KashmirConnected
  • Home
  • Publications, News
  • Articles + Reports
  • Book Reviews
  • Kashmir Journal
    • A Few Days in the Lolab Valley
    • Saints, shrines and divines
    • A Few Good Women
    • Water
    • Stories and Storytellers
    • Celebrating Kashmiri food
    • Traumatic Pasts in Kashmiri Fiction
    • The Majesty of Kashmiri Shawls
    • Multiple Meanings of Aazadi
    • Photographing Kashmir
    • 'Clash of Ideas'
    • The New Militancy
    • Kashmiri and the Languages of Kashmir
    • Srinagar
    • The spectacle/side show of Kashmir
  • RESOURCES
  • Contact

Rajani Palme Dutt in Kashmir: a documentary note

1/17/2018

2 Comments

 
Picture
This letter from Sheikh Abdullah has come to light in the archives of the Communist Party of Great Britain, held at the People's History Museum in Manchester. It was written to Rajani Palme Dutt, the eminence gris of the British CP (born in Cambridge, his father was a Bengali doctor and his mother was Swedish) who was then making his first trip to India.  

Palme Dutt spent four months in India, arriving in late March 1946. During that time, he met not simply the leaders of the CPI but most of the movers and shakers in Indian political life, including Gandhi, Nehru and Patel. Sheikh Abdullah's letter suggests that he was expecting Palme Dutt in Srinagar, and was disappointed that he changed his plans. Abdullah was writing just as the Quit Kashmir campaign - the biggest mass mobilisation that the National Conference ever attempted - was getting going. The 'Bedi' he mentions is the Punjabi Communist B.P.L. Bedi, husband of Freda Bedi, who had been the principal architect of the 'New Kashmir' manifesto two years earlier.

Three days after Sheikh Abdullah wrote this letter, he was arrested - and was only released from the maharaja's jails in September 1947. Palme Dutt did get to Kashmir, but only in July 1946 at the very end of his time in India. He met Bedi in Lahore before travelling to Srinagar, where he talked to Freda Bedi and other key figures in Kashmir - and had the chance to attend part of Sheikh Abdullah's trial in Srinagar and indeed talk to the defendant.

​Palme Dutt was nominally travelling around India as a correspondent for the London-based Daily Worker. From Srinagar, he wrote for the paper about Sheikh Abdullah's court hearings.
Picture
Palme Dutt's fullest account of his time in the Kashmir Valley was published in the journal he edited, Labour Monthly. The issue for October 1946 reported that Sheikh Abdullah had, the previous month, been sentenced to three years in jail for sedition. It published part of Abdullah's speech from the dock. The same issue included the final section of Palme Dutt's India travel notes - the portions relating to Kashmir, which he described as 'the political storm centre of the Indian fight for freedom', are posted below.
Andrew Whitehead
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
2 Comments

    KashmirConnected

    a site about the modern history of Kashmir
    ​

    Archives

    October 2021
    January 2021
    December 2019
    October 2019
    August 2019
    September 2018
    January 2018
    August 2017
    July 2017
    September 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    January 2015
    October 2014
    September 2014

    Categories

    All
    1947
    Achala Sachdev
    Agha Shahid Ali
    A.G. Noorani
    Amina Mahmood Mir
    Andrew Whitehead
    Article 370
    Balraj Puri
    Chitralekha Zutshi
    Donnabelle Garga
    Faruq Ahmad
    Jammu
    Jawaharlal Nehru
    John Keay
    Kanta Wazir
    Lalla Rookh
    Mahatta's
    Meenu Gaur
    Mehbooba Mufti
    Nazir Ahmad
    Nedou's Hotel
    Nirupama Rao
    Orientalism
    Quit Kashmir
    Rajani Palme Dutt
    Reeta Tremblay
    Rekha Wazir
    Sameer Arshad Khatlani
    Sheikh Abdullah
    Storm Over Kashmir
    Tara Chand Wazir
    Thomas Moore
    Trifurcation
    Tyndale-Biscoe
    Women's Militia
    WSDC

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly