Sheikh Abdullah

Politician

Birthday December 5, 1905

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Soura, Jammu and Kashmir, British India

DEATH DATE 1982-9-8, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India (76 years old)

Nationality India

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1905

Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah (5 December 1905 – 8 September 1982) was a Kashmiri politician who played a central role in the politics of Jammu and Kashmir.

Abdullah was the founding leader of the All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference (later renamed Jammu and Kashmir National Conference) and the 1st elected Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir after its accession to India.

He agitated against the rule of the Maharaja Hari Singh and urged self-rule for Kashmir.

He served as the 1st elected Prime Minister of the Princely State of Jammu and Kashmir and Jammu & Kashmir as a State and was later jailed by Indian government unconstitutionally citing his support to Insurgents.

Sheikh Abdullah was born on 5 December 1905 in Soura, a suburb on the outskirts of Srinagar, two weeks after the death of his father Sheikh Mohammed Ibrahim.

As claimed by him in his autobiography Aatish-e-Chinar, his great- grandfather was a Hindu Brahmin of the Sapru clan, who converted to Islam after getting influenced by a Sufi preacher.

His father had been a middle class manufacturer and trader of Kashmiri shawls.

Abdullah was the youngest of six siblings.

1909

He was first admitted to a traditional school or maktab in 1909, when he was four, where he learnt the recitation of the Quran and some basic Persian texts like Gulistan of Sa'di, Bostan and Padshanama.

This was followed by a primary school run by the Anjuman Nusrat-ul-Islam, however the low standards of education resulted in Abdullah shifting to the district school at Visrarnaag.

After five grades here he shifted to Government High School, Dilawar Bagh.

He had to walk the distance of ten miles to school and back on foot, but in his own words, the joy of being allowed to obtain a school education made it seem a light work.

1920

In the 1920s there were a couple of 'reading rooms' in Srinagar which consisted of the educated youth of the area and could only be formed after acquiring the permission of the government.

Forming political associations the time was banned.

1922

He passed his matriculation (standard 12) examination from Punjab University in 1922.

After matriculation he obtained admission in Shri Pratap (S. P.) College, a leading college of Kashmir.

His aim was to go into the medical profession at the time.

However, circumstances not permitting, he decided to try to study general science at Prince of Wales College in Jammu.

He was denied admission.

Then he took admission in Islamia College, Lahore and graduated from there.

In 1922, G. A. Ashai set up the Islamia School Old Boys Association (a reading room) with 20 members as part of the leadership, including Sheikh Abdullah.

At this time Abdullah was still in college.

1930

In 1930, he obtained an M.Sc.

in Chemistry from Aligarh Muslim University.

The political exposure in Lahore and Aligarh would inspire his later life.

As a student at Aligarh Muslim University, he came in contact with and was influenced by persons with liberal and progressive ideas.

He became convinced that the feudal system was responsible for the miseries of the Kashmiris and like all progressive nations of the world Kashmir too should have a democratically elected government.

Permission to open the Fateh Kadal Reading Room Party was given in 1930 and Sheikh Abdullah became the Secretary of the party.

During Abdullah's time the reading room party was located in the house of Mufti Ziauddin.

For Abdullah, "the establishment of reading room(s) was an excuse"; rather it was an opportunity to get together to discuss different issues.

One of the first incidents which led Abdullah's Reading Room Party to gain wider recognition was after writing a letter to the government related to government recruitment policies.

Subsequently they were called to present their views in front of the Regency Council headed by G. E. C. Wakefield in October 1930.

This was one of the first interactions of Sheikh Abdullah with the government and the favourable impression that Abdullah had left on Wakefield helped push his name into the public limelight.

Sheikh Abdullah and his colleagues were greatly influenced by the lectures of a Kashmiri polymath and lawyer Molvi Abdullah.

1931

Molvi Abdullah's son Molvi Abdul Rahim, Sheikh Abdullah and Ghulam Nabi Gilkar were the first three educated Kashmiri youth to be arrested during the public agitation of 1931.

1932

Kashmir's first political party the Kashmir Muslim Conference with Sheikh Abdullah as President, Chaudhary Ghulam Abbas as general secretary, and Molvi Abdul Rahim as Secretary was formed on 16 October 1932.

In his presidential address Sheikh Abdullah categorically stated that the Muslim Conference had come into existence to struggle for the rights of all oppressed sections of the society and not Muslims alone.

1953

He was dismissed from the position of Prime Ministership on 8 August 1953 and Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad was appointed the new Prime Minister.

1965

The expressions 'Sadr-i-Riyasat' and 'Prime Minister' were replaced with the terms 'Governor' and 'Chief Minister' in 1965.

1982

Sheikh Abdullah again became the Chief Minister of the state following the accord with Indira in 1974 and remained in the top slot till his death on 8 September 1982.