|
In August 1917, the Secretary of State for
India, Edwin Samuel Montagu, made the declaration that the aim of
British. policy was the introduction of responsible government in
India. When Montagu visited India that autumn, Maharaja Bhupinder
Singh, ruler of Patiala, met him on behalf of the Sikhs. A deputation
of the Sikh leaders also waited upon the Viceroy, Lord Chelmsford,
on 22 November 1917 and pressed their claim to one-third representation
in the Punjab, especially in view of their services in World War I.
The Montagu-Chelmsford report published in July
1918 proposed to extend to the Sikhs the system adopted in the case
of Muslims in provinces where they were in a minority. To consider
the report, the Chief Khalsa Diwan convened a representative conclave
of the Sikhs at Amritsar on 18 September 1918. In the memorandum
which they prepared on behalf of the community, government was urged
to carry out the assurance given the Sikhs in the Montagu-Chelmsford
report. The Montagu-Chelmsford proposals were debated in the joint
committee of the Punjab Legislative Council. When Sir Fazl-i-Hussain,
the Muslim leader, tried to push through a resolution that the Muslim
proportion in the Punjab Legislative Council be based on the Lucknow
Pact, Gajjan Singh of Ludhiana proposed that the words "subject
to just claims of the Sikhs" be added to the resolution.
The amendment was opposed by both Muslim and
Hindu members and was lost. The publication of the Montagu-Chelmsford
report was followed by the appointment of Franchise Committee under
the chairmanship of Lord Southborough to go into the matter of the
composition of the new legislatures. India was represented on the
Committee by three members, but none of them was a Sikh. When the
Sikhs protested, Sundar Singh Majithia was taken as a co-opted member
for the Punjab, but their demand for one-third of the total number
of non-official seats held by Indians in the Punjab, 7 out of 67
non, official seats in the Assembly of India and 4 seats in the
Council of States for the Sikh community remained largely unfulfilled.
The Franchise Committee recommended 15 per cent Council seats for
the Sikhs. In Bihar and Orissa where they formed 10 per cent of
the total population, the Muslims were given 25 per cent seats by
the Franchise Committee.
In the Punjab, where they constituted 11.8 per
cent of the population and were otherwise an important factor in
the life of the province Sikhs' share was fixed at a bare 15 per
cent.
The Sikhs made representations to government.
A deputation, consisting of Sewaram Singh, a lawyer of the Chief
Court of Lahore, Shivdev Singh Uberoi, a senior member of the Chief
Khalsa Diwan, Sohan Singh of Rawalpindi and Ujjal Singh, who later
became the principal spokesman of the Sikhs on constitutional reforms,
was sent to England.
The deputation sailed from Bombay on 18 June
1919 and reached London on 11 July 1919. On arrival in London, they
had interviews with Lord Selborne, Chairman, Joint Parliamentary
Committee, Mr Montagu and others. The deputationists claimed seats
for the Sikhs on the same principle as was being applied in the
case of Muslims in Bihar and Orissa. They demanded 33 per cent of
Council seats in the Punjab and justified the demand on the grounds
of their historical and economic position in the "province".
The deputationists found the authorities in England quite receptive
to their arguments and generally friendly to the claims of the Sikh
community. Lord Selborne regretted that they did not have the benefit
of these arguments while formulating their recommendations and promised
to discuss the case again with his colleagues on the joint Parliamentary
Committee, but ultimately nothing tangible came forth and the deputationists
returned disappointed.
|
 |