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Catholic Congress slams Congress-Welfare Party tie-up in Nilambur bypoll

Catholic Congress slams Congress-Welfare Party tie-up in Nilambur bypoll

KOCHI: The Catholic Congress has strongly criticised the Indian National Congress over its electoral alliance with the Welfare Party in the Nilambur Assembly by-election, calling the move an "open challenge to Kerala's secular democratic traditions" and an example of "opportunistic politics."
In a press release issued on Wednesday, the Catholic Congress, a lay organisation of Syro-Malabar Catholics, alleged that the Congress has compromised on core secular values by aligning with a party they claim is ideologically linked to religious fundamentalism.
The statement, signed by Catholic Congress Director Fr Mathew Thoommoolil, General Secretary Shaji Kandathil, and President Dr Chacko Kalampparambil, warned that such alliances risk legitimising extremism in mainstream politics.
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GK: What Was The 1947 British Law That Declared India's Independence?
GK: What Was The 1947 British Law That Declared India's Independence?

News18

time3 days ago

  • News18

GK: What Was The 1947 British Law That Declared India's Independence?

On 18 July 1947, the British Parliament passed the Indian Independence Act, setting the stage for India's freedom. On this day, 18 July 1947, history turned a decisive page. With the passage of the Indian Independence Act in the British Parliament, the legal foundation was laid for the end of colonial rule in India. The legislation, approved by then-British monarch King George VI, marked a watershed moment in the subcontinent's political history. With this Act, the stage was set for the creation of two sovereign nations — India and Pakistan — which officially came into being less than a month later, on 15 August 1947. A Landmark Decision In Parliament The Indian Independence Act was a direct outcome of the Mountbatten Plan, proposed on 3 June 1947. It was introduced in the British Parliament on 4 July and received royal assent just 14 days later, highlighting the urgency and significance the British government accorded to Indian self-rule. The Act proposed the partition of British India into two dominions — India and Pakistan — and granted them the power to frame their own constitutions. It also nullified the authority of the British Parliament over Indian laws, ending imperial legislative control. Importantly, the Act gave Indian princely states the freedom to choose whether they wished to accede to India, Pakistan, or remain independent. The legislation fixed 15 August 1947 as the date for full independence, ushering in a new era. Lord Mountbatten was appointed the first Governor-General of independent India, and Jawaharlal Nehru took charge as the country's first Prime Minister. The end of the Second World War had significantly weakened Britain, both economically and militarily. At the same time, India's independence movement, led by towering figures such as Mahatma Gandhi, Nehru, and Sardar Patel, had reached its peak. The growing unrest and united demand for freedom became impossible for the British to ignore. A lack of consensus between the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League over the future governance structure led to the proposal for partition. On 14 June 1947, the Congress Working Committee approved the Mountbatten Plan, effectively clearing the path for the historic law. Other Major Events On 18 July In History While 18 July 1947 remains central to India's journey to freedom, the date has witnessed several other notable global milestones: 1857: Establishment of the University of Bombay (now the University of Mumbai), one of India's oldest higher education institutions. 1918: Birth of Nelson Mandela, South Africa's anti-apartheid hero and Nobel Peace Prize laureate. 1955: For the first time in history, electricity generated from nuclear energy was sold commercially — a major leap in scientific and technological progress. As the nation reflects on 18 July, it remembers not just the passing of a law but the culmination of decades of struggle, sacrifice, and unyielding hope. The Indian Independence Act remains a powerful reminder of a hard-won freedom achieved through unity, resilience, and the dreams of millions. First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

A new book examines whether Hindu nationalists supported the Zionist project to occupy Palestine
A new book examines whether Hindu nationalists supported the Zionist project to occupy Palestine

Scroll.in

time4 days ago

  • Scroll.in

A new book examines whether Hindu nationalists supported the Zionist project to occupy Palestine

The geopolitical reconfigurations following the end of the First World War had a profound impact on independence and nationalist movements across the globe. India was no different. The Indian National Congress, under the leadership of Gandhi, saw the events of the First World War, the issuing of the Balfour Declaration, the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and Caliphate and the establishment of the British Mandate for Palestine in 1922 as further reasons to repudiate British rule. It also helped initiate closer ties with Muslims in India and the assertion of an anti-imperial agenda. In Palestine, Zionism had arrived. Palestinians were increasingly displaced, excluded from employment opportunities and denied entry into Jewish-only trade unions. As the continuous flow of Jewish refugees from Europe increased, the rate of dispossession of Palestinians only increased. The programme of building a Jewish state brought together Jews (as well as dispensationalist or Christian Zionists) of various persuasions and motivations. The movement spawned political, cultural and labour Zionism (and later revisionist Zionism), each with its own idea as to the character of this future state. However different these might have been, Zionism in totality agreed that this future state would need to have a Jewish majority and, therefore, establishing it was ultimately predicated on the act of ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. The political project went against Orthodox Jewish beliefs, but it nonetheless proceeded. However, political Zionists were so detached from the sentiments of the Jewish polity that they expressed an openness to a 'homeland' in Argentina or Uganda before this matter was put to rest. Once the political project was endorsed, it wasn't long before the Bible was used as 'proof' that Jews belonged in Palestine. And in keeping with the peculiarities of the time, the Zionists reframed their movement as one befitting a 'national liberation movement'. India was the crown jewel of the British Empire, and Zionists paid attention to both the art and literature that emerged from India, as well as the mass mobilisations that threatened the British Empire. However, it was Hindu nationalists who felt an immediate kinship with the Zionist movement. They saw no contradiction in admiring the European fascist movements that targeted European Jews as well as the Zionist project that looked to revitalise the Jewish race by building an exclusive homeland for the Jewish people. The support of European powers for a Jewish state in the Middle East turned a colonial matter into a civilisational conquest. The subtext now was that 'Israel was a device for holding Islam – and later the Soviet Union – at bay,' Edward Said wrote. Herzl, the writer Abdul-Wahab Kayalli argued, had routinely portrayed Zionism 'as a political meeting point between Christianity and Judaism in their common stance against Islam and the barbarism of the Orient'. Unsurprisingly, in India, Hindu nationalists saw 'the Jewish question' in Europe as 'the Muslim problem' in their own backyard. 'India's Muslims are on the whole more inclined to identify themselves and their interests with Muslims outside India than Hindus who live next door, like Jews in Germany,' Savarkar said in a speech in December 1939. For Hindu nationalists, their support for both fascism in Europe as well as Zionism won them admirers among the right wing in Europe and helped them recast themselves as adjacent to the global racial elite. In Har Bilas Sarda's book, Hindu Superiority: An Attempt to Determine the Position of the Hindu Race in the Scale of Nations, the famous Indian judge writes that his effort to glorify the Hindu past was not meant to 'run down any creed or nationality […] it may be remarked that the evils of the rule of the Afghans, Turks, and others were due not to the religion they professed but by their ignorance and backwardness in civilisation'. It is precisely this invocation of a racial, civilisational and cultural superiority and the adoption of a very European tradition of pathologising Muslims as a backward and problematic minority that has lured Hindu nationalists and supremacists towards European ethno-fascism. For Hindu nationalists and supremacists, the comparison with Zionism, then, was not incidental. It merely represented an exchange in a large, and longer, conversation between Judaism and Hinduism, as 'two age-old civilisations'. Hindutva's affinity for the Zionist search for a homeland spoke to their interactions across the centuries. Hindutva's construction of the Hindu proto-race (as 'insider') in opposition to Muslims (as ultimate 'outsider') through a focus on religion, culture and philosophy was a marker of 'civilisation'. In other words, Hindutva held that the people of India were all fundamentally Hindu and that Hinduism was ultimately their race-culture. It also determined who could be part of the nation. As academic Satadru Sen argues, both Zionism and Hindutva developed 'an interest in deploying the language and imagery of a racialised people whose health was both a scientific and a political problem'. Golwalkar, in particular, was caustic and influential when he articulated the place of 'the other' in his book We or Our Nationhood Defined: 'All those not belonging to the national ie, Hindu Race, Religion, Culture and Language, naturally fall out of the pale of real 'National' life.' There were other similarities in the religious ethos of both Judaism and Hinduism, which right-wing proponents latched on to, too. Both Jews and Hindus purportedly rejected conversion and were unenthused by the proselytising habits of others (Christians and Muslims). This underscored the aforementioned anxiety of racial 'contamination' or being demographically overrun by Muslims or Arabs or Palestinians. This concern is foundational to racial superiority as purported by both Zionists and Hindu nationalists. The duo also found symmetry in the vigour of the religion itself. While Hinduism was about seeking eternal enlightenment, Judaism could be characterised as a journey 'to search after the knowledge of God'. These similarities became the religious backbone for building ties between the political projects of Hindutva and Zionism, which relied on myth-making as a form of statecraft. But the relationship didn't happen immediately. With the labour Zionist movement becoming the dominant stream in Palestine, Zionists reached out to the presiding movement in India: the INC and Gandhi. For labour Zionists, Gandhi represented a version of Hinduism that appeared to match their egalitarian vision of Zionism, being still in denial over the actions of the Haganah or militia. The Hindu nationalists, however, chose to understand Zionism in its totality. It is no surprise that Ze'ev Jabotinsky, the father of revisionist Zionism, or the right-wing version of Zionism that rejected labour Zionism's 'negotiation' in the Holy Land, wrote his manifesto, The Iron Wall, in 1923, the same year that Savarkar published his treatise on Hindutva. Unlike labour Zionists, Jabotinsky was blunt about his ambitions. Hindu nationalists, too, saw the full project, understood the implications and imbibed the values. Jabotinsky argued that only the complete disenfranchising of Palestinians would convince them to accept the Jewish settlers: Culturally they [the Palestinian Arabs] are 500 years behind us, spiritually they do not have our endurance or our strength of will, but this exhausts all of the internal differences. We can talk as much as we want about our good intentions; but they understand as well as we what is not good for them. On the 'Arab Question', Jabotinsky argued: 'Zionist colonisation must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native population. Which means that it can proceed and develop only under the protection of a power that is independent of the native population – behind an iron wall, which the native population cannot breach.' Jabotinsky and Zionist revisionists accused labour Zionists of attempting to obscure what they all fundamentally agreed was a colonial project in Palestine. Likewise, for Hindu nationalists, the INC's 'policy of appeasement' delayed the inevitable: the creation of a majoritarian Hindu state. Philosophically, Hindutva was fundamentally anti-Muslim. The 'Hindu' identity was built almost entirely in opposition to Muslims, even placed ahead of the struggle for independence. So much so that some of Hindutva's early ideologues extricated themselves from the larger Indian struggle for independence. In theory, Zionism shared the imperial methodology of dispossession and settlement with European colonisers, including the British, as it shared with Afrikaner 'puritans' the bigoted policy of separate development exercised under apartheid South Africa. But it also resonated in the anxieties of Muslims in colonial India, who, fearing Hindu majoritarianism and their position of 'minority', began to conceptualise a separate polity of their own. It is this fear of Hindu majoritarianism that culminated in the formation of the idea of Pakistan, prompting some to suggest that Israel and Pakistan, both formed on the basis of religion, were kindred spirits, too. Other scholars argued that traces of labour Zionism, often depicted as the dominant strain of the ideology, could be found in the socialist, internationalist agenda of the Nehru government as well. These were all political movements in the making, laden with contradiction and opportunism. However, the comparisons between Zionism or Israel with both Nehru-led India and the project of Pakistan are simplistic and incomplete. For starters, the Indian struggle for freedom against the British, as flawed and contradictory as it might have been, cannot be compared with the Zionist so-called struggle for independence from the British. Through the auspices of the Balfour Declaration, it was the British who had demarcated Palestine for the Zionist settler-colonial project in Palestine in the first place. As early as 1931, it was clear that all Zionists 'concurred ideologically with the principle of Jewish sovereignty over all Palestine', Zeev Tzahor writes. If anything, labour Zionism functioned as a Trojan horse for settler colonialism. They held disagreements on strategy, on timing, on language, but 'there was no difference between our militarists and our vegetarians', as Jabotinsky put it. The comparisons with Pakistan, too, are inadequate; beyond the similar predicament that both Jews in Europe and Muslims on the Indian subcontinent faced in becoming a minority in the modern nation-state, there aren't many similarities. Pakistan was not designed to be a settler-colonial imperial outpost as the Zionist state was envisioned. The territorial lands that would ultimately make up Pakistan – as fluid as they may have been – still had geographic contiguity with the regions in which Muslims were a majority. This was the territorial demand of the founders of the Pakistan movement. They did not have extra-territorial ambitions, nor did they seek to make all of the Indian subcontinent into Pakistan. They were, primarily, concerned with questions of power sharing among Hindus and Muslims after the departure of the British. In addition, Muslims were not settlers in Pakistan, nor did the Pakistan movement seek to replace existing Hindu and Sikh minority communities with Muslims, although the violence at the time of Partition caused a refugee crisis across both India and Pakistan. While Pakistan was initially conceived of as a Muslim homeland, within a few months it was evident that Pakistan – unlike the Zionist state – was not invested in settling Muslims from around the world (or even North India) in the nascent nation. The settler constitution of Zionism is integral to its ideology; this was not the case with Muslim nationalism on the Indian subcontinent. Furthermore, the Zionist project was much more invested in a mythical history, a trait it shares with Hindutva rather than the founders of the Pakistan movement. In other words, symmetries will exist; some imagined, others more fanciful. However, when it comes to Hindu nationalism and the complete project of Zionism – be it cultural, political, labour or revisionist – the two ideas share more than symmetry. They share kinship. And their differences aside, the pursuit of consolidating dominion to create unified states with a single culture and identity predicated on erasing the 'other' is what ultimately defines their kinship.

PM Modi pays tribute to K. Kamaraj, says his noble ideals, emphasis on social justice inspire us
PM Modi pays tribute to K. Kamaraj, says his noble ideals, emphasis on social justice inspire us

Hans India

time6 days ago

  • Hans India

PM Modi pays tribute to K. Kamaraj, says his noble ideals, emphasis on social justice inspire us

Chennai: Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid rich tributes to K. Kamaraj, one of India's most respected political leaders, on his birth anniversary, lauding his pivotal role in the freedom struggle and his enduring contributions to post-Independence India. In a post on social media platform X, the Prime Minister said, 'Paying homage to Thiru K. Kamaraj Ji on his birth anniversary. He was at the forefront of India's freedom struggle and provided invaluable leadership in the formative years of our journey after Independence. His noble ideals and emphasis on social justice inspire us all greatly.' K. Kamaraj, fondly known as the 'Kingmaker' of Indian politics and hailed as the Kalvi Thanthai (Father of Education) in Tamil Nadu, was born on this day in 1903 in Virudhunagar. A stalwart of the Indian National Congress, he joined the freedom movement at a young age and was imprisoned several times by the British colonial regime. His quiet efficiency, unwavering commitment to Gandhian ideals, and grassroots connect made him a natural leader of the masses. As Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu from 1954 to 1963, Kamaraj ushered in sweeping reforms in education and social welfare. His government introduced the now-celebrated midday meal scheme in schools, constructed thousands of new schools, and brought education to millions of children, particularly from poor and marginalised communities. His focus on rural development and infrastructure laid the foundation for the state's later industrial and social progress. After stepping down as Chief Minister, Kamaraj took on a key role in national politics. In 1963, he proposed the 'Kamaraj Plan', urging senior Congress leaders to step down from government posts to rejuvenate the party. Though controversial, it was accepted by several top leaders, including Kamaraj himself. Later, he played a crucial role in selecting Lal Bahadur Shastri and Indira Gandhi as Prime Ministers, earning him the title of 'Kingmaker'. Kamaraj remained a guiding force in the Congress until he died in 1975. His political legacy continues to inspire generations, particularly in Tamil Nadu, where he is remembered not only as a leader but as a statesman committed to the cause of the poor, education, and national unity.

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