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Jammu
and Kashmir came into being as a
single political and
geographical entity following
the Treaty of Amristar between
the British Government and Gulab
singh signed on March 16, 1846.
The Treaty handed over the
control of the Kashmir State to
the Dogra ruler of Jammu who had
earlier annexed Ladakh.
Thus a new State comprising
three distinct religions of
Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh was
formed with Maharaja Gulab Singh
as its founder ruler. The feudal
dispensation in the State,
however, was too harsh for the
people to live under and towards
the end of a hundred years of
this rule when their Indian
brethren were fighting for
independence from the British
under the inspiring leadership
of Mahatma Gandhi and Pandit
Jawahar Lal Nehru, the Kashmiris
led by a towering personality,
the Sher-I-Kashmir Sheikh
Mohammad Abdullah, rose against
the autocracy.
The autocratic rule came down
heavily on the people’s freedom
movement. However, the people
laid their lives in the cause of
freedom and to uphold the ideals
of secularism, equality,
democracy and brotherhood.
The high point of the movement
was July 13, 1931 when 22
protesters were martyred.
The
event strengthened the movement
and contrary to the expectations
of the then rulers, the peopled
emerged more determined in their
resolution to seek an end to
autocratic rule.
By the time the rulers could
realise the futility of breaking
the will of the people with the
might of the State, the National
Conference, headed by Sheikh
Mohammad Abdullah, had become a
mass movement and a force to
reckon with.
It broke the barriers of region
and religion and became a
popular and secular voice of the
people of the State whose
collective yearning was freedom
from autocracy and the
establishment of a popular rule.
The people’s movement
spearheaded by the National
Conference saw several ups and
downs with its leaders
particularly the Sher-I-Kashmir
suffering vissitudes and long
internment.
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