Jammu and Kashmir - India travel & tourism
information
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.
| Location |
: |
Northern Most Part Of India
|
| Three Main Regions |
: |
Jammu, Kashmir & Ladakh |
| Languages Spoken |
: |
Dogri, Kashmiri, Hindi & Ladakhi |
| Best Time To Visit |
: |
Jammu - October To February |
| |
|
Kashmir - May To October & November
To February |
| |
|
Ladakh - Mid June To September |
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.
Accession
Jammu and Kashmir was one of about 565 princely States of India
on which the British paramountcy lapsed at the stroke of midnight
on August 15, 1947. While the power was transferred to the people
in British India, the rulers of the princely States were given
an option to join either of the two Dominions – India or Pakistan.
The Government of India Act 1935, as adopted in the Indian Independence
Act, 1947, provided, "An Indian State shall be deemed to have
acceded to the Dominion if the Governor General has signified
the acceptance of an Instrument of Accession executed by the rule
thereof." India, Pakistan and even Britain were party to these
provisions. So the choice of joining either of the Dominions was
left to the Rulers of the States concerned. Moreover, in the Indian
Independence Act, 1947, there was no provision for any conditional
accession.
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