VOl II-19 - 13. Socio-Political - PDF - 11
VOl II-19 - 13. Socio-Political - PDF - 11
VOl II-19 - 13. Socio-Political - PDF - 11
Abstract
This research treats the initial period of colonial rule in Multan
tracing the factors that led the British to rely on the landed elite
for support, and enter into the bargain between the two actors
that drove subsequent power politics. How this bargain in the
shape of rewards and patronage disturbed the balance of
power and innate sense of competition began to exist among
the local allies and the indirect willingness was to serve more
and be rewarded more? This is demonstrated through the war
services of Qureshies and Gillanies, the dominant political
elites. The relationship between the two was one of mutual
benefit, with the British using their landed allies to ensure the
maintenance of order and effective economic accumulation in
exchange for state patronage. Over a century and a half later,
the politics of Pakistani Punjab continues to be dominated by
landowning politicians as Pirs and Jagirdars despite
significant societal changes that could have potentially eroded
their power. Addressing the issues, the research aims at to
develop deductive method for assessing its historic importance
and analyze the region as case studies. This research is based
on original unpublished official reports from British Indian
Library London, Punjab Civil Secretariat Lahore
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Vol. V. No. II (July-December 2019) PP 238-255
influential officers of the Diwan‟s force. Edwardes decided to
take his services and send him as ambassador to the Diwan for
discussion. Faujdar Khan too understood the importance of the
time, and felt that Company could help him and his family in
regaining the position authorities lost 30 years ago.
In early 1848, Mulraj himself sent one of his senior officers
Ghulam Mustafa Khakwani to Edwardes to convey that he
wanted to transfer power peacefully. On 8th May, Gulam
Mustafa Khakwani and Faujdar Khan met at the east bank of
Sindh River where Khakwani told Edwardes that Pathans were
ready to leave Mulraj if Edwardes would give back all their
lands and property with their jobs that were taken by the
Mulraj. Edwardes gave them his hand written guarantee for
their lives, property and honour.4
This was how the Muslim leadership of Multan became ready
to give support Edwards. If the sword was the source of power
for armed class, we cannot deny the importance of Pirs and
Sajjada Nashins and their influence on social sector. From all
of them, Shah Mahmood Qureshi was most prominent because
he was the Sajjada Nashin of Bahudin Zakria, who was the
most famous in Multan, Sindh, Baluchistan and Punjab.
Followers from Kharasan, Afghanistan and Hindustan came to
his tomb with offerings. With Shah Mahmood, there were two
other important families of Multan - Gillani and Gardezi,
helped Edwardes against Mulraj. Now the question is why
Muslims of Multan were ready to support Colonial officers?
We cannot understand the entire situation without analysing
prevailing circumstances with special reference to their
relationship with Hindus. Hindus became dominant over
Muslims in the fields of politics and economics during the last
30 years of Sikh rule. Hindu traders and bankers took many
benefits from the peaceful period of Sikh rule.
In Afghan period, Shikarpur and Sindh were trading and
banking centres where Hindus were the dominant business
class. Multan city was the main exporter of fine silk and textile
cotton while Shikapur and Calcutta were associated with
banking networking. This commerce network was very
important for those traders who were exchanging money with
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gold and silver coins. With the start of Sikh rule, Hindu traders
from Shikarpur were used to station at Multan, 5 where they
became very powerful not only politically but economically as
well. For Muslims, it was period of decline. In 1831, when
Burnes came in Multan he wrote in his travelogue … “So high
a Mahomaden Supremacy, there is now no public numaz, the
true believer dare not fit his voice in public. The Eieds and
Moherrum pass without the usual observances; the Allah ho
Akbar of priest is never heard, the mosques are yet frequented,
but the pious are reduced to offering up their orisons in
silence.”6
These were the circumstances when Muslim political and
religious elites decided to throw in their lot with the Colonial
officers. After annexation of Multan, the East India Company
decided to give rewards for their war allies. Sarfaraz Khan
Sadozai secretly worked for the British during the war. Sarfraz
Khan was the only living son of ex Afghan ruler Muzafar khan
who had died during the war of Sikh annexation. Sikh
government gave him life time pension but forced him to
remain under their observation.7In 1849, Sarfraz Khan claimed
to the Board of Administration, because he was the chief of his
tribe. The Board declared him to be a life time pension holder
for his family. Many Pathan allies got rewards for their war
time services but the Board was especially generous with
Sarfraz Khan.8 In the irregular army of Herbert Edwardes, local
soldiers, like Faujdar Khan, Gulam Sarwar Khan Khakwani,
Sadiq Muhammad Khan Badozai and Gulam Qasim Khan
Alizai were appointed as regular servants.9
After generously distributing the rewards, the East India
Company secured not only their raj but also took the oath of
faith for future assistance. The Company finished their
traditional type of rule because they did not need their services.
Now they wanted to rule over the people with their new ruling
policies. According to John Lawrence, “The soldiers long for
native rule. He is not fit or inclined for our service. His trade is
gone; he is too old or lazy to lean a new one. Crowds of
irregular horses and footmen are thrown out of employment
and swell the number of the discontented.”10 Pirs and Pathans
got much from the East India Company for their war time
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services. In this respect Shah Mahmood got more than others.
However, the government refused to compensate the loss of
damage of shrines of Bahaudin Zakria due to war.”11
Post 1857 War Political Settlement
The next test of the Muslim elites‟ faithfulness was the war of
1857. At that time there were two platoons in Multan that were
suspected by the British .They took back all the arms from
them. Yet 1200 men from 69th regiment rebelled. At the early
time of crisis with the help of large Bengal Army,
Commissioner Hamilton and Major Chamberlain controlled the
situation.12 The Pir and Pathan families supported in1848 did
all again to strengthen the Raj. While the local inhabitants and
agriculturalists were concerned the situation was apparently
seemed calm. They wanted to follow their leader‟s footstep.
The Pir and Pathan were confident that when the Raj became
stable, they would be rewarded for their loyalties. Mukhdum
Shah Mahmud Qureshi, Gulam Mustafa Khan Khawani and
Sadiq Muhammad Khan Badozai were the real beneficiaries of
the war time services. They were awarded life time jagirs,
gardens in Multan city, dresses of honor and cash prises.13 The
British, however, were able to crush the rebellion, thanks to the
help of their local landlord allies. Multan was thereafter seen as
a bastion of Colonial strength in the region.
After the war, the collaboration between Pir and Pathan
families of Multan and British Government not only sustained
but extended. According to Hamilton, “The proposed grants
were necessary not only to requite past services but to maintain
in positions of eminence families whose representatives have in
times of danger proved loyalty and fidelity and to whom we
may in future look for support.”14
Colonial Management and Conception of Authority
In a region like Multan, land was an essential factor
symbolizing power and authority. 15 It gave a feudal economic
and social privilege over the rest of the society. 16Muslim
society was based on tribal kinship bonds. The Colonial
administrator acknowledged the social and political importance
of the tribal and kinship groups and strengthened and promoted
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Zaildari system was introduced in Multan district during the
second regular settlement (1873-1880).22 A total of 79 Zaildars
were appointed: two of them e for police administration and 79
for the newer common functions. In many cases, however, the
appointment of Zaildars was nothing more than a paper
exercise.23 Magistrates, however, were more helpful and
satisfactory as collaborators for colonial rule.24 A provincial
Government enquiry in became the reason for the introduction
of Honorary Magistracy in district Multan. However it was
somewhat later when actual appointments were made. 25 In
1877 four Honorary Magistrates were appointed for Multan
city, invested with the powers of a third class magistrate. Two
more honorary magistrates were appointed in 1879.26 A chief
headman was elected in every village through the votes of the
proprietary bodies, subject to the sanction of deputy
commissioner. .27 They were also accountable for revenue
collection and were bound to assist in the prevention and
detection of the crime. A chief headman was elected in every
village through the votes of the proprietary bodies, subject to
the sanction of deputy commissioner. .
The headmen were appointed on the basis of their loyalty and
skills, and were under the Zaildars. Usually, these Zaildars
were the leaders of the local “tribes” and “clans”, and had
showns their unquestionable loyalty to the British. The early
practice in the selection of Zaildars called for elections among
the Zails headman, whose vote though not binding was
intended to guide the choice.28 Zaidars were the most essential
segment of the local level management and their involvement
in government was of much importance.29
District Management and Colonial Multan
The Zaildari system was an attempt to link rural masses with
the district management through prominent men from dominant
families. .30 These Zaildar families emerged with considerable
influence and gained the position to claim the leadership of the
Zail's dominant tribes. Though the position of the Zaildars was
not hereditary, mostly it passed from father to son, and thus this
class became very influential. After 1890, the British granted
large tracts of land in the canal colonies to enhance the position
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distinction between different classes of society. The culture
widened the difference between commoner and elite.36 The
Colonial administration strengthened this difference in the
process of redefining tribal leadership, which created factional
rivalry as less privileged tribes felt they had been implicitly
relegated to secondary status.
If the jagirdars were the prop up of rural society, spiritual
support was provided by religious figures known as Pirs and
Sayids. The importance of Pirs in Multan cannot be
overvalued. Every Multani feel honoured to be associated with
a particular Pir, to whose mazar a regular contribution would
be made at harvest time. The living Pirs were a source of
spiritual guidance and inspiration and gave practical advice on
disputes. In this way, Pirs complemented the jagirdars as
adjudicators. Indeed jagirdars would frequently consult their
Pirs before exercising authority in difficult or complex cases,
while cultivators who had lost their jagirdars’ good will, or
who wanted a favour , might approach the great man through
his Pir. The pirs’and jagirdars shared the leadership of Multani
society.
At the other end of Multan's social spectrum were Hindu
tribes and castes, mainly the Jat and Rajput, who had converted
to Islam. Many were the tribal groups of Sindhi origin that had
settled in South-western Punjab, as had the Siyals who
dominated the territory of the lower Ravi, between Jhang and
Multan. Further south, in the bar lands of the Mailsi and
Kabirwala Tehsils, Langrial, Hirraj and Singana were the
dominant nomadic or semi-nomadic tribes and the Joyas on the
southern course of the Sutlej. Langha, Thahim and Traggar
were present along the Ravi on the Shujabad tehsil. While
many of these tribes in the 19th century appeared to have settled
in great numbers founding the riverian villages, the tribes
inhabiting the bar, although converted to Islam not completed
their transition to a settled way of life.37 Therefore, the
difference between hithar and bar or riverian and highlands,
largely corresponded to one between settled and nomadic
worlds. This pattern remained intact despite Colonial pressure
until the second half of 19th century. 38
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Village communities in Punjab were defined by Richard
Tupper as a group of families bound together by the tie of
descent from a common ancestor.‟41 Therefore, the people had
to be made jointly accountable for the collection of revenue.
The land was thus alienated into artificial units, called mauzah,
to which a joint liability was accredited. However, the
presences of these communities in Multan were more a fantasy
than a reality due to the environmental characteristics of the
region. The Commissioner G.W. Hamilton warned, in 1860, of
„non-existence of village communities and the incoherent
nature of the subordinate fiscal division.‟42 However the
Government, while admitting the non-existence of these
communities, emphasised the need to create them. There was a
logic that the formation of the communities had to be the
„natural‟ growth of the Multani society. The individualistic
stage, at which the rural people of Multan lived, was for some a
type of first on the mode of civilization .The Financial
Commissioner R.N.Cust in fact wrote that:
…these people are the pioneers of civilization, the
squatters in the primeval forest. Gradually however, the
ramparts of a municipality will be formed round them; we have
now given them a defined village area, and a joint property in
the jungle, to the exclusion of others…the ties of fellowship
and mutual advantage will draw them together, the law of joint
responsibility will bring with it the right of pre-emption. As
cultivation, population and wealth extend, these infant
communities will develop themselves on one of the Gangetic
valley, and the village community has come in to existence.43
However, by trying to classify a region in common property for
a community „to the exclusion of others‟ in an area where
grazing areas were so insufficient that the cattle had to „wander
over wide tracts in search of food‟ 44 was not only to go against
any verification of the standard of living and ecosystem of the
area, but also to bring the risk of creating clash in the society.
It was a situation similar to Kamshmiri settings as analysed by
Aprana Rao.45 Where, ordinary entrance to sources was
controlled by the colonial interference.
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commissioner to go against his subordinate‟ s view and confirm
the grant for the life of the incumbent.48
Moreover, in the early 20th century, about 48 % of the region of
Multan fell under the grouping of „uncultivable waste‟. In the
uplands, according to the official records, land was „a grazing
ground for sheep and a browsing ground for goats and
camels.49 In addition, we have sufficient proof to suggest the
different sectors of the society tended to maintain pastoralism
as a preferred activity. If therefore, pastoralism and breeding
were so important in the life of the district, we would argue that
the decrease of grazing tax payback by the management to the
families and tribes of the district signalled the colonial concern
in reducing the admittance to resources for pastoral nomadism
in the district, motivating as a replacement for adjusted life and
agriculture. In any case, the stability of a „pastoral spirit‟ in the
temperament of Multani peasants was something about which
the Colonial management kept complaining throughout the
period under discussion .This complexity faced by the
management in enforcing a diverse pattern of economic activity
would be part of the background of the large scale irrigation
projects of the late 19th and early 20th century. As we have seen,
the Multan bar was a high and mostly arid region, which
extended from the southern part of the Jhang and Montgomery
districts to confluence of the Sutlej and Chenab rivers, south of
Multan city. It was a region that was populated mostly by
nomadic or semi-nomadic tribes judged by the management to
be generally „unreliable‟ and „predatory‟. The area had not
considerably changed despite earlier attempts of artificial
irrigation made during the Mughal period.50 In the early 18th
century, agriculture in Multan was still limited to the fertile
hithar lands. A partial extension of the agriculture towards the
bar occurred many years later under the Nawabs of Multan and
Bahawalpur in the mid-18th century, possibly due to the
political autonomy enjoyed by the Nawabs with the passage of
the independence from the Mughal to the Afghan kingdom.51
The uncultivated areas were not economically profitable for the
management: the land paid little as revenue and the grazing tax
paid was considered „insignificant‟ by a Colonial officer in the
early 19th century. Furthermore, the tribes of the bar were not
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were from the old ruling families like Pathans of Multan. They
would be high in social rank and stood aloof from the rivalries
with each other.
Conclusion
To conclude, within a couple of decades of the Colonial
annexation, a number of officers serving in Multan, began to
believe that Jagirdars who got worse off the competition. They
were floundered in a mesh of debt and usurious interest
payments. Their estates were broke up and passed to their
Hindu creditors. The Jagirdars would soon become extinct. In
short, the traditional power structure of rural Multan was
disintegrated. The prospect of social revolution on such a scale
was appalling due to the disintegration of the rural power. If the
rural power structure disintegrated, it would take the colonial
regime with it the Jagirdars were a crucial element in the
system of rural intermediaries through whom the Colonial
governors governed Multan. Without them little would remain
of the local administration.
The period under analysis concluded that the management was
far away from troubled that the rapid agricultural indebtedness
and land alienation, to be the trend as an example of the
survival of the fittest. Economic policies brought effects as the
economic and social position of many prominent landed
families deteriorated.
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References
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