Variyan Kunnath Kunahmad Haji - An Eranad Warlord
Posted by Labels: 1921, British Malabar, Eranad, Khilafat, Malabar - English period 1900 -1950, Moplah rebellion, Variyam Kunnath HajiThere is a furor these days about this 1921 Eranad rebel
warlord and many expert opinions are being voiced. I was a bit intrigued as I
had encountered VKH often in my Malabar Rebellion studies, but I had not really
paused to study him, though spending a while on the Sinderby account
caricaturing an antagonist based on VKH’s character. But it is time to do a little study and I will try to detail his actions as dispassionately as I can,
referring to the numerous secondary sources I am in possession of. We will see
that this is actually the story of a tired old man who had been perpetually on
the run before 1921, nursing his grudges against the British, straying somewhat
unwillingly into a larger revolt, with only a desire to help out his benefactor
Ali Musaliyar, quickly changing his ideology when he became a fugitive and lording
a gang who resorted to tactics he would not have approved otherwise.
While some feel Conrad Wood’s and Stephen Dale’s Mappila studies, as well as the official reports made by Hitchcock and Tottenham, are white man’s tales, others remark that accounts by some local administrators such as Gopalan Nair, Madhavan Nair, and Gangadhara Menon are congressmen’s studies, toeing the British line. Accounts by Bhrahmadattan Nambudiri and MP Narayanan Menon are mostly about their experiences, providing meager detail on VKH. There are a few Mappila writers who have made an effort, though these books are difficult to source and somewhat tilted in their handling of the subject. M Gangadharan is perhaps the only contemporary writer who authored books covering many of these events, referring to a larger number of sources. But of course, a number of people are happy to live with legends, myths, oral tales or songs on 1921, which over generations have been changing hues. This study provides only an outline, is not exhaustive, and just a primer to those who wish to delve deeper into those terrible years.
When viewed on a broad frame, it becomes clear that while
the impacts of the revolt were indeed felt heavily on Valluvanad, Ponnani and
Calicut, violence related to V Kunahmed Haji was localized around Eranad. The
revolt was as we can all agree, a culmination of many years of perceived
servitude by the Eranad Mappila, catalyzed by religious fervor and at some instants,
prodding by leaders who believed in making it a larger issue. Much of that, as
well as the earlier influence of the Caliphate at Turkey, the first world war,
the Mappila rifles disbandment, the expected support from other Muslim nations
and of course the contempt shown by the British who preferred to deal only with
Hindu landlords, were all reasons which caused the pent up resentment among Mappila’s,
to explode. Add to it the disappointment that there was going to be no Turkish
support, when the man on the street heard that Mustafa Kemal Ataturk himself had
got rid of the Caliph, the very Caliph they looked up to as their savior. As
Gandhiji and the Ali brothers faded away from the local scene, to focus on
larger matters, it would turn out to be a Mappila rebellion against not only the
British, but against all perceived enemies, namely the Hindu Landlord, the
Christian estate owner, their own economic situation and the dark hole they
were in (indebted and largely illiterate), the British administrator as well as
the local police force commanded by the British captains.
As the revolt spread and martial law was imposed, in came the war hardened military folk i.e. the Leinsters and Dorsets aided by ruthless Gurkhas and the Chin-Kachin Burmese soldiers, whose orders were to take on and simply massacre the lightly armed Mappila mobs and gangs. The police force under Hitchcock worked separately from the military, an aspect to be noted (though Hitchcock got all the blame).
It was into the middle of this cauldron of hate, violence
and disturbance that this Variyamkunnath Kunahmed Haji was thrown into. How did
he get there and what did he do? People as you can imagine, behave differently
in differing circumstances and VKH was a classic example of that, as we shall soon
see. Incidentally, he was one among the four main leaders of the rebellion, the
others being Chembrassery Thangal, Ali Musaliyar and Seethikoya Thangal.
VKH and his background
Kunhahamad Haji was born in the Valluvangad village situated
in Eranad (Malappuram) in a time frame between 1861-75 as the son of Moideen
Kutty Haji. Originally from Chakkipparamban house of the Nediyiruppu area near
Kondotty, he belonged to a branch which settled down at Valluvangad.
Variyankunnath was where Haji’s house was situated. As we discussed previously
the region was famed for a large number of blacksmiths, so the agricultural
implements and hill produce were transported to Calicut and other towns by
bullock carts, and VKH himself a cart driver, was the cart driver’s leader.
In 1894 a terrible tragedy occurred, known as the Pandikkad
event where some 32 Mappilas killed themselves in a fanatical outbreak and this
was followed by an even more terrible event in 1896 when some 92 Mappilas of
Chembrasseri became martyrs at the Manjeri temple. Because they were mostly wanton
acts with little by way of concrete reasons, Mappilas were placed in the
backward class for educational purposes, by the British. But something positive
was now being done, strategic roads were laid into Eranad and schools were
started. The Mappilas were pulled into the mainstream with army employment,
jobs in Singapore, Burma, Colombo and the rubber estates, the Kolar gold
fields, timber depots at Kallayi and other locales. This resulted in relative
peace until 1915. But the British knew that there was an undercurrent of
militancy in the region. Hitchcock, the other player in all these events had
been deputed a few years earlier and was well placed in the Madras special
police encampment at Malappuram, heading the intelligence acquisition team and
in the thick of things.
Many members of VKH’s family were implicated and killed in
the 1894/96 outbreaks and his father had been transported to the Andamans (he
died there in 1907). I guess this was the event which triggered the revenge and
hate in VKH, for we hear of him soon potentially involved in wayside robberies,
first robbing a postal van in 1908, then in 1909 robbing and apparently murdering
a couple of Palghat goldsmiths. VKH escaped capture and fled to Mecca,
remaining there until 1911. Now a Haji, he returned to Eranad in 1911 (some say
later in 1913-14). But the police did not allow him to reside in his old
environs and so we see him working as an iterant bullock cart driver in Nediyirippu,
Morayur and Kondotty, already red-marked a trouble creator in British eyes, and
his family characterized as an ‘outbreak family’.
Two events were to catalyze the 1921 disturbances, one being
the disbandment of a Mappila army battalion (I had covered this in a previous
article) and the second being the aftermath of the first world war, with Turkey and
the Islamic Caliph on the side of the Axis powers. Since 1911 (Turco-Italian
war) the Mappilas had professed support for Turkey and a 40-day prayer was
regularly conducted at the Perinthalmanna mosque in support of the Ottomans. During
the First World War, the Mappilas came to believe that Germany had accepted
Islam and with the entry of Turkey on its side, the defeat of the British and
their allies would be inevitable. They believed that the Germans and the Turks
would relieve them of the British and that all their rent, revenue demands and
debts would thus be cancelled. Pilgrims returning from Mecca reaffirmed the
rumors that the Turks and Germans were drubbing the British.
These wild rumors now spun into conclusions that the German
army had landed in Bombay and with that the entire Eranad area was in a state
of unrest. In Sept 1914, the German warship Emden shelled Madras and the news
hit the region like a bolt from the blue. Soon the British, needing the army
men elsewhere, replaced the regular army at the Malappuram barracks with a less
experienced reserve battalion, manned by local recruits, with the result that
the Eranad Mappilas now stepped on the gas, increasing dacoities and forced
conversions (Wood 135-137). It was one such forced conversion that triggered
the Innes murder event at Kalikavu (See article).
Hitchcock arrived on the scene, and soon many rebels were captured. Per the report - Four of the fanatics died fighting and one was captured severely wounded. Four Mappillas who had been arrested as a precautionary measure among them being the afterwards notorious Variankunnath Kunhamad HaJi and Potayil Ahamad Kutti Musaliyar were released, their apparent implication in the outbreak being, it was decided, an elaborate concoction of evidence by their enemies. What could that be? It appears that when VKH fled to Mecca, others appropriated his family lands and since then VKH and his mother were trying to get them back through the court system, this resulted in antagonism between his family & some others in the area. Seemingly one of them tried to trap VKH in the Innes murder case. Perhaps all this affected VKH and we thus come across an oft repeated opinion that VKH was not an affable person, was quite quarrelsome and easily brought to a boiling rage. In 1919 he was finally given permission by the British to go back and live in his home town.
Around this time, the disillusioned Mappila’s who had been
employed in the British army were back home, terminated by Kitchener who deemed
the short experiment a failure. Many were indoctrinated by local preachers and other
leaders, increasing their grouse against the Brits, as 1921 turned the corner.
Conrad wood explains - In fact there can be no doubt that the insurgents
were able to draw on the military expertise of large numbers of Mappila
ex-sepoys who joined their ranks which in some cases, such as with the gang of
Kunhamad Haji, were made up largely of men of this type.
The Rebellion Starts – Aug 1921
A poignant meeting with Madhavan Nair just before the bank
incident provides a better understanding of VKH’s situation. As news spread of
the arrival of rebels in the Manjeri area, Madhavan Nair too joined other
Hindu’s in moving to areas of safety. It was then that he was summoned by VKH
who had arrived with his mob to take control. At the meeting, a tired, short-statured, 60-year-old and armed VKH, dressed in black, aged around 60 according
to Nair, asked him what he should do next. Taken aback, Nair recommended that
VKH surrender or go home. VKH answered saying that he got involved in the whole
fracas only because he was indebted to Ali Musaliyar and had started all this
to support Musaliyar. He added that it was too late to step back and had no
choice but to face the consequences.
What is evident in that emotional discussion was, from that
point onwards, VKH’s acceptance that he was a fugitive. With no great support
from the rest of the world, Turkey or other Muslims, or even an absolute lack
of contact with any of them, the three Mappila leaders, Thangal Haji and Koya
were left to their own devices, with no way out, faced with the prospect of
annihilation by the heavily armed British forces and the police. All they could
do was create turmoil, get their voices heard and hope for the best. In that
respect it was not a fight for national freedom or anything like that. Anyway,
let’s continue with VKH’s exploits from then on.
Now situated at Manjeri and turning down congressman
Madhavan Nair’s advice to stop any revolt, VKH asserted that he will continue
armed and violent revolt if only to help Ali Musaliyar’s cause, but agreed not
to harm or loot any Hindu households, adding that he will deal firmly with any Mappila
who does so. Some initial actions portrayed him as a kind of Robin hood, where
he stopped the looting of the Namboodiri bank, but returned all the pledged
ornaments to the owners. He also warned the Mappila people not to convert the
people to the faith forcibly. But it is quite apparent that VKH did not plan to
wage a larger war against the British, though as a fugitive, he fought hard to defend
his gang and himself from them. Meanwhile, martial law had been declared.
Aided by the ex-servicemen and other volunteers, VKH’s next
task was the collection of firearms by attacking Pandikkad station. As SI
Karunakaran Nair and his men took the hills the gang set fire to the Police
Station, Travelers Bungalow, Amsha kacheri, the Post Office, and other Govt.
Buildings were demolished. Bridges were pulled down, trees cut and houses were
looted for arms money and provisions. Haji deemed that all property obtained by
loot belongs to the Khilafat. ‘In fact, without the supply of food, arms and
money commandeered from the inhabitants of the area of insurrection, it is
cleared that the khilafat troops would have lacked the means of continuing
resistance to the British rule.’ (Conrad Wood).
With this, an armed VKH gang was formed and ready for
action. But what they unleased was regrettably, mayhem. VKH moved from Pookkottur
via Karuvarakkundu, collected more arms and proceeded to Angadippuram through
Melattur. Here at Mudikkod his gang confronted constable Hydross and killed
him. Kalikavu was to figure prominently during the Aug 1921 revolt too, when
some of the rioters burned forty houses belonging to other Mappilas who did not
associate with the revolt. Stanley. P.
Eaton, a planter of Pulleugude Estate, was beheaded and paraded with his
head placed on a spear. His bungalow was looted.
Particularly brutal was his intolerance against Mappila’s working
for the British, notably the Head Constable at Mudikkad and the retired Khan
Bahadur Chekutty Saheb who were murdered by his mob and Chekutty’s severed head
was carried around on a spear and exhibited to the populace. While some would
fob off all this as actions aimed against the British, it was far from it, for
VKH had a previous grudge towards the Khan Bahadur who had been responsible for
punishing his father in the Mannarkkad riot. Some 35 including 2 Mappilas of
Tuvur, who had helped the British troops were then done away with, many houses
were burnt and VKH next moved on to Nilambur and proclaimed himself to be the new
Khilafat king (He styled himself, Rajah of the Hindus, Amir of the Mohammedans, and Colonel of the Khilafat Army).
VKH and his gang continued their violent acts and a Chetti
of Nilambur who sold cigarettes and was found helping the troops was killed, so
also a Mappila Sub Inspector Shaikh Mohideen and two Nayar constables. With
Nilambur as his temporary headquarters, he moved to prevent any information
leaks and started his rule in a systemic fashion, cutting off many telegraph lines and destroying bridges and isolating Eranad.
Khilafat state
While the Chembrassery Thangal was formally appointed as the
Emir of Chembrassery, Karuvarakkundu, Melattur, and Kalikavu, VKH was to govern
Nellikkuthu and Valluvangad area and Kodalayil Musakkutty Haji, was appointed
as the Emir of Pandikkad area. Seethikkoya Thangal was appointed as the Emir of
Mannarkkad area.
VKH raided the Nilambur Kovilakom and took away all its
wealth, emptied its granary and armory. It was quickly decided that all boys
below 16 will be sent away and not required to fight, that the British military
will not be attacked, but that they would defend themselves, all houses would
be looted for provisions and cattle. Operating through numerous small gangs,
and with the three leaders Thangal, Koya, and Haji in frequent contact, the British
army units found themselves hard-pressed to effectively retaliate. By October
1921, the rebels and their leaders were making an impact, and bodies piled up.
To counter this, new battalions arrived and a special police force MSP was set
up.
In the Khilafat state, strict martial rules were imposed and
curfews were enacted at night. A system of entry and passes were imposed, and
all historic tenancy rules were abolished. Anybody who tilled a piece of land owned it henceforth in this new kingdom. The first year’s tax was not levied. VKH
started a weapon fund with the money derived from the sale of passports, in
effect safe conduct passes. Trespassers were severely punished (e.g. a Sub
Inspector of Police and two constables were killed when they tried to cross the
frontier marked by khilafat flags). Landlords had to pay security taxes. It was also decided to start courts to deal
with popular grievances.
Many smaller, armed gangs were then created and spread out,
VKH himself taking control of Kalikkavu, but allocating other areas to his
friends and relatives. Readers must note
that all these locales are not how they look today, they were all undeveloped
poor hamlets amidst dense jungle terrain. Roads and bridges were very few and
motor transport was not easy. Even the military had to march with their guns
and heavy uniforms and kits. As the army was on the move towards Nilambur, we
come to hear of atrocities in the new state, of terrorizing acts, forced
conversions, the murder of Edru Haji, and so on. VKH had probably believed that he
would remain lord for a long time and was perhaps shaken, with reality starting
to set in after two months of stress. You can imagine how it is for a 55-60-year-old
underfed man perpetually on the run and incessantly fearing for his life.
His (purported) letter in July to the Hindu blaming the
police for various atrocities and his opposition to looting Hindu homes and
forced conversions shows some honesty in his views during the initial phase of
the rebellion. But there is no doubt that it changed and between Sept and Dec they
attacked and robbed a large number of houses for food and arms and killed their
occupants, Hindu and Muslim. It is also documented that his accomplices were
involved in many forced conversions (VKH stated they came and converted willingly!). Also evident is that
some of the attacks by his accomplices were acts of revenge for previous cases.
It was at this juncture (Oct 21) that he and his band of
followers decided to attack the Kondotty Thangal who was apparently favoring
the British. It was an abject failure and the grand entry into Kondotty quickly
became a hasty retreat after VKH’s bodyguard was killed.
We also note that there is some discord in his ranks since
many were unhappy that VKH neither participated in nor led most raids, he stayed behind the scenes. Add to that the general discontentment and the fact that
feeding his troops was becoming a problem (no houses left to loot), so disillusionment
was quickly setting in. VKH no longer had a fixed place to stay and was
constantly on the move, the old man he was must have been dead tired.
This is where Sinderby’s (He was with the Dorset’s at
Malabar) account adds color to the story, and you can read the details in my
previous article. It was rumored that VKH had kidnapped a Hindu lady during
this time, very much in line with Sinderby’s account. But Geetha in her book
insists that it was just a rumor and that his 3rd wife Malu, an
educated Mappila was perhaps earlier convert, this aspect lending itself to the
rumor. According to Madhavan Nair, this lady eloped with VKH’s brother towards
the end, further stressing and infuriating VKH. By November, the rebels had
lost the support of the locals and some gang members were starting to give up
and surrender. The British moved in for the kill, with a large force headed to
Pandikkad where VKH was located. Perhaps to motivate his tired gang, VKH
decided to confront the British head-on, this time, as the leader of his
troops.
In Nov 1921, on the auspicious day of 14th, the combined forces
of Thangal and Haji attacked the Gurkha camp at Pandikkad. But a mob armed with
sticks facing a Lewis machine gun is not very clever and 200 rebels were massacred
by the Brit forces disproving VKH’s exhortations that British bullets will not
harm any Jihadi. The British decided to push forward and drive the rebels to
the South of Eranad, dividing the area into five zones and sending a battalion
to take care of each zone. VKH and his followers now fled to hideouts near
Kalikkavu. But when the military seized the paddy which had been stored for food,
their end was near. Frenzied attacks and counterattacks took place between the
rebels and the British led forces. VKH fled to Edakkara, burning the TB there
and destroying the bridge leading to the village, next attacking Pandalaur.
It was around this time that the terrible wagon tragedy
occurred, a sad story which I had covered earlier.
There was nothing left in VKH’s stock. Tired hungry and with no ammunition and just a few (just 80) followers, VKH’s march of terror was soon to end. On Dec 30th, they narrowly escaped capture by a Gurkha patrol at Pandalur. Two members of VKH’s gang (Unniali musaliyar and Kunahmed Kutty) apparently leaked VKH’s location to the MSP detachment tracking him, who then cornered his hideout The MSP apprehended VKH and his gang, just before the feared Gurkhas tracking the gang arrived.
On January 6th, Variankunnath Kunhamad Haji and 21 of his
gang surrendered to SI Ramanatha Ayyer and his team, at Veetikundu in Chokkad.
Their belongings consisted of one 303 rifle, 10 police rifles, Rs 69/-, a gold
fountain pen which was stolen from the Manjeri CI and 4 other breech-loading firearms.
From there the Gurkha platoon and Ayyar marched them in
chains to Vandur, and then to Manjeri where the Sub Divisional magistrate took VKH’s
statement (The statement which he provided seems quite incoherent, stating that
Khilafat was a Turkish matter and in it, he does not really address the 6 months
of mayhem or any gang activity) and sentenced him to death.
He was shot dead on the 22nd Jan 1922 somewhere
in Malappuram and his remains cremated. All personal records were destroyed,
for we cannot find a single photo of this rebel leader, the homes of these
rebel leaders were burned and obliterated. VKH’s Khilafat state established on
Aug 22nd, 1921, had thus lasted until 6th Jan 1922.
As days went by, VKH was criticized by the nationalists who
argued that the activities of the Haji fetched very little benefit for the
country. I would conclude that his six months reign and fight was for his and
his gang’s perseverance and subsistence, and we can surely observe that it was
a reign of terror. It was not nationalistic or overtly agrarian. Neither Ali
Muslair, nor Kunahmad Haji had any agrarian grievances. But one thing is clear,
in the initial stages, VKH seeing the need for broad-based support for a revolt
did make clear statements exhorting his people not to attack, maim convert or
trouble Hindus, a statement which he did not follow after he became a fugitive,
when baser instincts took over.
Well, those were different days when egos, ideology,
religions, classes, castes, and communities clashed. For a while the singular
desire to be free from the British united everybody, but it all unraveled when the violence took over in 1921. As we all saw, many undercurrents continued to
direct or misdirect many of these characters, into what was fated in the end.
TSP Ramanatha Ayyar, the man who captured VKH received the
Kings Medal in 1923 for his efforts. In 2018, VKH was listed as a martyr in the
‘Dictionary of Martyr’s in India’s freedom struggle (1857-1947)’ - Vol 5 ICHR.
References (Just a few)
Malabar Kalapam – K Madhavan Nair
Moplah Rebellion 1921 – C Gopalan Nair
Mappila Padanangal – M Gangadharan
Variyan Kunnath Kunahmad Haji – Dr Hussain Randathani
The Jewel of Malabar – D Sinderby
Khilafath Smaranakal – Mozhikunnath Brahmadattan Nambudiri
1921 Charitra Varthamanangal - Geetha
Mappila Rebellion 1921-22 – Tottenham
Malabar Gazetteer – Innes & Malabar Manual – Logan
Related articles
Moplah Rifles disbanding
6 comments:
Coming on a day on which the Turkish Parliament is deliberating on converting the Hagia Sophia into a mosque, this post gains added significance. I have read most of the important books on the uprising, but your post is the most exhaustive and unbiased narration of facts that I have come across. As usual, it is well researched and referenced. Almost like a University term paper, except for the flashes of humour which would be unacceptable in a term paper!
Thank you for putting down facts which are not easily accessible. I hope the biographical filmmakers will read your blog before they finalise their scripts!
Thanks, CHF
I am sure there will be many aspects still missing in this account, but otherwise, it would have ended up a as a dreary long piece. There would be some who like this, some who hate it, but it is, after all, a consolidation of available reports.
The communal, ideological, moral, and personal aspects which were at play in the region are difficult to put into words, but when it comes to actions of individuals, those aspects are always at the fore.
I have been to the Haga Sofia many times, and it used to be a living museum. It was first a church with many mosaic frescoes, which had been painted over or filled, and over the last few decades, those mosaics were being brought back to light painstakingly. Wonder what happens next. Erdoganbey is perhaps trying to bargain with the EU!
Maddy sir
Well researched article as usual, kudos.
Hope and pray you safe there.
Special congrats , that too article came at covid times !!!
It is a well researched one , going in hair splitting details
Since we all new gen ( 50 years !!!)
Got a general perception of 1921 riots now some claimed it as part of freedom struggle ,and more recently some tom , and cherry portrayed as freedom fighters !!?
My some points in general ,do not want to eugolise any tom dick and harry , vkm or cpm!!!
During Hyder Ali and latter tippu onslaught ,the malabar Muslims ( not all) crossed sides and aided Hyder and tippu acts t,taking revenge on samoothri who helped portugese to kill kunjali marakar brutally.
during tippu rule,upper castes ( Nair and naboohtirs and ambalavasis) fled from malabar, thus making muslims had all say on all matters.
Even to enjoy dalits hindu women before her marriage!!
The defeat tippu got from combined trancore and brtish forces,ended tippus rule, all people who fled during Tippu rule came back with the help of british.
Brtish decided to have civil rule in malabar, deprived samootri of his powers , fearing samootri and upper castes may turn against Muslims.
But Muslims did not understand and appreciate brtish plan instead , they were worried a lot ,.because the land lords came back and occupied their powers.
They thought and found , brtish rule was not that much conducive like tippu rule,.thus waiting for an opportunity to strike back against hindus and brtish.
( Already tippu attack and his win made fissures in hindu Muslim relation in malabar)
Thus 1921 riots happened, but they never thought brtish could handle them. They were mistaken ,and brtis with the help of natives suppressed it in a brutal way.
I never consider 1921 rebellion as part of indepence movement.
Had Muslims planned this attack along with hindu brothers against brtish rule, we could have taken it as a brave act against brtish and thus a part of independent struggle!!
Instead it was an uncalled and unwarranted brutality against un armed Hindu natives ,.( Sadly women) to rape ,kill and make them run from malabar and thus making way for occupying whole land ,.like what happened during tippus time
So it has to understood ,. 1921 a barbarian act against natives by natives ,.later make claim as something against foreign Intruders.!!!
We can not shut our eyes on this kind of brutality and claim as secular ,.
May be Marxist ,.may portrait is as freedom movement , thanks to 24% Muslim vote bank.
But fact is fact , it is time Kerala society take introspection , and learn from such blunders,and never do anything which hampers our social harmony, and we never be a prey to petty political powers , they reverse history suiting their political needs
1921 malabar rebellion, , there was no champion s , only some rogue fanatics who even made secular muslims to sit in the backstage
Again we must introspect ,how nabbotris and nair land lord treated muslim work force !! Why they suddenly swtiched favour to fanatic muslims
If film any body wants to make this guy vkh is sole intention is to make fast buck , as film making is an industry , where your aim to make profit , even distorting history.
Also i wonder mysore invasion lasted some 40 years only, there were proud, independent, powerful nair house holds still loyal to zamorin, and nair tharavads of velluvanade having strong chaver martial back ground, why they along with this mopplah chiefs couldnt put a strong effort together against east india company like muslims n hindus did in north (1857)?
Thanks Muz
Regrettably there was considerable distrust between the two communities after the Mysore invasion.
I wrote a two piece article around this many years ago, please read it
https://maddy06.blogspot.com/2009/06/amity-enmity.html
https://maddy06.blogspot.com/2009/07/amity-enmity-part-ii.html
Amity is what we should always have...
The Moplah Rebellion and the Khilafat Movement were just terms to us in our school lessons. Had very little idea of the context and the details. Thank you very much for the painstaking research, reconstruction and narration.
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