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Noakhali riots

The Noakhali riots were a series of semi-organized massacres, rapes and abductions, combined with looting and arson of Hindu properties, perpetrated by the Muslim community in the districts of Noakhali in the Chittagong Division of Bengal (now in Bangladesh) in October–November 1946, a year before India's independence from British rule.[3]

Noakhali riots
Part of Partition of Bengal (1947)
Gandhi listens to a survivor in Noakhali, 1946
LocationNoakhali Region, Bengal, British India
DateOctober–November 1946
TargetBengali Hindus
Deaths285,[1] on other sources 5,000[2]
PerpetratorsEx-servicemen, private militia

It affected the areas under the Ramganj, Begumganj, Raipur, Lakshmipur, Chhagalnaiya and Sandwip police stations in Noakhali district and the areas under the Hajiganj, Faridganj, Chandpur, Laksham and Chauddagram police stations in Tipperah district, a total area of more than 2,000 square miles.[4]

The massacre of the Hindu population started on 10 October, on the day of Kojagari Lakshmi Puja[5][6][7] and continued unabated for about a week. Around 50,000 Hindus remained marooned in the affected areas under the strict surveillance of the Muslims, where the administration had no say.[8] In some areas, Hindus had to obtain permits from the Muslim leaders in order to travel outside their villages.

Mahatma Gandhi camped in Noakhali for four months and toured the district in a mission to restore peace and communal harmony. In the meantime, the Congress leadership started to accept the proposed Partition of India and the peace mission and other relief camps were abandoned. The majority of the survivors migrated to West Bengal, Tripura[9] and Assam.[10]

Cause of Riot edit

When elections were held in the provinces of India in 1937, the provincial power of Bengal came into the hands of the Muslims. But during the long British rule, Hindus were mainly in the seat of ruler (control of zamindari). They were also ahead in education and economics. Educated and financially advanced Hindus were forced to obey many new laws of the new Muslim government in various ways. One of which is manifested in many places including Noakhali. A section of Muslims was looking for an opportunity to vent their old grievances against Hindu zamindars (Local rulers). And that was the opportunity they got at the end of British rule in India.[11]

Attempts to bar Hindus from entering jobs, poor status of Muslims in Hindu-majority provinces, partition of Bengal, and the preposterously fanatic provocations by the Muslim League led to such a gruesome incident. The relationship between the Hindus and Muslims was very delicate. After this, the false news of a joint Hindu attack on Muslims in the Hindu-dominated Calcutta in retaliation to the attacks by Muslims on Direct Action Day spread exaggeratedly, adding fuel to the fire of previous accumulated anger. The Hindu-Muslim riots in Noakhali are believed to have been caused mainly by the resentment of Muslims against Hindus when the British rule was ending and the false news of massacre against Muslims in Calcutta and its outrage.[12] Furthermore, there were rumours that, Jaminder of Ramganj Rajendra Lal Chowdhury was going to sacrifice a Muslim boy instead goat in a sacrificial event that gives an initiation of that event. On 11th October, 1946 riots started.[13][14]

Prelude edit

Communal tensions in Noakhali started soon after the Great Calcutta Riots between Muslims and Hindus. Though it was quiet, the tension had been building up. During the six weeks leading up to the disturbances in Noakhali, Eastern Command headquarters in Kolkata received reports indicating tension in the rural areas of Noakhali and Chittagong districts.[15] Village poets and balladeers composed anti-Hindu poems and rhymes, which they recited and sang in market places and other public gathering places.[16]

Eid al-Fitr violence edit

On 29 August, the day of Eid al-Fitr, the tension escalated into violence. A rumour spread that the Hindus had accumulated weapons.[17] A group of Hindu fishermen were attacked with deadly weapons while fishing in the Feni River. One of them was killed and two seriously injured. Another group of nine Hindu fishermen from Charuriah were severely assaulted with deadly weapons. Seven of them were admitted to hospital.[18] Devi Prasanna Guha, the son of a Congressman of Babupur village under the Ramganj police station, was murdered.[19][20] One of his brothers and a servant were assaulted. The Congress office in front of their house was set on fire.[18] Chandra Kumar Karmakar of Monpura was killed near Jamalpur. Jamini Dey, a hotel worker, was killed near Ghoshbag. Ashu Sen of Devisinghpur was severely beaten up at Tajumiarhat at Char Parvati. Rajkumar Choudhury of Banspara was severely assaulted on his way home.[18]

All the properties of six or seven Hindu families of Kanur Char were looted. At Karpara, a Muslim gang armed with deadly weapons entered the house of Jadav Majumdar and looted properties worth Rs. 1,500. Nakul Majumdar was assaulted. The houses of Prasanna Mohan Chakraborty of Tatarkhil, Nabin Chandra Nath of Miralipur and Radha Charan Nath of Latipur were looted. Five members of the Nath family of Latipur were injured.[18]

The temple of the family deity of Harendra Ghosh of Raipur was desecrated: a calf was butchered and thrown inside the temple. The Shiva temple of Dr. Jadunath Majumdar of Chandipur was desecrated in a similar manner. The household shrines of Nagendra Majumdar and Rajkumar Choudhury of Dadpur were desecrated and the idols were stolen. The Durga images of Ishwar Chandra Pathak of Kethuri, Kedareshwar Chakraborty of Merkachar, Ananta Kumar De of Angrapara and Prasanna Mohan Chakraborty of Tatarkhil were broken.[18]

Communal propaganda edit

 
The Dayra Sharif of Shyampur, the residence of Ghulam Sarwar Husseini.

In 1937, Gholam Sarwar Husseini, the scion of a Muslim Pir family, was elected to the Bengal Legislative Assembly on a Krishak Praja Party ticket. However, in the 1946 elections, he lost to a Muslim League candidate. Gholam Sarwar's father and grandfather were pious Muslims and had led lives of penance. Their family happened to be the hereditary khadims at the Diara Sharif in Shyampur, revered as a holy place by both Muslims and Hindus. After the Direct Action Day riots in Kolkata, Husseini began to deliver provocative speeches, inciting the Muslim masses to take revenge for the Kolkata riots.[21][22] In some places, Hindu shops began to be boycotted. In the Ramganj and Begumganj police station areas, the Muslim boatmen refused to ferry Hindu passengers.[22] In the first week of September, Muslims looted the Hindu shops in Sahapur market.[22] Hindus were harassed and molested when they were returning to their native villages from Kolkata to spend the puja holidays.[22] From 2 October onwards there were frequent instances of stray killings, theft and looting.[23]

Events edit

According to Governor Burrows, "the immediate occasion for the outbreak of the disturbances was the looting of a Bazar [market] in Ramganj police station following the holding of a mass meeting and a provocative speech by Gholam Sarwar Husseini."[24] That included attacks on the place of business of Surendra Nath Bose and Rajendra Lal Roy Choudhury, the former president of the Noakhali Bar and a prominent Hindu Mahasabha leader.[25]

Violence edit

The riots started on 10 October, the day of Kojagari Lakshmi Puja, when the Bengali Hindus were involved in puja activities. Ghulam Sarwar instructed the Muslim masses to march towards the Sahapur market. Another Muslim League leader, Kasem, also arrived at the Sahapur market with his private army, then known as Kasemer Fauz.[citation needed][N 1]

 
Surabala Majumdar, the wife of Dr. Pratap Chandra Majumdar, who was killed

After that Kasem's army marched to Narayanpur to the zamindari office of Surendranath Basu. They were joined there by another Muslim mob from Kalyannagar. Some of the Muslim tenants also joined the mob and attacked the zamindari office.[citation needed]

 
The destroyed house of Rajendralal Roychowdhury

On 11 October, the private army of Gholam Sarwar, known as the Miyar Fauz, attacked the residence of Rajendralal Roychowdhury, the president of the Noakhali Bar Association and the Noakhali District Hindu Mahasabha. At that time Swami Tryambakananda of Bharat Sevashram Sangha was staying at their house as a guest. Roychowdhury fended off the mob from his terrace with his rifle for the entire day. At nightfall, when they retreated, he sent the swami and his family members to safety. The next day the mob attacked again.[citation needed] Rajendralal Roychowdhury's severed head was presented to Golam Sarwar on a platter and his two daughters were given to two of his trusted generals.[26] According to Sucheta Kriplani, Rajendralal Roychowdhury had followed the footsteps of Shivaji and Guru Gobind Singh and became a martyr, defending his faith and family honour.[27] Acharya Kripalani, a staunch believer in non-violence, held that the resistance offered by Rajendralal Roychowdhury and his family was the nearest approach to non-violence.[27] After three months Mahatma Gandhi, while touring Noakhali, visited their gutted house. On 11 January 1947, the corpses of the Roychowdhurys were exhumed from a swamp in Azimpur and brought before Mahatma Gandhi's prayer assembly at Lamchar High School. After the prayers the corpses were cremated according to Hindu rites.[citation needed]

 
A destroyed homestead in Chandpur

On 12 October, the residence of Chittaranjan Dutta Raychaudhuri, at Shayestaganj, under the Raipur police station, was attacked by a Muslim mob.[citation needed] Kasem's private army attacked the Das family of Gopairbag, near Sompara market, under the Ramganj police station. The Das family were Kasem's immediate neighbour.[citation needed] The Chaudhuri family of Noakhola village under the Ramganj police station were also attacked by a Muslim mob. The attackers resorted to murder, loot and arson.[citation needed] Another Muslim mob attacked the residence of Yashoda Pal and Bharat Bhuiyan at Gobindapur under Ramganj police station.[citation needed] Between Amishapara and Satgharia the residences of the Bhaumiks and the Pals were totally destroyed by fire.[citation needed] In Nandigram, Golam Sarwar's private army burnt the Nag residence, the post office and the school founded by Ramanikanta Nag. The Hindus from the nearby areas had taken shelter in the Nag residence and initially the police protected them, repulsing the first attacks. The attackers then resorted to indiscriminate looting in the village.[citation needed] On 13 October, at 12 noon, a mob of 200 to 250 Muslims armed with deadly weapons attacked the Hindus in Changirgaon. 1,500 maunds of paddy were burnt and all the temples were destroyed. The Hindu women were stripped of their shankha[N 2] and sindur. The men were forced to perform the namaz.[28]

On 14 October, Jogendra Chandra Das, the M.L.A. from Chandpur, Tipperah, wrote to Jogendra Nath Mandal stating that thousands of Scheduled Caste Hindus had been attacked in Ramganj police station area in Noakhali. Their houses were being looted and set on fire and they were being forcibly converted to Islam.[29]

 
Freedom fighter Lalmohan Sen was killed by a mob.

According to eyewitnesses,[who?] the attackers used petrol to set the houses on fire. In the remote island of Sandwip, which had no motor cars, petrol was imported from the mainland to set the houses on fire. According to Rakesh Batabyal, the use of petrol and kerosene indicates the premeditated and organised nature of the attacks.[30] In Sandwip, revolutionary freedom fighter Lalmohan Sen was killed when he tried to resist a Muslim mob from killing the Hindus.[31][32]

 
An affidavit attesting to atrocities on Hindu women

Violence broke out in the Ramganj police station area, in the north of Noakhali District, on 10 October 1946. The violence unleashed was described as "the organized fury of the Muslim mob".[33] It soon engulfed the neighbouring police stations of Raipur, Lakshmipur, Begumganj and Sandip in Noakhali, and Faridganj, Hajiganj, Chandpur, Lakshman and Chudagram in Tippera.[34] As per Gandhian Ashoka Gupta's report during Mahatma Gandhi's visit to the area, at least 2000 Hindus were forced to change their religion to Islam, six were forced to marry by force and one was murdered.[35] However, the official estimate was 200.[36]

Jashoda Ranjan Das, one of the landlord of Noakhali Nauri, was killed during the riot. He succeeded in saving his wife and children, sending them to West Bengal with the help of local Muslims, and stayed with his brothers-in-law. A few months later, with the help of Mahatma Gandhi, the bodies were found.

Forcible conversions edit

Village after village was forcibly converted to Islam. The men were forced to wear skullcaps and grow beards. The women were stripped of their shankha and sindur and forced to recite the kalma. Moulavis visited their homes and imparted Islamic teachings.[citation needed]

Ashoka Gupta, whose husband was then a judge serving in Chittagong, was among the first outsiders to reach Noakhali to provide relief.

When the news of the killings and forced conversions appeared in the news for the first time, Star of India, a newspaper patronised by the Muslim League, denied any incidents of forcible conversion.[37] However, Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, while answering a question from Dhirendranath Datta in the assembly, stated that there had been 9,895 cases of forcible conversion in Tipperah. The exact figure was not known for Noakhali, but it ran into thousands.[37] Edward Skinner Simpson stated in his report that 22,550 cases of forcible conversion took place in the three police station areas of Faridganj, Chandpur and Hajiganj in the district of Tipperah. Dr. Taj-ul-Islam Hashmi concluded that the number of Hindu women raped or converted was probably many times the number of Hindus killed. According to M. A. Khan, at least 95% of the Hindus of Noakhali were converted to Islam.[citation needed] According to Justice G. D. Khosla, the entire Hindu population of Noakhali were robbed of all they possessed and then forcibly converted to Islam.[38]

Official developments edit

On 13 October, Kamini Kumar Dutta, the leader of the Indian National Congress in the Bengal Legislative Council, paid a visit of inquiry to Noakhali in his personal capacity during which interviewed Abdullah, the District Superintendent of Police. On the 15th, he met the Minister of Civil Supplies of the Government of Bengal, who was on his way to Noakhali. On his return he communicated with the Home Department of the Interim Government seeking effective remedial measures and stating that it was impossible for anyone from outside to enter the disturbed areas without risking his life. He further stated that the authorities were anxious to hush up the entire episode from public inspection. No force had been sent to the disturbed areas until 14 October.[39]

Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, the Prime Minister of Bengal, held a press conference in Kolkata on 16 October at which he acknowledged the forcible conversion, plunder and looting of Hindus in Noakhali. While insisting that the incidents had stopped, he said he had no idea why the incidents had occurred. He stated that it had become difficult for troops to move in because the canals had been jammed, bridges were damaged and roads blocked. He contemplated dropping printed appeals and warnings from the air instead of rushing in troops.[40] On 18 October, Frederick Burrows, the Governor of Bengal, along with Suhrawardy and the Inspector General of Police for Bengal, visited Feni by plane and flew over the affected areas.[citation needed] Later, the Government of Bengal sent an official team to Noakhali and Tipperah to assess the situation. The team consisted of Jogendra Nath Mandal the newly appointed Member-in-Charge of Law in the Interim Government; Shamsuddin Ahmed, the Minister of Labour in the Bengal Government; Abul Hashim, the Secretary of Bengal Provincial Muslim League; Fazlur Rahman; Hamidul Huq Choudhury; Moazzem Hossain; A. Malik and B. Wahiduzzaman.[29]

On 19 October, Jivatram Bhagwandas Kripalani, the president-elect of the Indian National Congress; Sarat Chandra Bose, the Member-in-Charge of Works, Mines and Power in the Interim Government; Surendra Mohan Ghosh, the President of the Bengal Provincial Congress Committee; Sucheta Kripalani; Major General A. C. Chatterjee; Kumar Debendra Lal Khan and the editor of Anandabazar Patrika flew to Chittagong at the suggestion of Mahatma Gandhi.[41] On the way they had made a brief stop at Comilla, where thousands of Hindu victims reported experiencing atrocities. In Chittagong, they met Frederick Burrows, the Governor of Bengal, who assured them that according to Suhrawardy, the Prime Minister of Bengal, everything was peaceful and orderly. He explained the rape and molestation of Hindu women as natural because they were more attractive than Muslim women.[42]

On 21 October, Arthur Henderson, the Under-Secretary of State for India and Burma, read a report from the Governor of Bengal in the House of Commons that stated that the number of casualties was expected to be in the three-figure range.[43] Sarat Chandra Bose challenged the statement, saying that 400 Hindus had been killed in a single incident at the office and residence of landlord Surendranath Bose.[44]

On 25 October, at a mass meeting in New Delhi presided over by Suresh Chandra Majumdar, the managing director of the Anandabazar Patrika and the Hindusthan Standard, a resolution was passed demanding the immediate recall of the Governor of Bengal, the dismissal of the Muslim League ministry and intervention of the centre.[45] At a press conference in Kolkata on 26 October, Lieutenant General F. R. R. Bucher, the GoC of Eastern Command, stated that it was impossible to estimate how long it would take to restore the confidence of the affected people in the government.[45]

Relief operations edit

 
Swami Abhayananda of Bharat Sevashram Sangha distributing relief at Dalalbazar under the Lakshmipur police station in Noakhali in 1946

When the news of the events in Noakhali reached the outside world, Indian social, religious and political institutions came forward for relief and rescue operations. Notable among them were Bharat Sevashram Sangha, Hindu Mahasabha, the Indian National Congress, the Communist Party of India, the Indian National Army, Prabartak Sangha, Abhay Ashram, Arya Samaj and Gita Press.[46] 30 relief organisations and six medical missions performed relief work in Noakhali. In addition there were 20 camps under Gandhi's "one village one worker" plan.[47]

On receiving the news of Noakhali, Ashutosh Lahiry, the General Secretary of Hindu Mahasabha, immediately left for Chandpur. Syama Prasad Mookerjee, Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee and Pandit Narendranath Das, along with other workers, flew to Comilla and entered the affected area with military escorts. A plane was requisitioned and dispatched to the affected area loaded with rice, chira, bread, milk, biscuits, barley and medicines. Other consignments of relief supplies were dispatched by train.[48] The affected people who took refuge in Kolkata were given protection in about 60 centres in the city and suburbs.[48] Syama Prasad Mookerjee appointed M/S. P. K. Mitter & Co., a Kolkata-based accountancy firm, to control the collection, disbursement and audit of funds contributed by the public.[49]

 
Inauguration of Rajendralal Hospital at Lakshmipur.

Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee, the acting President of the Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha; Debendranath Mukherjee, the general secretary; and Nagendranath Bose, the Assistant Secretary, proceeded to the affected areas of Noakhali and Tipperah.[50] Chatterjee consulted Larkin, the Relief Commissioner, and considered zonal settlement to be the best method for providing relief and safety, keeping in mind the future resettlement of the victims in their respective villages. Accordingly, relief centres were opened at Bamni under the Raipur police station, Dalalbazar under the Lakshmipur police station and Paikpara under the Faridganj police station.[50] M. L. Biswas, the Secretary of the Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha; P. Bardhan, the Medical Secretary; and J. N. Banerjee, the Treasurer, were sent to the other affected areas to set up relief centres. Each of the relief centres was provided with a mobile medical unit under medical officers.[50] Sanat Kumar Roy Chowdhury, the vice-president of the Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha, inaugurated a well equipped 25-bed hospital at Lakshmipur in the memory of Rajendralal Raychaudhuri. Dr. Subhodh Mitra was placed in charge of the hospital.[50] Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee visited Noakhali for a third time and inaugurated a students' home at Bajapati named 'Shyamaprasad Chhatrabas'.[50]

 
Leela Roy rescued 1,307 Hindu girls.

On 20 October, at a meeting of the Chattogram Mahila Sangha, the Chittagong branch of the All India Women's Conference, presided over by Nellie Sengupta, a resolution was passed that the organisation would work for the relief and recovery of the abducted Hindu women in Noakhali.[51] The Noakhali Relief Committee was formed for the purpose of providing relief and rehabilitation to the affected Hindu women.[52] From 26 October onwards, the committee began to send a group of volunteers led by Ashoka Gupta to Noakhali for relief operations on a weekly basis.[53] Their task was to search for abducted Hindu women, provide relief to the refugees at the railway stations, and prepare a list of affected villages based on the accounts of affected villagers. Leela Roy reached Ramganj on 9 December, walking 90 miles on foot from Chaumohani. She recovered 1,307 abducted girls. Her organisation, the National Services Institute, set up 17 relief camps in Noakhali.[46] In December, the Srihatta Mahila Sangha decided to send Kiranshashi Deb, Leela Dasgupta, Saralabala Deb and Suhasini Das to Noakhali for relief work.[54] The Congress leaders who took the lead in the relief work were Satish Chandra Dasgupta, Dhirendranath Dutta, Trailokya Chakrabarti and Bishwaranjan Sen.[46]

Mahatma Gandhi sent four Hindu girls to Sujata Devi, the daughter-in-law of Chittaranjan Das, for rehabilitation. Sujata Devi established the Bangiya Pallee Sangathan Samity for the rehabilitation and a free school for the education of the girls.[55]

The Government of Bengal appointed a Special Relief Commissioner with magisterial powers for the distribution of funds to the refugees.[56] A Government Order dated 10 February 1947 announced relief of Rs 250 to each affected household for rebuilding and also promised the amount of Rs 200 to each affected weaver, fisherman and peasant for buying a new loom, langal, ox cart or fishing equipment on furnishing proof of loss. The relief workers were surprised at the government decision considering an entire joint family as one single holding or unit and contested that the sum of Rs 250 was greatly inadequate for rebuilding a homestead. Ashoka Gupta met Akhtaruzzaman, the Additional District Magistrate of Noakhali, on 11 February on behalf of the relief workers and obtained an explanation of the government order so that none of the affected families were left out.[57]

Gandhi peace mission edit

 
Gandhi in Noakhali, 1946

Gandhi played a role in cooling down the situation. He toured the area with his aides, and was instrumental in calming the communal tension.[35]

On 18 October, Bidhan Chandra Roy personally communicated with Gandhi, appraising him of the massacre of Hindus in Noakhali and the plight of the Hindu women in particular. At the evening prayer, Gandhi mentioned the events in Noakhali with concern. He said, if one-half of India's humanity was paralyzed, India could never really feel free. He would far rather see India's women trained to wield arms than that they should feel helpless. On 19 October, he decided to visit Noakhali.[44] Before leaving, he was interviewed on 6 November by Dr. Amiya Chakravarty at the Abhay Ashram in Sodepur, near Kolkata. After the interview, Dr Amiya Chakravarty said that the most urgent need of the hour was to rescue the abducted Hindu women who obviously could not be approached by the military because, after being forcefully converted, they were kept under the veil.[58]

Gandhi started for Noakhali on 6 November and reached Chaumuhani the next day. After spending two nights at the residence of Jogendra Majumdar, on 9 November he embarked on his tour of Noakhali, barefoot. In the next seven weeks, he covered 116 miles and visited 47 villages. He set up his base in a half-burnt house in the village of Srirampur, where he stayed until 1 January. He organized prayer meetings, met local Muslim leaders, and tried to win their confidence. Mistrust between Hindus and Muslims continued to exist, and stray incidents of violence occurred even during his stay in Noakhali. On the evening of 10 November, two persons were reported to have been murdered while returning home after attending Gandhi's evening prayer at Duttapara relief camp.[59]

Gandhi's stay in Noakhali was resented by the Muslim leadership. In January 1947, Gandhi in his talks with villagers of Fatehpur asked, "It is the easiest thing to harass the Hindus here, as you Muslims are in the majority. But is it just as honourable?"[60]

On 12 February 1947, while addressing a rally at Comilla, A. K. Fazlul Huq said that Gandhi's presence in Noakhali had harmed Islam enormously.[61] His presence had created a bitterness between the Hindus and the Muslims.[61] The resentment against Gandhi's stay in Noakhali grew day by day. Towards the end of February 1947, it became vulgar. Gandhi's route was deliberately dirtied every day and Muslims began to boycott his meetings.[61] Fazlul Huq further wondered how the Muslims of Noakhali and Tipperah were tolerating Gandhi's presence.[62]

Refugees edit

The survivors fled Noakhali and Tippera in two distinct phases. The first batches of refugees arrived in Kolkata after the massacres and forced conversions. The refugee flow subsided when the Government announced relief measures and the relief organisations started working in Noakhali and Tippera. However, in March 1947, when the Congress agreed to the Partition of India, the relief camps were abandoned and a fresh refugee influx took place in Tripura, Assam and the region that was to become West Bengal. Around 50,000 Hindu refugees who were sheltered in temporary relief camps were subsequently relocated to Guwahati in Assam.[63]

Aftermath edit

According to historian Rakesh Batabyal, the situation never returned to normal.[64] Sporadic incidents of violence continued and even the police were not spared. In one incident in early November, reported by Frederick Burrows to Frederick Pethick-Lawrence, a senior ICS officer and his police party were attacked three times while escorting Hindu survivors to a refugee camp. The police had to open fire; seven people were killed and ten wounded.[65] The Bengali periodical Desher Vani published in Noakhali quoted a relief worker in the Ramganj police station area who stated that even after four months people had not returned to their houses.[24]

Investigation and cover-up edit

On 29 September 1946, the Government of Bengal passed an ordinance prohibiting the press from publishing information regarding any communal disturbances. Any statement, advertisement, notice, news or opinion piece was prohibited from mentioning: the name of the place where the incident occurred; the way in which the victims were killed or injured; the name of the community to which the victim or the perpetrator belonged; and the destruction or desecration of places of worship or shrines, if any. According to Ramesh Chandra Majumdar, the promulgation of the ordinance was the main reason that news of the incidents was not published in the press for a week.[66]

The Government of Bengal appointed Edward Skinner Simpson, a retired judge, to investigate the incidents in Noakhali. His report was covered up by the government. After arriving at Kolkata, on his way to Noakhali, Gandhi sought a copy of the report from Prime Minister Suhrawardy. The latter had initially agreed to provide him with a copy. However, the Governor and the secretaries strongly objected to such a proposition and Suhrawardy declined to hand over the report to Gandhi. A copy of the report was with Mathur, the secretary to Suhrawardy, who secretly provided a summary to The Statesman. The editor published a censored version on 13 November 1946. In the report, Simpson mentioned that for a proper investigation into the happenings in Noakhali, at least 50 senior officers would need to be engaged for a period of six months.[67]

Noakhali on the eve of Partition edit

Though the massacres and mass conversions had stopped in October, persecution of the Hindu population continued in Noakhali, even during Gandhi's stay there. A week after Gandhi's departure from Noakhali, A. V. Thakkar wrote from Chandpur on 9 March before leaving for Mumbai that lawlessness was still persisting in Noakhali and Tipperah. Even five months after the riots in October, there was no sign of its stopping. On the contrary the withdrawal of some of the temporary police stations was encouraging the criminal elements.[68] On 19 March 1947, the Muslims held secret meetings in various places. They threatened the Hindus with mass slaughter.[69] Ghulam Sarwar convened a huge meeting at Sonapur under the Ramganj police station on 23 March. The day was to be celebrated as Pakistan Day, and the day's programme was a general strike. Thousands of Muslims would gather at the meeting, which had been announced in the village markets on 20 March by the beating of the drums. At the announcement of the meeting, the Hindus began to flee, fearing further oppression. The Choumohani railway station became packed with Hindu refugees.[70] The relief workers of the Gandhi peace mission requested the District Superintendent of Police, the Additional District Magistrate and Abdul Gofran, a minister, not to allow the meeting to be held. The DSP, however, stated that the meeting would be held and the police would adopt adequate security measures. The relief workers reported the matter to Mahatma Gandhi and Suhrawardy and the latter wired a government order to the Noakhali SP on 22 March prohibiting meetings in public places, processions and slogans. However, meetings could be held in private places like madrasas and mosques.[71] Rehan Ali, the Officer-in-Charge of the Ramganj police station, said that the meeting would be held at the Amtali ground, which was a private place as it was adjacent to a mosque, and therefore the government order would not be violated.[71] The Muslim League leadership resolved to hold the meeting at any cost. Muslim League leaders Mohammad Ershad and Mujibur Rahman enlisted minister Abdul Gofran as one of the speakers at the meeting.[72] On 23 March 4,000 to 5,000 Muslims marched in a procession from Ramganj to Kazirkhil and then back to Ramganj, chanting slogans, and gathered for the meeting.[73] Addressing the gathering one of the speakers, Yunus Mian Pandit, criticised the Hindus for the practice of untouchability and lack of a purdah system and justified an economic boycott on them.[64]

On 13 May 1947, William Barret, the Divisional Commissioner of the Chittagong Division, submitted a top secret report to P. D. Martyn, the Additional Secretary to the Department of Home, Government of Bengal detailing the persecution of the Hindus.[68] He reported that groups of Muslims sometimes searched Hindus and took belongings which caught their fancy. In some cases the Hindus had their daily shopping snatched away. Coconuts and betel nuts were forcefully taken from Hindu homesteads. Cattle were stolen. Corrugated iron sheets and timber were taken. Paddy plants were uprooted from Hindu-owned land. Efforts were made to close down Hindu-owned cinemas. Demands were made that the Muslims should have 50% of the loom licenses, even though the vast majority of weavers were Hindus belonging to the Yogi caste. Efforts were made to rid the marketplaces of Hindu merchants and shopkeepers. Hindus who had rebuilt their houses were told to leave the district. Hindu complainants at the police station were threatened by Muslims and compelled to agree to their cases being compromised. Hindus were openly addressed as malauns and kafirs.[74] It was reported on 13 May that a Hindu woman of Dharmapur village had been rescued while being abducted by Muslims.[75] On 16 May abduction was unsuccessfully attempted on two Hindu women.[76]

Repercussions in Bihar and United Provinces edit

As a reaction to the Noakhali riots, riots rocked Bihar towards the end of 1946.[77] Severe violence broke out in Chhapra and Saran district between 25 and 28 October.[78] Between 30 October and 7 November, mass communal massacres in Bihar brought Partition closer to inevitability.[citation needed] Very soon Patna, Munger and Bhagalpur also became the sites of serious turbulence. Begun as a reprisal for the Noakhali riot,[citation needed] this rioting was difficult for authorities to deal with because it was spread out over a large area of scattered villages, and the number of casualties was impossible to establish accurately: "According to a subsequent statement in the British Parliament, the death-toll amounted to 5,000. The Statesman's estimate was between 7,500 and 10,000; the Congress party admitted to 2,000; Mr. Jinnah [the head of the Muslim League] claimed about 300."[79] However, by 3 November, the official estimate put the number of deaths at only 445.[34] Writing in 1950, Francis Tuker, who at the time of the violence was General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Eastern Command, India, put the Muslim death toll between 7,000 and 8,000.[80]

Severe rioting also took place in Garhmukteshwar in United Provinces, where a massacre occurred in November 1946 in which "Hindu pilgrims, at the annual religious fair, set upon and exterminated Muslims, not only on the festival grounds but in the adjacent town" while the police did little or nothing; the deaths were estimated at between 1,000 and 2,000.[81]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Kasemer Fauz literally means Kasem's army.
  2. ^ Shankha (Bengali: শাঁখা) is a bangle made of conch shell, traditionally worn by married Bengali Hindu women as a mark of their married life.

References edit

  1. ^ ROY, Sukumar (1947). Noakhalite Mahatma (নোয়াখালীতে মহাত্মা) (in Bengali). Calcutta: Orient Book Company. p. 14.
  2. ^ "India: Written in Blood". Time. 28 October 1946. p. 42. Mobs in the Noakhali district of east Bengal ... burned, looted and massacred on a scale surpassing even the recent Calcutta riots. In eight days an estimated 5,000 were killed.
  3. ^ "The Bengal Conundrum: How Noakhali Riots Set Template for Anti-Hindu Violence in East Bengal". News18. 9 June 2022. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  4. ^ Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (1 January 2011). 1946: The great Calcutta killings and the Noakhali genocide (PDF) (First ed.). Kolkata: Sri Himansu Maity. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  5. ^ নোয়াখালীতে গান্ধী: সাম্প্রদায়িক হত্যাযজ্ঞের রক্তাক্ত অধ্যায়. BBC Bangla (in Bengali). 2 October 2019. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  6. ^ হিন্দু-মুসলিম দাঙ্গা থামাতেই নোয়াখালী আসেন মহাত্মা গান্ধী. Somoy News (in Bengali). 2 October 2019. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  7. ^ ROY, Sukumar (1947). Noakhalite Mahatma (নোয়াখালীতে মহাত্মা) (in Bengali). Calcutta: Orient Book Company. p. 11.
  8. ^ Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. pp. 278–280. ISBN 9788192246406.
  9. ^ Dev, Chitta Ranjan (2005). . Ishani. Mahatma Gandhi Ishani Foundation. 1 (4). Archived from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
  10. ^ Dasgupta, Anindita (2001). "Denial and Resistance: Sylheti Partition 'refugees' in Assam". Contemporary South Asia. South Asia Forum for Human Rights. 10 (3): 352. doi:10.1080/09584930120109559. S2CID 144544505. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
  11. ^ সাম্প্রদায়িক সম্প্রিতি এবং ভারতে হিন্দু মুসলিম দন্দ্বের ইতিহাস। Page 242
  12. ^ সাম্প্রদায়িক সম্প্রিতি এবং ভারতে হিন্দু মুসলিম দন্দ্বের ইতিহাস। Page 306-351
  13. ^ "দাঙ্গা বন্ধে নোয়াখালীতে ছাগল হারান মহাত্মা গান্ধী". banglanews24.com (in Bengali). 24 October 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  14. ^ "নোয়াখালীতে গান্ধী: সাম্প্রদায়িক হত্যাযজ্ঞের রক্তাক্ত অধ্যায় - BBC …". archive.ph. 2 October 2019. Archived from the original on 2 October 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ Tuker, Francis (1950). While Memory Serves. London: Cassell. p. 170. OCLC 937426955. Reports received at Command H.Q. during the six weeks before the trouble started certainly indicated tension in the rural area, particularly Noakhali and Chittagong.
  16. ^ Mukherjee, Kali Prasanna (2003). দেশ বিভাজনের অন্তরালে [Behind The Partition Of The Country] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra. p. 36.
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  18. ^ a b c d e Ghosh Choudhuri, Haran C. (6 February 1947). Proceedings of the Bengal Legislative Assembly (PBLA). Vol. LXXVII. Bengal Legislative Assembly.
  19. ^ Das, Suhasini (2004). নোয়াখালি: ১৯৪৬ [Noakhali:1946] (in Bengali). Dhaka: Sahitya Prakash. p. 10. ISBN 9844653738.
  20. ^ Mukherjee, Kali Prasanna (2003). দেশ বিভাজনের অন্তরালে [Behind The Partition Of The Country] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra. p. 37.
  21. ^ Whitehead, Andrew (20 May 1997). "Noakhali's Darkest Hour". Indian Express.
  22. ^ a b c d Das, Suhasini (2004). Noakhali:1946. Dhaka: Sahitya Prakash. p. 11. ISBN 9844653738.
  23. ^ Batabyal, Rakesh (2005). Communalism in Bengal: From Famine to Noakhali, 1943–47. New Delhi: Sage Publications. p. 280. ISBN 0-7619-3335-2. From 2 October, there were frequent instances of stray killings, snatching of goods, and lootings throughout the district.
  24. ^ a b Mansergh, Nicholas; Moon, Penderel (1980). The Transfer of Power 1942-7. Vol. IX. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-11-580084-9. cited in Batabyal 2005, p. 277.
  25. ^ Batabyal, Rakesh (2005). Communalism in Bengal: From Famine to Noakhali, 1943–47. Sage Publishers. p. 277. ISBN 0-7619-3335-2. This included an attack on the 'Kutchery bari of Babu Suerndra Nath Bose and Rai Saheb Rajendra Lal Ray Choudhury of Karpara' ... the erstwhile president of the Noakhali Bar and a prominent Hindu Mahasabha leader in the district.
  26. ^ Ghosh, Benoy Bhusan (1978). দ্বিজাতিতত্ত্ব ও বাঙালী [Two Nation Theory and Bengalees] (in Bengali). Kolkata. p. 68.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  27. ^ a b Kriplani, Sucheta. Noakhali Tipperah Tragedy. Kolkata: Noakhali Rescue, Relief and Rehabilitation Committee. p. 12. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
  28. ^ Nayyar, Pyarelal (1966). Mahatma Gandhi: The Last Phase. Vol. I (2) (2nd ed.). Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House. pp. 91–92. OCLC 773250180.
  29. ^ a b Biswas, Bipad Bhanjan (2003). Bharat Bibhajan: Jogendranath O Dr. Ambedkar (in Bengali). p. 44.
  30. ^ Batabyal, Rakesh (2005). Communalism in Bengal: From Famine to Noakhali, 1943–47. New Delhi: Sage Publications. p. 274. ISBN 0-7619-3335-2. The use of kerosene and petrol indicates the premeditated and organized nature of the attacks because the attacking crowd, as one victim informed, had "an abundant stock".
  31. ^ Sengupta, Subhodh Chandra; Basu, Anjali, eds. (January 2002). "Sansad Bangali charitabhidhan" লালমোহন সেন [Lalmohan Sen]. Samsad Bangali Charitabhidhan (Bibliographical Dictionary) (in Bengali). Vol. 1 (4th ed.). Kolkata: Shishu Sahitya Samsad. p. 501. ISBN 8185626650.
  32. ^ Bandyopadhyay, Sandip (2010). ইতিহাসের দিকে ফিরে: ছেচল্লিশের দাঙ্গা [The Calcutta Riots, 1946] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Radical. p. 66. ISBN 9788185459073.
  33. ^ Ghosh Choudhuri, Haran C. (6 February 1947). Proceedings of the Bengal Legislative Assembly (PBLA). Vol. LXXVII. Bengal Legislative Assembly. p. 39. cited in Batabyal 2005, p. 272.
  34. ^ a b Mansergh, Nicholas; Moon, Penderel (1980). The Transfer of Power 1942-7. Vol. IX. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-11-580084-9. cited in Batabyal 2005, p. 272.
  35. ^ a b Gupta, Ashoka. "Those days in Noakhali…". Seminar Publications. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  36. ^ Mansergh, Nicholas; Moon, Penderel (1980). The Transfer of Power 1942-7. Vol. IX. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-11-580084-9. cited in Batabyal 2005, p. 273.
  37. ^ a b Batabyal, Rakesh (2005). Communalism in Bengal: From Famine to Noakhali, 1943–47. New Delhi: Sage Publications. p. 282. ISBN 0-7619-3335-2. H. S. Suhrawardy... while answering the question of Dhirendranath Datta on the floor of the Bengal Legislative Assembly, gave a figure of 9,895 cases of forcible conversion in Tipperah, while that for Noakhali was not known, 'but (which) ran into thousands.'
  38. ^ Khosla, G. D. (1989). Stern Reckoning: A Survey of the Events Leading up to and Following the Partition of India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-19-562417-5.
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  40. ^ Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. p. 264. ISBN 9788192246406.
  41. ^ Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. p. 265. ISBN 9788192246406.
  42. ^ Kriplani, Jivatram Bhagwandas (2003). Gandhi: His Life and Thought. New Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. pp. 255–256. ISBN 9788123011141.
  43. ^ "Bengal (Disturbances)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 21 October 1946. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
  44. ^ a b Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. pp. 266–267. ISBN 9788192246406.
  45. ^ a b Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. p. 270. ISBN 9788192246406.
  46. ^ a b c Das, Suhasini (2004). Noakhali:1946. Dhaka: Sahitya Prakash. p. 13. ISBN 984-465-373-8.
  47. ^ Nayyar, Pyarelal (January 1966). Mahatma Gandhi: The Last Phase. Vol. I Book Two (2nd ed.). Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House. p. 54. OCLC 773250180.
  48. ^ a b Short Report of Hindu Mahasabha Relief Activities during "Calcutta Killing" and "Noakhali Carnage". Kolkata: Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha. 1946. p. 3. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  49. ^ Short Report of Hindu Mahasabha Relief Activities during "Calcutta Killing" and "Noakhali Carnage". Kolkata: Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha. 1946. p. 6. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  50. ^ a b c d e Short Report of Hindu Mahasabha Relief Activities during "Calcutta Killing" and "Noakhali Carnage". Kolkata: Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha. 1946. p. 5. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  51. ^ Gupta, Ashoka (1999). Noakhalir Duryoger Dine (নোয়াখালির দুর্যোগের দিনে). Kolkata: Naya Udyog. p. 11. ISBN 8185971552.
  52. ^ Das, Suhasini (2004). Noakhali:1946. Dhaka: Sahitya Prakash. p. 12. ISBN 9844653738.
  53. ^ "About our founder". Mahila Seva Samity. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  54. ^ Das, Suhasini (2004). Noakhali:1946. Dhaka: Sahitya Prakash. p. 25. ISBN 9844653738.
  55. ^ Das, Mohua (9 May 2012). "Hall of Bobby largesse back in old hands". The Telegraph. Kolkata. Archived from the original on 17 September 2013. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  56. ^ Nayyar, Pyarelal (January 1966). Mahatma Gandhi: The Last Phase. Vol. I Book Two (2nd ed.). Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House. p. 85. OCLC 773250180.
  57. ^ Gupta, Ashoka (1999). নোয়াখালির দুর্যোগের দিনে [Noakhalir Durjoger Dine] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Naya Udyog. pp. 27–28. ISBN 8185971552.
  58. ^ Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. p. 271. ISBN 9788192246406.
  59. ^ Ghosh, Biswaroop (2011). "Religion and Politics in Bengal: The Noakhali Carnage 1946-47". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 72: 936–946. JSTOR 44146785.
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  61. ^ a b c Majumder, Ramesh Chandra (1975). বাংলা দেশের ইতিহাস [History of Bangla Desh] (in Bengali). Kolkata: General Printers and Publishers. p. 425.
  62. ^ Chatterjee, R. (1947). The Modern Review. Prabasi Press Private, Limited. p. 178. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
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  64. ^ a b Batabyal, Rakesh (2005). Communalism in Bengal: From Famine to Noakhali, 1943–47. New Delhi: Sage Publications. p. 276. ISBN 0-7619-3335-2. The situation never returned to normal ... The entire area was ablaze with tension throughout the next few months ... [In] 1947, Yunus Mia Pandit while presiding over the meeting in Khilparato to celebrate Pakistan Day on 23 March, criticized untouchability and absence of Purdah system among the Hindus and justified their boycott by the Muslims.
  65. ^ Mansergh, Nicholas; Moon, Penderel (1980). The Transfer of Power 1942-7. Vol. IX. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. 98–99. ISBN 978-0-11-580084-9. cited in Batabyal 2005, p. 275.
  66. ^ Majumdar, Ramesh Chandra (1975). বাংলা দেশের ইতিহাস [History of Bangla Desh] (in Bengali). Vol. 4. Kolkata: General Printers and Publishers. p. 422.
  67. ^ Majumdar, Ramesh Chandra (1975). বাংলা দেশের ইতিহাস [History of Bangla Desh] (in Bengali). Vol. 4. Kolkata: General Printers and Publishers. p. 421.
  68. ^ a b Majumder, Ramesh Chandra (1975). বাংলা দেশের ইতিহাস [History of Bangla Desh] (in Bengali). Vol. 4. Kolkata: General Printers and Publishers. p. 428.
  69. ^ Maksud, Syed Abul, ed. (2011). নোয়াখালী গান্ধী মিশন ডায়েরি [Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Katha. p. 50. ISBN 9789380476070.
  70. ^ Maksud, Syed Abul, ed. (2011). নোয়াখালী গান্ধী মিশন ডায়েরি [Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Katha. p. 52. ISBN 9789380476070.
  71. ^ a b Maksud, Syed Abul, ed. (2011). নোয়াখালী গান্ধী মিশন ডায়েরি [Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Katha. p. 54. ISBN 9789380476070.
  72. ^ Maksud, Syed Abul, ed. (2011). নোয়াখালী গান্ধী মিশন ডায়েরি [Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Katha. p. 55. ISBN 9789380476070.
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  74. ^ Sinha, Dinesh Chandra; Dasgupta, Ashok (2011). 1946: The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide. Kolkata: Himangshu Maity. pp. 333–334. ISBN 9788192246406.
  75. ^ Maksud, Syed Abul, ed. (2011). নোয়াখালী গান্ধী মিশন ডায়েরি [Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary] (in Bengali). Kolkata: Katha. p. 60. ISBN 9789380476070.
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  78. ^ Ian Stephens, Pakistan (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1963), pp. 110–111.
  79. ^ Ian Stephens, Pakistan (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1963), p. 111.
  80. ^ Tuker, Francis (1950). While Memory Serves. London: Cassell. p. 182. OCLC 937426955. The number of Muslim dead ... was about seven thousand to eight thousand. The Muslim League tried to put the figure at between twenty and thirty thousand. Our reports show this to be a considerable exaggeration but, equally on the other side, was it false to assess the casualties at some two to three thousand dead or even less.
  81. ^ Ian Stephens, Pakistan (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1963), p. 113.

noakhali, riots, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Noakhali riots news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Noakhali riots were a series of semi organized massacres rapes and abductions combined with looting and arson of Hindu properties perpetrated by the Muslim community in the districts of Noakhali in the Chittagong Division of Bengal now in Bangladesh in October November 1946 a year before India s independence from British rule 3 Noakhali riotsPart of Partition of Bengal 1947 Gandhi listens to a survivor in Noakhali 1946LocationNoakhali Region Bengal British IndiaDateOctober November 1946TargetBengali HindusDeaths285 1 on other sources 5 000 2 PerpetratorsEx servicemen private militiaIt affected the areas under the Ramganj Begumganj Raipur Lakshmipur Chhagalnaiya and Sandwip police stations in Noakhali district and the areas under the Hajiganj Faridganj Chandpur Laksham and Chauddagram police stations in Tipperah district a total area of more than 2 000 square miles 4 The massacre of the Hindu population started on 10 October on the day of Kojagari Lakshmi Puja 5 6 7 and continued unabated for about a week Around 50 000 Hindus remained marooned in the affected areas under the strict surveillance of the Muslims where the administration had no say 8 In some areas Hindus had to obtain permits from the Muslim leaders in order to travel outside their villages Mahatma Gandhi camped in Noakhali for four months and toured the district in a mission to restore peace and communal harmony In the meantime the Congress leadership started to accept the proposed Partition of India and the peace mission and other relief camps were abandoned The majority of the survivors migrated to West Bengal Tripura 9 and Assam 10 Contents 1 Cause of Riot 2 Prelude 2 1 Eid al Fitr violence 2 2 Communal propaganda 3 Events 3 1 Violence 3 2 Forcible conversions 3 3 Official developments 4 Relief operations 4 1 Gandhi peace mission 5 Refugees 6 Aftermath 6 1 Investigation and cover up 6 2 Noakhali on the eve of Partition 7 Repercussions in Bihar and United Provinces 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 ReferencesCause of Riot editWhen elections were held in the provinces of India in 1937 the provincial power of Bengal came into the hands of the Muslims But during the long British rule Hindus were mainly in the seat of ruler control of zamindari They were also ahead in education and economics Educated and financially advanced Hindus were forced to obey many new laws of the new Muslim government in various ways One of which is manifested in many places including Noakhali A section of Muslims was looking for an opportunity to vent their old grievances against Hindu zamindars Local rulers And that was the opportunity they got at the end of British rule in India 11 Attempts to bar Hindus from entering jobs poor status of Muslims in Hindu majority provinces partition of Bengal and the preposterously fanatic provocations by the Muslim League led to such a gruesome incident The relationship between the Hindus and Muslims was very delicate After this the false news of a joint Hindu attack on Muslims in the Hindu dominated Calcutta in retaliation to the attacks by Muslims on Direct Action Day spread exaggeratedly adding fuel to the fire of previous accumulated anger The Hindu Muslim riots in Noakhali are believed to have been caused mainly by the resentment of Muslims against Hindus when the British rule was ending and the false news of massacre against Muslims in Calcutta and its outrage 12 Furthermore there were rumours that Jaminder of Ramganj Rajendra Lal Chowdhury was going to sacrifice a Muslim boy instead goat in a sacrificial event that gives an initiation of that event On 11th October 1946 riots started 13 14 Prelude editCommunal tensions in Noakhali started soon after the Great Calcutta Riots between Muslims and Hindus Though it was quiet the tension had been building up During the six weeks leading up to the disturbances in Noakhali Eastern Command headquarters in Kolkata received reports indicating tension in the rural areas of Noakhali and Chittagong districts 15 Village poets and balladeers composed anti Hindu poems and rhymes which they recited and sang in market places and other public gathering places 16 Eid al Fitr violence edit On 29 August the day of Eid al Fitr the tension escalated into violence A rumour spread that the Hindus had accumulated weapons 17 A group of Hindu fishermen were attacked with deadly weapons while fishing in the Feni River One of them was killed and two seriously injured Another group of nine Hindu fishermen from Charuriah were severely assaulted with deadly weapons Seven of them were admitted to hospital 18 Devi Prasanna Guha the son of a Congressman of Babupur village under the Ramganj police station was murdered 19 20 One of his brothers and a servant were assaulted The Congress office in front of their house was set on fire 18 Chandra Kumar Karmakar of Monpura was killed near Jamalpur Jamini Dey a hotel worker was killed near Ghoshbag Ashu Sen of Devisinghpur was severely beaten up at Tajumiarhat at Char Parvati Rajkumar Choudhury of Banspara was severely assaulted on his way home 18 All the properties of six or seven Hindu families of Kanur Char were looted At Karpara a Muslim gang armed with deadly weapons entered the house of Jadav Majumdar and looted properties worth Rs 1 500 Nakul Majumdar was assaulted The houses of Prasanna Mohan Chakraborty of Tatarkhil Nabin Chandra Nath of Miralipur and Radha Charan Nath of Latipur were looted Five members of the Nath family of Latipur were injured 18 The temple of the family deity of Harendra Ghosh of Raipur was desecrated a calf was butchered and thrown inside the temple The Shiva temple of Dr Jadunath Majumdar of Chandipur was desecrated in a similar manner The household shrines of Nagendra Majumdar and Rajkumar Choudhury of Dadpur were desecrated and the idols were stolen The Durga images of Ishwar Chandra Pathak of Kethuri Kedareshwar Chakraborty of Merkachar Ananta Kumar De of Angrapara and Prasanna Mohan Chakraborty of Tatarkhil were broken 18 Communal propaganda edit nbsp The Dayra Sharif of Shyampur the residence of Ghulam Sarwar Husseini In 1937 Gholam Sarwar Husseini the scion of a Muslim Pir family was elected to the Bengal Legislative Assembly on a Krishak Praja Party ticket However in the 1946 elections he lost to a Muslim League candidate Gholam Sarwar s father and grandfather were pious Muslims and had led lives of penance Their family happened to be the hereditary khadims at the Diara Sharif in Shyampur revered as a holy place by both Muslims and Hindus After the Direct Action Day riots in Kolkata Husseini began to deliver provocative speeches inciting the Muslim masses to take revenge for the Kolkata riots 21 22 In some places Hindu shops began to be boycotted In the Ramganj and Begumganj police station areas the Muslim boatmen refused to ferry Hindu passengers 22 In the first week of September Muslims looted the Hindu shops in Sahapur market 22 Hindus were harassed and molested when they were returning to their native villages from Kolkata to spend the puja holidays 22 From 2 October onwards there were frequent instances of stray killings theft and looting 23 Events editAccording to Governor Burrows the immediate occasion for the outbreak of the disturbances was the looting of a Bazar market in Ramganj police station following the holding of a mass meeting and a provocative speech by Gholam Sarwar Husseini 24 That included attacks on the place of business of Surendra Nath Bose and Rajendra Lal Roy Choudhury the former president of the Noakhali Bar and a prominent Hindu Mahasabha leader 25 Violence edit The riots started on 10 October the day of Kojagari Lakshmi Puja when the Bengali Hindus were involved in puja activities Ghulam Sarwar instructed the Muslim masses to march towards the Sahapur market Another Muslim League leader Kasem also arrived at the Sahapur market with his private army then known as Kasemer Fauz citation needed N 1 nbsp Surabala Majumdar the wife of Dr Pratap Chandra Majumdar who was killedAfter that Kasem s army marched to Narayanpur to the zamindari office of Surendranath Basu They were joined there by another Muslim mob from Kalyannagar Some of the Muslim tenants also joined the mob and attacked the zamindari office citation needed nbsp The destroyed house of Rajendralal RoychowdhuryOn 11 October the private army of Gholam Sarwar known as the Miyar Fauz attacked the residence of Rajendralal Roychowdhury the president of the Noakhali Bar Association and the Noakhali District Hindu Mahasabha At that time Swami Tryambakananda of Bharat Sevashram Sangha was staying at their house as a guest Roychowdhury fended off the mob from his terrace with his rifle for the entire day At nightfall when they retreated he sent the swami and his family members to safety The next day the mob attacked again citation needed Rajendralal Roychowdhury s severed head was presented to Golam Sarwar on a platter and his two daughters were given to two of his trusted generals 26 According to Sucheta Kriplani Rajendralal Roychowdhury had followed the footsteps of Shivaji and Guru Gobind Singh and became a martyr defending his faith and family honour 27 Acharya Kripalani a staunch believer in non violence held that the resistance offered by Rajendralal Roychowdhury and his family was the nearest approach to non violence 27 After three months Mahatma Gandhi while touring Noakhali visited their gutted house On 11 January 1947 the corpses of the Roychowdhurys were exhumed from a swamp in Azimpur and brought before Mahatma Gandhi s prayer assembly at Lamchar High School After the prayers the corpses were cremated according to Hindu rites citation needed nbsp A destroyed homestead in ChandpurOn 12 October the residence of Chittaranjan Dutta Raychaudhuri at Shayestaganj under the Raipur police station was attacked by a Muslim mob citation needed Kasem s private army attacked the Das family of Gopairbag near Sompara market under the Ramganj police station The Das family were Kasem s immediate neighbour citation needed The Chaudhuri family of Noakhola village under the Ramganj police station were also attacked by a Muslim mob The attackers resorted to murder loot and arson citation needed Another Muslim mob attacked the residence of Yashoda Pal and Bharat Bhuiyan at Gobindapur under Ramganj police station citation needed Between Amishapara and Satgharia the residences of the Bhaumiks and the Pals were totally destroyed by fire citation needed In Nandigram Golam Sarwar s private army burnt the Nag residence the post office and the school founded by Ramanikanta Nag The Hindus from the nearby areas had taken shelter in the Nag residence and initially the police protected them repulsing the first attacks The attackers then resorted to indiscriminate looting in the village citation needed On 13 October at 12 noon a mob of 200 to 250 Muslims armed with deadly weapons attacked the Hindus in Changirgaon 1 500 maunds of paddy were burnt and all the temples were destroyed The Hindu women were stripped of their shankha N 2 and sindur The men were forced to perform the namaz 28 On 14 October Jogendra Chandra Das the M L A from Chandpur Tipperah wrote to Jogendra Nath Mandal stating that thousands of Scheduled Caste Hindus had been attacked in Ramganj police station area in Noakhali Their houses were being looted and set on fire and they were being forcibly converted to Islam 29 nbsp Freedom fighter Lalmohan Sen was killed by a mob According to eyewitnesses who the attackers used petrol to set the houses on fire In the remote island of Sandwip which had no motor cars petrol was imported from the mainland to set the houses on fire According to Rakesh Batabyal the use of petrol and kerosene indicates the premeditated and organised nature of the attacks 30 In Sandwip revolutionary freedom fighter Lalmohan Sen was killed when he tried to resist a Muslim mob from killing the Hindus 31 32 nbsp An affidavit attesting to atrocities on Hindu womenViolence broke out in the Ramganj police station area in the north of Noakhali District on 10 October 1946 The violence unleashed was described as the organized fury of the Muslim mob 33 It soon engulfed the neighbouring police stations of Raipur Lakshmipur Begumganj and Sandip in Noakhali and Faridganj Hajiganj Chandpur Lakshman and Chudagram in Tippera 34 As per Gandhian Ashoka Gupta s report during Mahatma Gandhi s visit to the area at least 2000 Hindus were forced to change their religion to Islam six were forced to marry by force and one was murdered 35 However the official estimate was 200 36 Jashoda Ranjan Das one of the landlord of Noakhali Nauri was killed during the riot He succeeded in saving his wife and children sending them to West Bengal with the help of local Muslims and stayed with his brothers in law A few months later with the help of Mahatma Gandhi the bodies were found Forcible conversions edit Village after village was forcibly converted to Islam The men were forced to wear skullcaps and grow beards The women were stripped of their shankha and sindur and forced to recite the kalma Moulavis visited their homes and imparted Islamic teachings citation needed Ashoka Gupta whose husband was then a judge serving in Chittagong was among the first outsiders to reach Noakhali to provide relief When the news of the killings and forced conversions appeared in the news for the first time Star of India a newspaper patronised by the Muslim League denied any incidents of forcible conversion 37 However Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy while answering a question from Dhirendranath Datta in the assembly stated that there had been 9 895 cases of forcible conversion in Tipperah The exact figure was not known for Noakhali but it ran into thousands 37 Edward Skinner Simpson stated in his report that 22 550 cases of forcible conversion took place in the three police station areas of Faridganj Chandpur and Hajiganj in the district of Tipperah Dr Taj ul Islam Hashmi concluded that the number of Hindu women raped or converted was probably many times the number of Hindus killed According to M A Khan at least 95 of the Hindus of Noakhali were converted to Islam citation needed According to Justice G D Khosla the entire Hindu population of Noakhali were robbed of all they possessed and then forcibly converted to Islam 38 Official developments edit On 13 October Kamini Kumar Dutta the leader of the Indian National Congress in the Bengal Legislative Council paid a visit of inquiry to Noakhali in his personal capacity during which interviewed Abdullah the District Superintendent of Police On the 15th he met the Minister of Civil Supplies of the Government of Bengal who was on his way to Noakhali On his return he communicated with the Home Department of the Interim Government seeking effective remedial measures and stating that it was impossible for anyone from outside to enter the disturbed areas without risking his life He further stated that the authorities were anxious to hush up the entire episode from public inspection No force had been sent to the disturbed areas until 14 October 39 Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy the Prime Minister of Bengal held a press conference in Kolkata on 16 October at which he acknowledged the forcible conversion plunder and looting of Hindus in Noakhali While insisting that the incidents had stopped he said he had no idea why the incidents had occurred He stated that it had become difficult for troops to move in because the canals had been jammed bridges were damaged and roads blocked He contemplated dropping printed appeals and warnings from the air instead of rushing in troops 40 On 18 October Frederick Burrows the Governor of Bengal along with Suhrawardy and the Inspector General of Police for Bengal visited Feni by plane and flew over the affected areas citation needed Later the Government of Bengal sent an official team to Noakhali and Tipperah to assess the situation The team consisted of Jogendra Nath Mandal the newly appointed Member in Charge of Law in the Interim Government Shamsuddin Ahmed the Minister of Labour in the Bengal Government Abul Hashim the Secretary of Bengal Provincial Muslim League Fazlur Rahman Hamidul Huq Choudhury Moazzem Hossain A Malik and B Wahiduzzaman 29 On 19 October Jivatram Bhagwandas Kripalani the president elect of the Indian National Congress Sarat Chandra Bose the Member in Charge of Works Mines and Power in the Interim Government Surendra Mohan Ghosh the President of the Bengal Provincial Congress Committee Sucheta Kripalani Major General A C Chatterjee Kumar Debendra Lal Khan and the editor of Anandabazar Patrika flew to Chittagong at the suggestion of Mahatma Gandhi 41 On the way they had made a brief stop at Comilla where thousands of Hindu victims reported experiencing atrocities In Chittagong they met Frederick Burrows the Governor of Bengal who assured them that according to Suhrawardy the Prime Minister of Bengal everything was peaceful and orderly He explained the rape and molestation of Hindu women as natural because they were more attractive than Muslim women 42 On 21 October Arthur Henderson the Under Secretary of State for India and Burma read a report from the Governor of Bengal in the House of Commons that stated that the number of casualties was expected to be in the three figure range 43 Sarat Chandra Bose challenged the statement saying that 400 Hindus had been killed in a single incident at the office and residence of landlord Surendranath Bose 44 On 25 October at a mass meeting in New Delhi presided over by Suresh Chandra Majumdar the managing director of the Anandabazar Patrika and the Hindusthan Standard a resolution was passed demanding the immediate recall of the Governor of Bengal the dismissal of the Muslim League ministry and intervention of the centre 45 At a press conference in Kolkata on 26 October Lieutenant General F R R Bucher the GoC of Eastern Command stated that it was impossible to estimate how long it would take to restore the confidence of the affected people in the government 45 Relief operations edit nbsp Swami Abhayananda of Bharat Sevashram Sangha distributing relief at Dalalbazar under the Lakshmipur police station in Noakhali in 1946When the news of the events in Noakhali reached the outside world Indian social religious and political institutions came forward for relief and rescue operations Notable among them were Bharat Sevashram Sangha Hindu Mahasabha the Indian National Congress the Communist Party of India the Indian National Army Prabartak Sangha Abhay Ashram Arya Samaj and Gita Press 46 30 relief organisations and six medical missions performed relief work in Noakhali In addition there were 20 camps under Gandhi s one village one worker plan 47 On receiving the news of Noakhali Ashutosh Lahiry the General Secretary of Hindu Mahasabha immediately left for Chandpur Syama Prasad Mookerjee Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee and Pandit Narendranath Das along with other workers flew to Comilla and entered the affected area with military escorts A plane was requisitioned and dispatched to the affected area loaded with rice chira bread milk biscuits barley and medicines Other consignments of relief supplies were dispatched by train 48 The affected people who took refuge in Kolkata were given protection in about 60 centres in the city and suburbs 48 Syama Prasad Mookerjee appointed M S P K Mitter amp Co a Kolkata based accountancy firm to control the collection disbursement and audit of funds contributed by the public 49 nbsp Inauguration of Rajendralal Hospital at Lakshmipur Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee the acting President of the Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha Debendranath Mukherjee the general secretary and Nagendranath Bose the Assistant Secretary proceeded to the affected areas of Noakhali and Tipperah 50 Chatterjee consulted Larkin the Relief Commissioner and considered zonal settlement to be the best method for providing relief and safety keeping in mind the future resettlement of the victims in their respective villages Accordingly relief centres were opened at Bamni under the Raipur police station Dalalbazar under the Lakshmipur police station and Paikpara under the Faridganj police station 50 M L Biswas the Secretary of the Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha P Bardhan the Medical Secretary and J N Banerjee the Treasurer were sent to the other affected areas to set up relief centres Each of the relief centres was provided with a mobile medical unit under medical officers 50 Sanat Kumar Roy Chowdhury the vice president of the Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha inaugurated a well equipped 25 bed hospital at Lakshmipur in the memory of Rajendralal Raychaudhuri Dr Subhodh Mitra was placed in charge of the hospital 50 Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee visited Noakhali for a third time and inaugurated a students home at Bajapati named Shyamaprasad Chhatrabas 50 nbsp Leela Roy rescued 1 307 Hindu girls On 20 October at a meeting of the Chattogram Mahila Sangha the Chittagong branch of the All India Women s Conference presided over by Nellie Sengupta a resolution was passed that the organisation would work for the relief and recovery of the abducted Hindu women in Noakhali 51 The Noakhali Relief Committee was formed for the purpose of providing relief and rehabilitation to the affected Hindu women 52 From 26 October onwards the committee began to send a group of volunteers led by Ashoka Gupta to Noakhali for relief operations on a weekly basis 53 Their task was to search for abducted Hindu women provide relief to the refugees at the railway stations and prepare a list of affected villages based on the accounts of affected villagers Leela Roy reached Ramganj on 9 December walking 90 miles on foot from Chaumohani She recovered 1 307 abducted girls Her organisation the National Services Institute set up 17 relief camps in Noakhali 46 In December the Srihatta Mahila Sangha decided to send Kiranshashi Deb Leela Dasgupta Saralabala Deb and Suhasini Das to Noakhali for relief work 54 The Congress leaders who took the lead in the relief work were Satish Chandra Dasgupta Dhirendranath Dutta Trailokya Chakrabarti and Bishwaranjan Sen 46 Mahatma Gandhi sent four Hindu girls to Sujata Devi the daughter in law of Chittaranjan Das for rehabilitation Sujata Devi established the Bangiya Pallee Sangathan Samity for the rehabilitation and a free school for the education of the girls 55 The Government of Bengal appointed a Special Relief Commissioner with magisterial powers for the distribution of funds to the refugees 56 A Government Order dated 10 February 1947 announced relief of Rs 250 to each affected household for rebuilding and also promised the amount of Rs 200 to each affected weaver fisherman and peasant for buying a new loom langal ox cart or fishing equipment on furnishing proof of loss The relief workers were surprised at the government decision considering an entire joint family as one single holding or unit and contested that the sum of Rs 250 was greatly inadequate for rebuilding a homestead Ashoka Gupta met Akhtaruzzaman the Additional District Magistrate of Noakhali on 11 February on behalf of the relief workers and obtained an explanation of the government order so that none of the affected families were left out 57 Gandhi peace mission edit nbsp Gandhi in Noakhali 1946Gandhi played a role in cooling down the situation He toured the area with his aides and was instrumental in calming the communal tension 35 On 18 October Bidhan Chandra Roy personally communicated with Gandhi appraising him of the massacre of Hindus in Noakhali and the plight of the Hindu women in particular At the evening prayer Gandhi mentioned the events in Noakhali with concern He said if one half of India s humanity was paralyzed India could never really feel free He would far rather see India s women trained to wield arms than that they should feel helpless On 19 October he decided to visit Noakhali 44 Before leaving he was interviewed on 6 November by Dr Amiya Chakravarty at the Abhay Ashram in Sodepur near Kolkata After the interview Dr Amiya Chakravarty said that the most urgent need of the hour was to rescue the abducted Hindu women who obviously could not be approached by the military because after being forcefully converted they were kept under the veil 58 Gandhi started for Noakhali on 6 November and reached Chaumuhani the next day After spending two nights at the residence of Jogendra Majumdar on 9 November he embarked on his tour of Noakhali barefoot In the next seven weeks he covered 116 miles and visited 47 villages He set up his base in a half burnt house in the village of Srirampur where he stayed until 1 January He organized prayer meetings met local Muslim leaders and tried to win their confidence Mistrust between Hindus and Muslims continued to exist and stray incidents of violence occurred even during his stay in Noakhali On the evening of 10 November two persons were reported to have been murdered while returning home after attending Gandhi s evening prayer at Duttapara relief camp 59 Gandhi s stay in Noakhali was resented by the Muslim leadership In January 1947 Gandhi in his talks with villagers of Fatehpur asked It is the easiest thing to harass the Hindus here as you Muslims are in the majority But is it just as honourable 60 On 12 February 1947 while addressing a rally at Comilla A K Fazlul Huq said that Gandhi s presence in Noakhali had harmed Islam enormously 61 His presence had created a bitterness between the Hindus and the Muslims 61 The resentment against Gandhi s stay in Noakhali grew day by day Towards the end of February 1947 it became vulgar Gandhi s route was deliberately dirtied every day and Muslims began to boycott his meetings 61 Fazlul Huq further wondered how the Muslims of Noakhali and Tipperah were tolerating Gandhi s presence 62 Refugees editThe survivors fled Noakhali and Tippera in two distinct phases The first batches of refugees arrived in Kolkata after the massacres and forced conversions The refugee flow subsided when the Government announced relief measures and the relief organisations started working in Noakhali and Tippera However in March 1947 when the Congress agreed to the Partition of India the relief camps were abandoned and a fresh refugee influx took place in Tripura Assam and the region that was to become West Bengal Around 50 000 Hindu refugees who were sheltered in temporary relief camps were subsequently relocated to Guwahati in Assam 63 Aftermath editAccording to historian Rakesh Batabyal the situation never returned to normal 64 Sporadic incidents of violence continued and even the police were not spared In one incident in early November reported by Frederick Burrows to Frederick Pethick Lawrence a senior ICS officer and his police party were attacked three times while escorting Hindu survivors to a refugee camp The police had to open fire seven people were killed and ten wounded 65 The Bengali periodical Desher Vani published in Noakhali quoted a relief worker in the Ramganj police station area who stated that even after four months people had not returned to their houses 24 Investigation and cover up edit On 29 September 1946 the Government of Bengal passed an ordinance prohibiting the press from publishing information regarding any communal disturbances Any statement advertisement notice news or opinion piece was prohibited from mentioning the name of the place where the incident occurred the way in which the victims were killed or injured the name of the community to which the victim or the perpetrator belonged and the destruction or desecration of places of worship or shrines if any According to Ramesh Chandra Majumdar the promulgation of the ordinance was the main reason that news of the incidents was not published in the press for a week 66 The Government of Bengal appointed Edward Skinner Simpson a retired judge to investigate the incidents in Noakhali His report was covered up by the government After arriving at Kolkata on his way to Noakhali Gandhi sought a copy of the report from Prime Minister Suhrawardy The latter had initially agreed to provide him with a copy However the Governor and the secretaries strongly objected to such a proposition and Suhrawardy declined to hand over the report to Gandhi A copy of the report was with Mathur the secretary to Suhrawardy who secretly provided a summary to The Statesman The editor published a censored version on 13 November 1946 In the report Simpson mentioned that for a proper investigation into the happenings in Noakhali at least 50 senior officers would need to be engaged for a period of six months 67 Noakhali on the eve of Partition edit Though the massacres and mass conversions had stopped in October persecution of the Hindu population continued in Noakhali even during Gandhi s stay there A week after Gandhi s departure from Noakhali A V Thakkar wrote from Chandpur on 9 March before leaving for Mumbai that lawlessness was still persisting in Noakhali and Tipperah Even five months after the riots in October there was no sign of its stopping On the contrary the withdrawal of some of the temporary police stations was encouraging the criminal elements 68 On 19 March 1947 the Muslims held secret meetings in various places They threatened the Hindus with mass slaughter 69 Ghulam Sarwar convened a huge meeting at Sonapur under the Ramganj police station on 23 March The day was to be celebrated as Pakistan Day and the day s programme was a general strike Thousands of Muslims would gather at the meeting which had been announced in the village markets on 20 March by the beating of the drums At the announcement of the meeting the Hindus began to flee fearing further oppression The Choumohani railway station became packed with Hindu refugees 70 The relief workers of the Gandhi peace mission requested the District Superintendent of Police the Additional District Magistrate and Abdul Gofran a minister not to allow the meeting to be held The DSP however stated that the meeting would be held and the police would adopt adequate security measures The relief workers reported the matter to Mahatma Gandhi and Suhrawardy and the latter wired a government order to the Noakhali SP on 22 March prohibiting meetings in public places processions and slogans However meetings could be held in private places like madrasas and mosques 71 Rehan Ali the Officer in Charge of the Ramganj police station said that the meeting would be held at the Amtali ground which was a private place as it was adjacent to a mosque and therefore the government order would not be violated 71 The Muslim League leadership resolved to hold the meeting at any cost Muslim League leaders Mohammad Ershad and Mujibur Rahman enlisted minister Abdul Gofran as one of the speakers at the meeting 72 On 23 March 4 000 to 5 000 Muslims marched in a procession from Ramganj to Kazirkhil and then back to Ramganj chanting slogans and gathered for the meeting 73 Addressing the gathering one of the speakers Yunus Mian Pandit criticised the Hindus for the practice of untouchability and lack of a purdah system and justified an economic boycott on them 64 On 13 May 1947 William Barret the Divisional Commissioner of the Chittagong Division submitted a top secret report to P D Martyn the Additional Secretary to the Department of Home Government of Bengal detailing the persecution of the Hindus 68 He reported that groups of Muslims sometimes searched Hindus and took belongings which caught their fancy In some cases the Hindus had their daily shopping snatched away Coconuts and betel nuts were forcefully taken from Hindu homesteads Cattle were stolen Corrugated iron sheets and timber were taken Paddy plants were uprooted from Hindu owned land Efforts were made to close down Hindu owned cinemas Demands were made that the Muslims should have 50 of the loom licenses even though the vast majority of weavers were Hindus belonging to the Yogi caste Efforts were made to rid the marketplaces of Hindu merchants and shopkeepers Hindus who had rebuilt their houses were told to leave the district Hindu complainants at the police station were threatened by Muslims and compelled to agree to their cases being compromised Hindus were openly addressed as malauns and kafirs 74 It was reported on 13 May that a Hindu woman of Dharmapur village had been rescued while being abducted by Muslims 75 On 16 May abduction was unsuccessfully attempted on two Hindu women 76 Repercussions in Bihar and United Provinces editMain article 1946 Bihar riots As a reaction to the Noakhali riots riots rocked Bihar towards the end of 1946 77 Severe violence broke out in Chhapra and Saran district between 25 and 28 October 78 Between 30 October and 7 November mass communal massacres in Bihar brought Partition closer to inevitability citation needed Very soon Patna Munger and Bhagalpur also became the sites of serious turbulence Begun as a reprisal for the Noakhali riot citation needed this rioting was difficult for authorities to deal with because it was spread out over a large area of scattered villages and the number of casualties was impossible to establish accurately According to a subsequent statement in the British Parliament the death toll amounted to 5 000 The Statesman s estimate was between 7 500 and 10 000 the Congress party admitted to 2 000 Mr Jinnah the head of the Muslim League claimed about 300 79 However by 3 November the official estimate put the number of deaths at only 445 34 Writing in 1950 Francis Tuker who at the time of the violence was General Officer Commanding in Chief Eastern Command India put the Muslim death toll between 7 000 and 8 000 80 Severe rioting also took place in Garhmukteshwar in United Provinces where a massacre occurred in November 1946 in which Hindu pilgrims at the annual religious fair set upon and exterminated Muslims not only on the festival grounds but in the adjacent town while the police did little or nothing the deaths were estimated at between 1 000 and 2 000 81 See also editCommunal violence in India 1946 Calcutta Killings Anti Hinduism Hinduism in BangladeshFootnotes edit Kasemer Fauz literally means Kasem s army Shankha Bengali শ খ is a bangle made of conch shell traditionally worn by married Bengali Hindu women as a mark of their married life References edit ROY Sukumar 1947 Noakhalite Mahatma ন য খ ল ত মহ ত ম in Bengali Calcutta Orient Book Company p 14 India Written in Blood Time 28 October 1946 p 42 Mobs in the Noakhali district of east Bengal burned looted and massacred on a scale surpassing even the recent Calcutta riots In eight days an estimated 5 000 were killed The Bengal Conundrum How Noakhali Riots Set Template for Anti Hindu Violence in East Bengal News18 9 June 2022 Retrieved 21 May 2023 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 1 January 2011 1946 The great Calcutta killings and the Noakhali genocide PDF First ed Kolkata Sri Himansu Maity Retrieved 4 July 2017 ন য খ ল ত গ ন ধ স ম প রদ য ক হত য যজ ঞ র রক ত ক ত অধ য য BBC Bangla in Bengali 2 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 হ ন দ ম সল ম দ ঙ গ থ ম ত ই ন য খ ল আস ন মহ ত ম গ ন ধ Somoy News in Bengali 2 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 ROY Sukumar 1947 Noakhalite Mahatma ন য খ ল ত মহ ত ম in Bengali Calcutta Orient Book Company p 11 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity pp 278 280 ISBN 9788192246406 Dev Chitta Ranjan 2005 Two days with Mohandas Gandhi Ishani Mahatma Gandhi Ishani Foundation 1 4 Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 7 August 2011 Dasgupta Anindita 2001 Denial and Resistance Sylheti Partition refugees in Assam Contemporary South Asia South Asia Forum for Human Rights 10 3 352 doi 10 1080 09584930120109559 S2CID 144544505 Retrieved 7 August 2011 স ম প রদ য ক সম প র ত এব ভ রত হ ন দ ম সল ম দন দ ব র ইত হ স Page 242 স ম প রদ য ক সম প র ত এব ভ রত হ ন দ ম সল ম দন দ ব র ইত হ স Page 306 351 দ ঙ গ বন ধ ন য খ ল ত ছ গল হ র ন মহ ত ম গ ন ধ banglanews24 com in Bengali 24 October 2021 Retrieved 30 January 2022 ন য খ ল ত গ ন ধ স ম প রদ য ক হত য যজ ঞ র রক ত ক ত অধ য য BBC archive ph 2 October 2019 Archived from the original on 2 October 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Tuker Francis 1950 While Memory Serves London Cassell p 170 OCLC 937426955 Reports received at Command H Q during the six weeks before the trouble started certainly indicated tension in the rural area particularly Noakhali and Chittagong Mukherjee Kali Prasanna 2003 দ শ ব ভ জন র অন তর ল Behind The Partition Of The Country in Bengali Kolkata Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra p 36 Mukherjee Kali Prasanna 2003 দ শ ব ভ জন র অন তর ল Behind The Partition Of The Country in Bengali Kolkata Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra p 35 a b c d e Ghosh Choudhuri Haran C 6 February 1947 Proceedings of the Bengal Legislative Assembly PBLA Vol LXXVII Bengal Legislative Assembly Das Suhasini 2004 ন য খ ল ১৯৪৬ Noakhali 1946 in Bengali Dhaka Sahitya Prakash p 10 ISBN 9844653738 Mukherjee Kali Prasanna 2003 দ শ ব ভ জন র অন তর ল Behind The Partition Of The Country in Bengali Kolkata Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra p 37 Whitehead Andrew 20 May 1997 Noakhali s Darkest Hour Indian Express a b c d Das Suhasini 2004 Noakhali 1946 Dhaka Sahitya Prakash p 11 ISBN 9844653738 Batabyal Rakesh 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine to Noakhali 1943 47 New Delhi Sage Publications p 280 ISBN 0 7619 3335 2 From 2 October there were frequent instances of stray killings snatching of goods and lootings throughout the district a b Mansergh Nicholas Moon Penderel 1980 The Transfer of Power 1942 7 Vol IX London Her Majesty s Stationery Office p 98 ISBN 978 0 11 580084 9 cited in Batabyal 2005 p 277 Batabyal Rakesh 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine to Noakhali 1943 47 Sage Publishers p 277 ISBN 0 7619 3335 2 This included an attack on the Kutchery bari of Babu Suerndra Nath Bose and Rai Saheb Rajendra Lal Ray Choudhury of Karpara the erstwhile president of the Noakhali Bar and a prominent Hindu Mahasabha leader in the district Ghosh Benoy Bhusan 1978 দ ব জ ত তত ত ব ও ব ঙ ল Two Nation Theory and Bengalees in Bengali Kolkata p 68 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Kriplani Sucheta Noakhali Tipperah Tragedy Kolkata Noakhali Rescue Relief and Rehabilitation Committee p 12 Retrieved 27 April 2011 Nayyar Pyarelal 1966 Mahatma Gandhi The Last Phase Vol I 2 2nd ed Ahmedabad Navajivan Publishing House pp 91 92 OCLC 773250180 a b Biswas Bipad Bhanjan 2003 Bharat Bibhajan Jogendranath O Dr Ambedkar in Bengali p 44 Batabyal Rakesh 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine to Noakhali 1943 47 New Delhi Sage Publications p 274 ISBN 0 7619 3335 2 The use of kerosene and petrol indicates the premeditated and organized nature of the attacks because the attacking crowd as one victim informed had an abundant stock Sengupta Subhodh Chandra Basu Anjali eds January 2002 Sansad Bangali charitabhidhan ল লম হন স ন Lalmohan Sen Samsad Bangali Charitabhidhan Bibliographical Dictionary in Bengali Vol 1 4th ed Kolkata Shishu Sahitya Samsad p 501 ISBN 8185626650 Bandyopadhyay Sandip 2010 ইত হ স র দ ক ফ র ছ চল ল শ র দ ঙ গ The Calcutta Riots 1946 in Bengali Kolkata Radical p 66 ISBN 9788185459073 Ghosh Choudhuri Haran C 6 February 1947 Proceedings of the Bengal Legislative Assembly PBLA Vol LXXVII Bengal Legislative Assembly p 39 cited in Batabyal 2005 p 272 a b Mansergh Nicholas Moon Penderel 1980 The Transfer of Power 1942 7 Vol IX London Her Majesty s Stationery Office p 48 ISBN 978 0 11 580084 9 cited in Batabyal 2005 p 272 a b Gupta Ashoka Those days in Noakhali Seminar Publications Retrieved 20 December 2008 Mansergh Nicholas Moon Penderel 1980 The Transfer of Power 1942 7 Vol IX London Her Majesty s Stationery Office p 98 ISBN 978 0 11 580084 9 cited in Batabyal 2005 p 273 a b Batabyal Rakesh 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine to Noakhali 1943 47 New Delhi Sage Publications p 282 ISBN 0 7619 3335 2 H S Suhrawardy while answering the question of Dhirendranath Datta on the floor of the Bengal Legislative Assembly gave a figure of 9 895 cases of forcible conversion in Tipperah while that for Noakhali was not known but which ran into thousands Khosla G D 1989 Stern Reckoning A Survey of the Events Leading up to and Following the Partition of India New Delhi Oxford University Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 19 562417 5 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity p 268 ISBN 9788192246406 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity p 264 ISBN 9788192246406 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity p 265 ISBN 9788192246406 Kriplani Jivatram Bhagwandas 2003 Gandhi His Life and Thought New Delhi Publications Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India pp 255 256 ISBN 9788123011141 Bengal Disturbances Parliamentary Debates Hansard 21 October 1946 Retrieved 16 September 2013 a b Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity pp 266 267 ISBN 9788192246406 a b Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity p 270 ISBN 9788192246406 a b c Das Suhasini 2004 Noakhali 1946 Dhaka Sahitya Prakash p 13 ISBN 984 465 373 8 Nayyar Pyarelal January 1966 Mahatma Gandhi The Last Phase Vol I Book Two 2nd ed Ahmedabad Navajivan Publishing House p 54 OCLC 773250180 a b Short Report of Hindu Mahasabha Relief Activities during Calcutta Killing and Noakhali Carnage Kolkata Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha 1946 p 3 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Short Report of Hindu Mahasabha Relief Activities during Calcutta Killing and Noakhali Carnage Kolkata Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha 1946 p 6 Retrieved 8 May 2011 a b c d e Short Report of Hindu Mahasabha Relief Activities during Calcutta Killing and Noakhali Carnage Kolkata Bengal Provincial Hindu Mahasabha 1946 p 5 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Gupta Ashoka 1999 Noakhalir Duryoger Dine ন য খ ল র দ র য গ র দ ন Kolkata Naya Udyog p 11 ISBN 8185971552 Das Suhasini 2004 Noakhali 1946 Dhaka Sahitya Prakash p 12 ISBN 9844653738 About our founder Mahila Seva Samity Retrieved 8 May 2011 Das Suhasini 2004 Noakhali 1946 Dhaka Sahitya Prakash p 25 ISBN 9844653738 Das Mohua 9 May 2012 Hall of Bobby largesse back in old hands The Telegraph Kolkata Archived from the original on 17 September 2013 Retrieved 17 September 2013 Nayyar Pyarelal January 1966 Mahatma Gandhi The Last Phase Vol I Book Two 2nd ed Ahmedabad Navajivan Publishing House p 85 OCLC 773250180 Gupta Ashoka 1999 ন য খ ল র দ র য গ র দ ন Noakhalir Durjoger Dine in Bengali Kolkata Naya Udyog pp 27 28 ISBN 8185971552 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity p 271 ISBN 9788192246406 Ghosh Biswaroop 2011 Religion and Politics in Bengal The Noakhali Carnage 1946 47 Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 72 936 946 JSTOR 44146785 Batabyal R 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine To Noakhali 1943 47 SAGE Series in Modern Indian History in Indonesian SAGE Publications p 357 ISBN 978 81 321 0205 2 Retrieved 1 October 2023 a b c Majumder Ramesh Chandra 1975 ব ল দ শ র ইত হ স History of Bangla Desh in Bengali Kolkata General Printers and Publishers p 425 Chatterjee R 1947 The Modern Review Prabasi Press Private Limited p 178 Retrieved 1 October 2023 Ghosh Partha S 2013 Refugees and Migrants in South Asia Nature and implications PDF Nehru Memorial Museum and Library ISBN 978 81 87614 70 8 Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2014 Retrieved 17 September 2013 a b Batabyal Rakesh 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine to Noakhali 1943 47 New Delhi Sage Publications p 276 ISBN 0 7619 3335 2 The situation never returned to normal The entire area was ablaze with tension throughout the next few months In 1947 Yunus Mia Pandit while presiding over the meeting in Khilparato to celebrate Pakistan Day on 23 March criticized untouchability and absence of Purdah system among the Hindus and justified their boycott by the Muslims Mansergh Nicholas Moon Penderel 1980 The Transfer of Power 1942 7 Vol IX London Her Majesty s Stationery Office pp 98 99 ISBN 978 0 11 580084 9 cited in Batabyal 2005 p 275 Majumdar Ramesh Chandra 1975 ব ল দ শ র ইত হ স History of Bangla Desh in Bengali Vol 4 Kolkata General Printers and Publishers p 422 Majumdar Ramesh Chandra 1975 ব ল দ শ র ইত হ স History of Bangla Desh in Bengali Vol 4 Kolkata General Printers and Publishers p 421 a b Majumder Ramesh Chandra 1975 ব ল দ শ র ইত হ স History of Bangla Desh in Bengali Vol 4 Kolkata General Printers and Publishers p 428 Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 50 ISBN 9789380476070 Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 52 ISBN 9789380476070 a b Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 54 ISBN 9789380476070 Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 55 ISBN 9789380476070 Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 56 ISBN 978 93 8047 607 0 Sinha Dinesh Chandra Dasgupta Ashok 2011 1946 The Great Calcutta Killings and Noakhali Genocide Kolkata Himangshu Maity pp 333 334 ISBN 9788192246406 Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 60 ISBN 9789380476070 Maksud Syed Abul ed 2011 ন য খ ল গ ন ধ ম শন ড য র Noakhali Gandhi Mission Diary in Bengali Kolkata Katha p 65 ISBN 9789380476070 Ian Stephens Pakistan New York Frederick A Praeger 1963 p 110 Ian Stephens Pakistan New York Frederick A Praeger 1963 pp 110 111 Ian Stephens Pakistan New York Frederick A Praeger 1963 p 111 Tuker Francis 1950 While Memory Serves London Cassell p 182 OCLC 937426955 The number of Muslim dead was about seven thousand to eight thousand The Muslim League tried to put the figure at between twenty and thirty thousand Our reports show this to be a considerable exaggeration but equally on the other side was it false to assess the casualties at some two to three thousand dead or even less Ian Stephens Pakistan New York Frederick A Praeger 1963 p 113 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Noakhali riots nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Noakhali riots Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Noakhali riots amp oldid 1186009437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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