A case study (712-1947) of centuries-old animosity that culminated in partition of India
The book was presented to the Editor of DV at a reception to the Dalit delegation from India on May 26, 2010.
Muslims of the undivided India became the worst victims of Brahminism because Islam posed an all-round threat to its exploitative tenets. To escape from the horrors of Brahminism, Muslims ultimately sought partition (1947).
Bengal had the largest concentration of Muslims and that is how the Brahminical terrorist party took .its birth in Bengal to prevent the large- scale conversion of Dalits into Islam. Sir Sayyid Ahmed Khan of Aligarh was the first most famous Muslim to unite the community against Brahminism. Tilak, a Chitpavan Brahmin from Pune, became the father of the anti-Muslim war and violence by staging Ganapati festival. The first riot took place in Bombay in 1893.
Dalits preferred Islam: A Bengali Brahmin, Bankim Chandra Chatterji, wrote the Anand Math, inciting “Hindus” to kill Muslims and also composed the notorious anti-Muslim song, Vande Mataram. When the persecuted Muslims, unable to bear Brahminical violence, appealed to the then British rulers they partitioned Bengal creating a Muslim-majority district (1905) against which the Brahminists launched a violent agitation. The Congress Party virtually became a Brahminist weapon. Tagore led the struggle against the partition of Bengal. The British were then forced to annul the partition.
It is this unending Brahminical hatred of Muslims that forced them to seek a separate country. M.K. Gandhi, as Hindu leader, was the no.1 conspirator to drive Muslims out of India. Arya Samaj, became a violent movement to fight Muslims.
The author says the principal grouse of the Brahminists was that the Untouchables of India preferred conversion to Islam by which they ceased to be Untouchable. It is the wholesale conversion of Dalits that upset the Brahminists because that decreased the “Hindu population”. To fight such conversions, they started the RSS.
All the top Brahmins like Tilak, Gokhale, Bankim Chandra Chatterji, M.M. Malaviya, Lala Lajpat Rai, Surendranath Banerji called upon the “Hindus” to arm themselves to fight and kill Muslims. This led to widespread anti-Muslim riots in many parts of India with hundreds killed. It was at this juncture the beleaguered Muslims launched the Muslim League headed by Jinnah to assert the rights of Muslims who then formed 1/5 of India. Arya Samaj was in the forefront of fomenting anti-Muslim riots. The Moplah rebellion of Kerala (1921) was a major event of all-India importance. Gandhi played an important role in provoking Hindus.
Such an all-round prejudice and reckless physical violence naturally forced Muslims to seek a separate homeland (Pakistan) for Muslims. Allama Iqbal, the eminent poet, made this proposal in his 1930 presidential speech at the Allahabad Muslim League conference. Pendrel Moon, a noted British author of the book, Divide & Quit, said:
“The Hindus say Muslims were brothers but would in fact treat them as less than stepbrothers”.
Abdul Kalam Azad, a Brahminical stooge, was the only one who went with Gandhi.

