"The relations between the two communities were strained throughout 1923-24. But in no locality did this tension produce such tragic consequences as in the city of Kohat. The immediate cause of the trouble was the publication and circulation of a pamphlet containing a virulently anti-Islamic poem. Terrible riots broke out on the 9th and 10th of September 1924, the total casualties being about 155 killed and wounded... As a result of this reign of terror the whole Hindu population evacuated the city of Kohat... A feature of Hindu-Muslim relations during the year which was hardly less serious than the riots was the number of murderous outrages committed by members of one community against persons belonging to the other. Some of the most serious of these outrages were perpetrated in connection with the agitation relating to Rangila Rasul and Risala Vartman, two publications containing most scurrilous attack on the Prophet Muhammed, and as a result of them, a number of innocent persons lost their lives, sometimes in circumstances of great barbarity... An event which caused considerable tension in April was the murder at Lahore of Rajpal, whose pamphlet Rangila Rasul, containing a scurrilous attack on the Prophet of Islam, was responsible for much of the communal trouble in previous years, and also for a variety of legal and political complications... In Madras a riot, on the 3rd September resulting in one death and injuries to 13 persons was occasioned by a book published by Hindus containing alleged reflections on the Prophet... On the 19th March 1935 a serious incident occurred in Karachi after the execution of Abdul Quayum, the Muslim who had murdered Nathuramal, a Hindu, already referred to as the writer of a scurrilous pamphlet about the Prophet. Abdul Quayum's body was taken by the District Magistrate, accompanied by a police party, to be handed over to the deceased's family for burial outside the city. A huge crowd, estimated to be about 25,000 strong, collected at the place of burial. Though the relatives of Abdul Quayum wished to complete the burial at the cemetery, the most violent members of the mob determined to take the body in procession through the city... Forty-seven rounds were fired by which 47 people were killed and 134 injured. (Chapter 7)"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
B.R. Ambedkar, Pakistan or The Partition of India (1946)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Freedom_of_expression_in_India
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Freedom of expression in India
38 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Freedom of expression in India →
Related Quotes
"While all governments, in varying degrees, try to muzzle free speech or physically intimidate journalists, what is ra…"
"If some people do not like a representation of art, there are other ways to counter it. I never support violent attac…"
"Every ban and censorship hurt. But banishment hurts the most. Banishment took away the ground from beneath my feet. W…"
"The [Arya Samajs'] defiant stand against Islam was increasingly reaping the whirlwind... A pamphlet of the local Sana…"
"Muslim leaders and Stalinist historians were raising a howl about Hindu chauvinism when it came to the notice of Arun…"
"After the Babri structure came down, Shri N. Ram thundered at a conference in Delhi that the print media owed it to t…"
"There are definitions of hate speech based on the Khan Market consensus as to who should be allowed to speak and who …"
"Generally, the death of a judge, in what seem to be mysterious circumstances, while presiding over a case against the…"
"Jokes making fun of Mr. Modi, or Facebook posts of lay citizens, and films criticizing his government are met with po…"
"The emphasis has been twofold: That the state knows, the state is right, the state must be privileged, and that citiz…"