister Goschen nominated 34 members to the council to support the new ministry Initially Justice joined Swaraj in opposing government by proxy In 1927 they moved a no confidence motion against Subbarayan that was defeated with the help of the Governor nominated members Halfway through the ministry s term Goschen convinced Justice to support the ministry This change came during the Simon Commission s visit to assess the political reforms 23 After the death of Ramarayaningar in December 1928 Justice broke into two factions the Constitutionalists and the Ministerialists The Ministerialists were led by N G Ranga and favoured allowing Brahmins to join the party 41 A compromise was reached at the eleventh annual confederation of the party and B Munuswamy Naidu was elected as the president 18 1936 44 Edit Main articles Anti Hindi agitation of 1937 40 and Dravidistan After its crushing defeat at the hands in 1937 Justice lost political influence The Raja of Bobbili temporarily retired to tour Europe 42 The new Congress government under C Rajagopalachari introduced compulsory Hindi instruction Under A T Panneerselvam one of the few Justice leaders to have escaped defeat in the 1937 elections 43 Justice joined Periyar E V Ramasamy s Self Respect Movement SRM to oppose the government s move The resulting anti Hindi agitation brought the party effectively under Periyar s control When Rao s term ended Periyar became president on 29 December 1938 Periyar a former Congressman had a previous history of cooperation with the party He had left Congress in 1925 after accusing the party of Brahminism SRM cooperated closely with Justice in opposing Congress and Swaraj Periyar had even campaigned for Justice candidates in 1926 and 1930 For a few years in the early 1930s he switched from Justice to the communists After the Communist party was banned in July 1934 he returned to supporting Justice 23 44 The anti Hindi agitations revived Justice s sagging fortunes On 29 October 1939 Rajagopalachari s Congress government resigned protesting India s involvement in World War II Madras provincial government was placed under governor s rule On 21 February 1940 Governor Erskine cancelled compulsory Hindi instruction 45 Under Periyar s leadership the party embraced the secession of Dravidistan or Dravida Nadu At the 14th annual confederation held in December 1938 Periyar became party leader and a resolution passed pressing Tamil people s right to a sovereign state under the direct control of the Secretary of State for India 46 In 1939 Periyar organised the Dravida Nadu Conference for the advocacy of a separate sovereign and federal republic of Dravida Nadu Speaking on 17 December 1939 he raised the slogan Dravida Nadu for Dravidians replacing the Tamil Nadu for Tamils that had been used earlier since 1938 47 The demand for Dravidistan was repeated at the 15th annual confederation in August 1940 48 On 10 August 1941 Periyar stopped the agitation for Dravida Nadu to help the government in its war efforts When the Cripps Mission visited India a Justice delegation comprising Periyar W P A Soundarapandian Nadar N R Samiappa Mudaliar and Muthiah Chettiar met the mission on 30 March 1942 and demanded a separate Dravidian nation Cripps responded that secession would be possible only through a legislative resolution or through a general referendum 49 50 During this period Periyar declined efforts in 1940 and in 1942 to bring Justice to power with Congress support 51 Transformation into Dravidar Kazhagam EditPeriyar withdrew the party from electoral politics and converted it into a social reform organisation He explained If we obtain social self respect political self respect is bound to follow 51 Periyar s influence pushed Justice into anti Brahmin anti Hindu and atheistic stances During 1942 44 Periyar s opposition to the Tamil devotional literary works Kamba Ramayanam and Periya Puranam caused a break with Saivite Tamil scholars who had joined the anti Hindi agitations Justice had never possessed much popularity among students but started making inroads with C N Annadurai s help 52 53 A group of leaders became uncomfortable with Periyar s leadership and policies and formed a rebel group that attempted to dethrone Periyar This group included P Balasubramanian editor of The Sunday Observer R K Shanmugam Chettiar P T Rajan and A P Patro C L Narasimha Mudaliar Damodaran Naidu and K C Subramania Chettiar A power struggle developed between the pro and anti Periyar factions On 27 December 1943 the rebel group convened the party s executive committee and criticised Periyar for not holding an annual meeting after 1940 To silence his critics Periyar decided to convene the confederation 54 On 27 August 1944 Justice s sixteenth annual confederation took place in Salem 55 where the pro Periyar faction won control The confederation passed resolutions compelling party members to renounce British honours and awards such as Rao Bahadur and Diwan Bahadur drop caste suffixes from their names resign nominated and appointed posts The party also took the name Dravidar Kazhagam DK Annadurai who had played an important role in passing the resolutions became the general secretary of the transformed organisation Most members joined the Dravidar Kazhagam 56 57 A few dissidents like P T Rajan Manapparai Thirumalaisami and M Balasubramania Mudaliar did not accept the new changes 42 Led at first by B Ramachandra Reddi and later by P T Rajan they formed a party claiming to be the original Justice party This party made overtures to the Indian National Congress and supported the Quit India Movement The Justice Party also lent its support to Congress candidates in the elections to the Constituent Assembly of India It contested nine seats in the 1952 Assembly elections P T Rajan was the sole successful candidate 58 The party also fielded M Balasubramania Mudaliar from the Madras Lok Sabha constituency in the 1952 Lok Sabha elections Despite losing the election to T T Krishnamachari of the Indian National Congress Mudaliar polled 63 254 votes and emerged runner up This new Justice party did not contest elections after 1952 In 1968 the party celebrated its Golden Jubilee at Madras 59 Electoral performance EditElections Total seats up for election 60 Seats won Total seats available for nomination 61 Members nominated Result Party President1920 98 63 29 18 Won Theagaroya Chetty1923 98 44 29 17 Won Theagaroya Chetty1926 98 21 34 0 Lost Raja of Panagal1930 98 35 34 Won B Munuswamy Naidu1934 98 34 Lost 62 Raja of Bobbili1937 215 18 46 7 Lost Raja of Bobbili1939 1946 No elections held E V Ramasamy1946 215 0 46 0 Did not participate P T Rajan1952 375 63 1 NA NA Lost P T RajanOrganisation EditThe Justice party s first officeholders were elected in October 1917 Arcot Ramaswamy Mudaliar was the party s first general secretary The party began writing a constitution in 1920 adopting it on 19 December 1925 during its ninth confederation An 18 October 1917 notice in The Hindu outlining the party s policies and goals was the nearest it had to a constitution in its early years 18 64 Madras City was the centre of the party s activities It functioned from its office at Mount Road where party meetings were held Apart from the head office several branch offices operated in the city By 1917 the party had established offices at all the district headquarters in the presidency periodically visited by the Madras based leaders The party had a 25 member executive committee a president four vice presidents a general secretary and a treasurer After the 1920 elections some attempts were made to mimic European political parties A chief whip was appointed and Council members formed committees Article 6 of the constitution made the party president the undisputed leader of all non Brahmin affiliated associations and party members in the legislative council Article 14 defined the membership and role of the executive committee and tasked the general secretary with implementing executive committee decisions Article 21 specified that a provincial confederation of the party be organised annually although as of 1944 16 confederations had been organised in 27 years 18 64 The following is the list of presidents of the Justice Party and their terms 18 64 President of Justice Party 65 Term start Term endSir P Theagaroya Chetty 1917 23 June 1925Raja of Panagal 1925 16 December 1928P Munuswamy Naidu 6 August 1929 11 October 1932Raja of Bobbili 11 October 1932 29 December 1938E V Ramaswami 29 December 1938 27 August 1944B Ramachandra Reddi 1944 1945P T Rajan 1945 1957Works EditLegislative initiatives Edit A cartoon from 19 March 1923 evaluating the first Justice Ministry It mentions Prohibition Andhra University irrigation schemes industrial development and more local self government among the unfulfilled expectations of the people During its years in power Justice passed a number of laws with lasting impact Some of its legislative initiatives were still in practice as of 2009 On 16 September 1921 the first Justice government passed the first communal government order G O 613 thereby becoming the first elected body in the Indian legislative history to legislate reservations which have since become standard 66 67 68 The Madras Hindu Religious Endowment Act introduced on 18 December 1922 and passed in 1925 brought many Hindu Temples under the direct control of the state government This Act set the precedent for later Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowment HR amp CE Acts and the current policy of Tamil Nadu 68 69 The Government of India Act of 1919 prohibited women from becoming legislators The first Justice Government reversed this policy on 1 April 1921 Voter qualifications were made gender neutral This resolution cleared the way for Dr Muthulakshmi Reddi s nomination to the council in 1926 when she became the first woman to become a member of any legislature in India In 1922 during the first Justice ministry before relationships with Scheduled Castes soured the Council officially replaced the terms Panchamar or Paraiyar which were deemed derogatory with Adi Dravidar to denote the Scheduled Castes of the presidency 68 The Madras Elementary Education Act of 1920 introduced compulsory education for boys and girls and increased elementary education funding It was amended in 1934 and 1935 The act penalised parents for withdrawing their children from schools The Madras University Act of 1923 expanded the administrative body of the University of Madras and made it more representative In 1920 the Madras Corporation introduced the Mid day Meal Scheme with the approval of the legislative council It was a breakfast scheme in a corporation school at Thousand Lights Madras Later it expanded to four more schools This was the precursor to the free noon meal schemes introduced by K Kamaraj in the 1960s and expanded by M G Ramachandran in the 1980s The State Aid to Industries Act passed in 1922 and amended in 1935 advanced loans for the establishment of industries The Malabar Tenancy Act of 1931 first introduced in September 1926 controversially strengthened the legal rights of agricultural tenants and gave them the right to occupy land in some cases 68 Universities Edit Rivalry between the Tamil and Telugu members of Justice party led to the establishment of two universities The rivalry had existed since the party s inception and was aggravated during the first justice ministry because Tamil members were excluded from the cabinet When the proposal to set up Andhra University long demanded by leaders like Konda Venkatapayya and Pattabi Sitaramaya was first raised in 1921 it was opposed by Tamil members including C Natesa Mudaliar The Tamils argued that it was hard to define Andhras or the Andhra University To appease the disgruntled Tamil members like J N Ramanathan and Raja of Ramnad Theagaraya Chetty inducted a Tamil member T N Sivagnanam Pillai in the second Justice ministry in 1923 This cleared the way for the passage of Andhra University Bill on 6 November 1925 with Tamil support The institution opened in 1926 with C R Reddy as its first vice chancellor 70 This led to calls for the establishment of a separate Tamil university because the Brahmin dominated Madras University did not welcome non Brahmins On 22 March 1926 a Tamil University Committee chaired by Sivagnanam Pillai began to study feasibility and in 1929 Annamalai University opened It was named for Annamalai Chettiar who provided a large endowment 70 71 Infrastructure Edit Map of Madras city in 1921 before the draining of Long Tank Madras city in 1955 after Long Tank had been drained out The second Justice Chief Minister Ramarayaningar s years in power saw improvements to the infrastructure of the city of Madras particularly the development of the village of Theagaroya Nagar His administration implemented the Madras Town Planning Act of 7 September 1920 creating residential colonies to cope with the city srapid population growth 72 The Long Tank a 5 km 3 1 mi long and 2 km 1 2 mi wide water body formed an arc along the city s western frontier from Nungambakkam to Saidapet and was drained in 1923 73 Development west of the Long Tank had been initiated by the British colonial government in 1911 with the construction of a railway station at the village of Marmalan Mambalam 73 Ramarayaningar created a residential colony adjoining this village The colony was named Theagaroya Nagar or T Nagar after just deceased Theagaroya Chetty 73 T Nagar centered around a park named Panagal Park after Ramarayaningar the Raja of Panagal 73 The streets and other features in this new neighbourhood were named after prominent officials and party members including Mohammad Usman Muhammad Habibullah O Thanikachalam Chettiar Natesa Mudaliar and W P A Soundarapandian Nadar 73 74 75 Justice governments also initiated slum clearance schemes and built housing colonies and public bathing houses in the congested areas They also established the Indian School of Medicine in 1924 to research and promote Ayurveda Siddha and Unani schools of traditional medicine 68 76 Political legacy Edit The Justice party served as a non Brahmin political organisation Though non Brahmin movements had been in existence since the late 19th century Justice was the first such political organisation The party s participation in the governing process under dyarchy taught the value of parliamentary democracy to the educated elite of the Madras state Justice and Dravidar Kazhagam were the political forerunners of the present day Dravidian parties such as Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam which have ruled Tamil Nadu a successor state Madras Presidency without interruption since 1967 12 13 23 Controversies EditAttitude towards Brahmins Edit The Justice party began as a political organisation to represent the interests of non Brahmins Initially it did not accept Brahmins as party members However along with other groups including Europeans they were allowed to attend meetings as observers 77 After the defeat in 1926 calls were made to make the party more inclusive and more nationalist in character Opponents especially Periyar E V Ramasamy s self respect faction protected the original policy At a tripartite conference between Justice Ministerialists and Constitutionalists in 1929 a resolution was adopted recommending the removal of restrictions on Brahmins joining the organisation In October 1929 the executive committee placed a resolution to this effect for approval before the party s eleventh annual confederation at Nellore 41 Supporting the resolution Munuswamy Naidu spoke as follows So long as we exclude one community we cannot as a political speak on behalf of or claim to represent all the people of our presidency If as we hope provincial autonomy is given to the provinces as a result of the reforms that may be granted it should be essential that our Federation should be in a position to claim to be a truly representative body of all communities What objection can there be to admit such Brahmins as are willing to subscribe to the aims and objects of our Federation It may be that the Brahmins may not join even if the ban is removed But surely our Federation will not thereafter be open to objection on the ground that it is an exclusive organization 41 Former education minister A P Patro supported Naidu s view However this resolution was vehemently opposed by Periyar and R K Shanmukham Chetty and failed Speaking against letting Brahmins into the party Periyar explained At a time when non Brahmins in other parties were gradually coming over to the Justice Party being fed up with the Brahmin s methods and ways of dealing with political questions it was nothing short of folly to think of admitting him into the ranks of the Justice Party 41 The party began to accept Brahmin members only in October 1934 44 The pressure to compete with the Justice party forced the Congress party to let more non Brahmins into the party power structure The party s policies disrupted the established social hierarchy and increased the animosity between the Brahmin and non Brahmin communities 13 Nationalism Edit The Justice party was loyal to the British Empire In its early years Justice opposed the Indian Home Rule movement It did not send representatives to the Central Legislative Assembly the national parliamentary body During 1916 20 it focused on obtaining communal representation and participating in the political process During the non cooperation period it joined with the Madras Mail in opposing and denouncing Gandhi and the nationalists 20 64 Sir Theagaraya Chetty President of the party from 1916 to 1924 publicly expressed his view on the floor of the assembly that political prisoners were worser than dacoits and robbers amidst opposition from nationalists including members of his own party as A P Patro 78 The then Justice Party government headed by the Raja of Panagal banned the publication and distribution of poems written by Indian nationalist Subramanya Bharathy 79 However by the mid 1920s the party adopted more nationalist policies It discarded its earlier disdain of spinning thread by hand and Swadeshi economics In 1925 the party s annual confederation passed a resolution supporting indigenous industries and swadeshi enterprise This shift enabled Justice to better compete against Swaraj to whom Justice was slowly losing ground 80 The term Swaraj or self rule itself was included in the constitution Madras branch president C R Reddy led this change To Justicites Swaraj meant partial self government under British rule not independence The constitution stated to obtain Swaraj for India as a component of the British Empire at as early a date as possible by all peaceful and legitimate and constitutional means The historical record does not clearly indicate whether Justice condemned the Jallianwala Bagh massacre 18 24 81 The party s shift toward nationalist policies was reversed in the 1930s during the terms of Munusamy Naidu and Raja of Bobbili During the civil disobedience campaign the Justice governments did not protest the polices harsh measures 37 However with nationalism growing in the country and a string of Congress victories in local elections in 1934 the party reversed course again towards nationalism Justice turned to Periyar E V Ramaswamy as its champion Ramaswamy had drifted away in the early 1930s In exchange for their support in campaigning and propaganda the Justicites included the Self Respect movement s socialist Erode program in their election manifesto The new program had much in common with Congress nationalist policies such as Prohibition 35 Rumors about Justice Party Edit See also 1921 Buckingham and Carnatic Mills Strike Justice party which had captured power in 1920 claiming to represent all non Brahmins in the presidency gradually lost the support of many communities Under Theagaraya Chetty and later Panaganti Ramarayaningar the party came to represent a few non Brahmin Shudra castes alienating Scheduled Castes and Muslims During the first Justice ministry Muslim council members supported the government but withdrew in a disagreement over appointments 82 Explaining the Muslim disillusionment with the Justice party Abbas Ali Khan a Muslim member said in late 1923 I have found out from actual experience that whenever the question of experience came in they always preferred a Mudaliar a Nayudu a Chettiar or a Pillai but not a Muhamaddan 82 Justice party never regained Muslim support because it failed to convince the group that high caste Hindus had not received a disproportionate allocation of jobs opened up by communal reservation 83 The fracture with Scheduled Castes came during the same time period After T M Nair s death Adi Dravidas were slowly pushed out of the party The Pulianthope incidents also called as the B amp C Mill strike soured the relationship of non Brahmin Sudra castes like Vellalas Beri Chettis Balija Naidus Kammas and Kapus with Paraiyars On 11 May 1921 bots and caste Hindus went on strike in the Carnatic textile mill On 20 June workers in Buckingham Mill followed The Paraiyars were quickly persuaded to end the strike but the caste Hindus continued to strike This created animosity between the two groups In an ensuing clash between the police and caste Hindus several were killed Justice leaders accused the Government of creating problems by pampering the Paraiyars 24 The party paper Justice claimed Public opinion holds the present deplorable state of affairs has been brought about partly at all events by the undue pampering of the Adi Dravidas by the officials of the Labour department and partly by the perhaps unconscious encouragement given to them by some police officers 24 O Thanikachala Chetty raised this issue in Madras Legislative Council on 12 October which led to an acrimonious debate between Justice members and S Srinivasa Iyengar a Brahmin law member of the Governor s executive council and Lionel Davidson the Home member Davidson blamed Justice saying it is no longer merely a labour dispute confined to strikers and non strikers but a faction fight inflamed by caste prejudices M C Rajah the main representative of Scheduled Castes in the Council agreed with Davidson An Adi Dravida reader of the Madras Mail condemned Justice in the same way that T M Nair had once condemned the Brahmins Soon after the Pulianthope incidents Rajah and Paraiyars left the party 24 84 Notes Edit Encyclopedia of Political parties p 152 Kavitha Muralidharan 20 November 2016 100 years of Justice Party a movement which defined Tamil Nadu politics The NewsMinute Retrieved 13 September 2021 Joshua Fishman Ofelia Garcia 2010 Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity The Success Failure Continuum in Language and Ethnic Identity Efforts Volume 2 The Success Failure Continuum in Language and Ethnic Identity Efforts Oxford University Press USA pp 230 ISBN 978 0 19 539245 6 Retrieved 7 July 2016 Manuraj Shunmugasundaram 22 November 2016 A century of reform The Dravidian movement has left its progressive imprint on Tamil Nadu The Indian Express Retrieved 8 August 2018 The Inner Grammar of Dissent Lives K S Chalam Outlook India 12 December 2016 Retrieved 8 August 2018 a b Irschick 1969 pp 1 26 Myron Weiner and Ergun Ozbudun 1987 Competitive elections in developing countries American Enterprise Institute p 61 ISBN 0 8223 0766 9 K Nambi Arooran 1980 Tamil renaissance and Dravidian nationalism 1905 1944 p 37 a b c d e f g h i j Rajaraman 1988 ch 2 The Genesis of the Justice Party a b Irschick 1986 pp 30 31 Kathleen Gough 1981 Rural society in Southeast India Cambridge University Press pp 144 ISBN 978 0 521 23889 2 a b Rajaraman 1988 ch 8 Conclusion a b c Irschick 1969 pp 351 357 a b Washbrook David A 1977 The Emergence of Provincial Politics The Madras Presidency 1870 1920 Cambridge University Press pp 283 285 ISBN 978 0 521 05345 7 Baker Christopher John 1976 The Politics of South India 1920 1937 Cambridge University Press pp 31 32 ISBN 978 0 521 20755 3 John R McLane 1970 The political awakening in India Prentice Hall Inc Englewood Cliffs New Jersey p 161 a b R Muthukumar 1 December 2010 3 த ன ன ந த ய நலவ ர ம ச சங கம Dravida Iyakka Varalaru Part 1 in Tamil Chennai Kizhakku Pathippagam ISBN 9788184935981 a b c d e f Rajaraman 1988 ch 4 Ideology Organisation and Programme of the Justice Party a b c d e Rajaraman 1988 ch 3 The Era of Dr T M Nair a b c Irschick 1969 pp 27 54 a b Irschick 1969 pp 55 88 a b Irschick 1969 pp 89 136 a b c d e f g h i j k Rajaraman 1988 ch 5 History of the Justice Party from 1920 to 1937 a b c d e f g h Irschick 1969 pp 182 193 Ralhan 2002 p 179 Ralhan 2002 p 180 Ralhan 2002 p 182 Sundararajan 1989 pp 334 339 Krishnaswamy S 1989 The role of Madras Legislature in the freedom struggle 1861 1947 Indian Council of Historical Research pp 126 131 OCLC 300514750 Ralhan 2002 p 190 Irschick 1969 pp 136 171 Ralhan 2002 p 196 a b Ralhan 2002 p 197 Ralhan 2002 p 199 a b c Irschick 1986 pp 104 105 Hamsapriya A 1981 Role of the opposition in the Madras legislature 1921 1939 PDF Madras University p 85 Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 a b c d e Manikumar K A 2003 A colonial economy in the Great Depression Madras 1929 1937 Orient Blackswan pp 180 198 ISBN 978 81 250 2456 9 N Ram Editor in Chief of The Hindu and Robert L Hardgrave Professor Emeritus in the Humanities Government and Asian Studies at the University of Texas Austin Robert L Hardgrave Faculty page University of Texas Archived 7 July 2012 at archive today David A Washbrook and Andre Beteille Marguerite Ross Barnett a b c d Ralhan 2002 pp 164 166 a b Malarmannan 2009 pp 34 35 Joseph George Gheverghese 2003 George Joseph the life and times of a Kerala Christian nationalist Orient Blackswan pp 240 241 ISBN 978 81 250 2495 8 a b Irschick 1986 pp 102 103 Sundararajan 1989 p 546 More 1997 p 163 Kannan 2010 p 56 Patwardhan Achyut Asoka Mehta 1942 The Communal Triangle in India Allahabad Kitabistan p 172 OCLC 4449727 Kannan 2010 pp 60 Chatterjee Debi 2004 Up against caste comparative study of Ambedkar and Periyar Rawat Publications p 43 ISBN 978 81 7033 860 4 a b Kannan 2010 p 41 Kannan 2010 pp 63 71 Ravichandran amp Perumal 1982 pp 5 18 Ravichandran amp Perumal 1982 pp 19 21 The anti Periyar faction tried to preempt their opponents moves by declaring that the resolution passed in the Salem confederation did not bind them They did this at a meeting convened on 20 August They argued that since Periyar had not been properly elected president per the party constitution any resolutions passed in the Salem conference were ultra vires Ravichandran amp Perumal 1982 pp 22 23 Malarmannan 2009 p 72 Irschick 1969 p 347 Statistical Reports of 1951 52 Madras State Election PDF Election Commission of India Retrieved 3 March 2010 Justice Party Golden Jubilee Souvenir 1968 From 1920 to 1934 98 seats were available for election in the Madras Legislative Council under the dyarchial system The legislature was a unicameral body In 1937 and 1946 215 seats were available for election in the Legislative Assembly After the Government of India Act of 1935 the legislature had become bicameral with the Assembly being the lower chamber with primacy over the Council In 1920 and 23 29 members were nominated to the Legislative Council During 1926 34 the number increased to 34 with the addition of 5 more members to represent the female franchise In 1937 and 1946 the Legislature had become bicameral with the Council being the upper house A total of 46 council seats were filled by election But still formed a minority government as the Swaraj party which had won the election refused to participate in the governing process The Justice party led by P T Rajan contested only nine seats The Dravidar Kazhagam led by Periyar did not contest the elections a b c d Irschick 1969 pp 172 178 Justice party was renamed as Dravidar Kazhagam in 1944 After 1944 a rebel faction claiming to be the original Justice party existed till the mid 1950s Irschick 1969 pp 368 369 Murugan N 9 October 2006 RESERVATION Part 2 National Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 Retrieved 22 December 2009 a b c d e Rajaraman 1988 ch 6 Performance of the Justice Party The Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Department Department of HR amp CE Government of Tamil Nadu Archived from the original on 6 January 2010 Retrieved 26 December 2009 a b Irschick 1969 pp 244 251 Raj Kumar 2003 Essays on Indian renaissance p 265 ISBN 978 81 7141 689 9 Madras Town Planning Act 1920 Kerala Institute of Local Administration Retrieved 28 October 2008 permanent dead link a b c d e Varghese Nina 29 August 2006 T Nagar Shop till you drop and then shop some more Business Line Retrieved 4 March 2010 DMK will not forsake rights of depressed classes says Karunanidhi The Hindu 18 September 2008 Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 4 March 2010 S Muthiah 22 December 2008 A street name unchanged The Hindu Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2010 Arnold David 2000 The new Cambridge history of India Science technology and medicine in Colonial India Volume 3 Cambridge University Press p 185 ISBN 978 0 521 56319 2 Ralhan 2002 p 465 Parthasarathy R 1979 Builders of modern India S Satyamurti Publications Division Government of India p 42 Parthasarathy R 1979 Builders of modern India S Satyamurti Publications Division Government of India p 43 Irschick 1969 pp 262 263 Ralhan 2002 p 170 a b Irschick 1969 pp 258 260 More 1997 pp 109 110 Mendelsohn Oliver Marika Vicziany 1998 The untouchables subordination poverty and the state in modern India Contemporary South Asia Vol 4 Cambridge University Press pp 94 95 ISBN 978 0 521 55671 2 References EditIrschick Eugene F 1969 Political and Social Conflict in South India The non Brahmin movement and Tamil Separatism 1916 1929 University of California Press OCLC 249254802 Irschick Eugene F 1986 Tamil revivalism in the 1930s PDF Madras Cre A OCLC 15015416 Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2010 Retrieved 4 March 2010 More J B Prashant 1997 The Political Evolution of Muslims in Tamilnadu and Madras 1930 1947 Orient Longman ISBN 978 81 250 1011 1 OCLC 37770527 Kannan R 2010 Anna The life and times of C N Annadurai Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 670 08328 2 Malarmannan 2009 Thimuka Uruvanadhu Aen in Tamil Kizhakku Pathippagam ISBN 978 81 8493 265 2 Ralhan O P 2002 Encyclopaedia of Political Parties Anmol Publications PVT LTD ISBN 978 81 7488 865 5 Rajaraman P 1988 The Justice Party a historical perspective 1916 37 Poompozhil Publishers OCLC 20453430 Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Ravichandran R Perumal C A 1982 Chapter 1 Dravidar Kazhagam A political study PDF Madras Madras University Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 16 August 2010 Sundararajan Saroja 1989 March to freedom in Madras Presidency 1916 1947 Lalitha Publications OCLC 20222383 Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Justice Party India Chirol Sir Valentine 1921 India Old and New Chapter XII Cross Currents in Southern India London Macmillan amp Co Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Justice Party India amp oldid 1151918961, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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