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in Political Science by kratos

Explain the poona pact of 1932

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by kratos
 
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In 1932, B.R. Ambedkarnegotiated the Poona Pact with Mahatma Gandhi. The background to the Poona Pact was the Communal Award of August 1932 which provided a separate electorate for depressed classes.

The pact signifies a solution derived by amalgamating two different ideologies (Ambedkar: Political Approach and Gandhi: Social Approach), striving to achieve a common goal for upliftment of one of most vulnerable sections of the Indian society.

Background of the Poona Pact

  • On August 16, 1932, the British Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald, announced the Communal Award which provided for separate electorates for the ‘Depressed Classes’, the Muslims, the Europeans, the Sikhs, the Anglo-Indians and the Indian-based Christians.
  • The Award of 1932 was built on the notion of separate electorates that the British government had already put in place through the Morley-Minto Reforms (1909) and the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms (1919).
  • Under a separate electorates system, each community was allocated a number of seats in the legislatures and only members from these communities would be eligible to vote to elect a representative of the same community to legislative assemblies.
  • Mahatma Gandhi was bitterly opposed to the communal award, as the award incontinuum of constant efforts of the British imperialists to divide Indian people into a number of special-interest groups and to weaken the national movement.
  • Initially, Ambedkar was in favour of the award, as according to him political solutions like separate electorate would work for upliftment of depressed classes.
  • However, after the series of negotiations both Gandhiji and Ambedkar agreed to a solution called Poona Pact and thereby withdrawing separate electorate for depressed classes.

Significance of Poona Pact

  • Representation Of Depressed Classes: In a settlement negotiated with Mahatma Gandhi, Ambedkar agreed for depressed class candidates to be elected by ajoint electorate.
    • Also, nearly twice as many seats (147) were reserved for the depressed classes in the legislature than what had been allotted under the Communal Award.
    • In addition, the Poona Pact assured a fair representation of the depressed classes in the public services while earmarking a portion of the educational grant for their uplift.
  • The Poona Pact was an emphatic acceptance by upper-class Hindus that the depressed classes constituted the most discriminated sections of Indian society.
  • It was also conceded that something concrete had to be done to give depressed classes a political voice.
  • The pact made the entire country morally responsible for the uplift of the depressed classes.
    • As the concessions agreed to in the Poona Pact were*precursors to the world’ largest affirmative programme (reservation in legislature, public services and educational institutions)** launched much later in independent India.
  • Most of all the pact made the depressed classes aformidable political force for the first time in Indian history.

Conclusion

The Poona Pact has changed the Indian Political history and the destiny of millions of Dalits across the country. However, social stigma attached to the caste system still *** in the Indian society. Therefore, in order to establish an egalitarian society in true sense, Gandhian Philosophy and *Ambedkar’ notion of Social Democracy** is much more relevant than ever before.

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