The
Workers and Peasants Party was a political party in India
, which
worked inside the Indian
National Congress 1925-1929. It became an important
front organisation for the Communist Party of India and an
influential force in the Bombay
labour
movement. The party was able to muster some success in
making alliances with other left elements inside the Congress
Party, amongst them
Jawaharlal
Nehru. However, as the
Communist International entered its
'
Third Period' phase, the communists
deserted the WPP project. The WPP was wound up, as its leadership
was arrested by the British authorities in March 1929.
Founding of the party
The party
was founded in Bengal
on November 1, 1925, as the
Labour Swaraj Party of the Indian National
Congress. The founding leaders of the party were
Kazi Nazrul Islam, Hemanta Kumar
Sarkar, Qutubuddin Ahmad and Shamsuddin Hussain. The founding
manifesto was signed by Kazi Nazrul Islam. During the first three
month of existence, the party organisation was very
provisional.
At the All
Bengal Praja Conference, held at Krishnagar
on February 6, 1926, a resolution was moved by Faizuddin Hussian Sahib
of Mymensingh
for the creation of a workers-peasants
party. The move was seconded by Braja Nath Das of
Bogra
. The resolution was passed by the
conference, and in accordance with this decision the name of the
party was changed to 'Workers and Peasants Party of Bengal'. Dr.
Naresh Chandra Sengupta was elected party president and Hemanta
Kumar Sarkar and Qutubuddin Ahmad were elected as joint
secretaries.
Build-up of the WPPs of Bengal and Bombay
As of 1926, the WPP of Bengal had only 40 members, and its growth
in membership was very slow. A two-room party office was set up at
37, Harrison Road, Calcutta.
British intelligence perceived that the
Bengal Jute Workers Association, the Mymensingh Workers and
Peasants Party (with branch in Atia), the
Dhakeswari Mill Workers Union, the Bengal Glass Workers Union, the
Scavengers' Union of Bengal (with branches in Howrah
, Dacca
and
Mymensingh) and the Workers Protection League were led by the
party.
Soon after the 1926 conference of the WPP of Bengal, the
underground
Communist Party of
India directed its members to join the provincial Workers and
Peasants Parties. All open communist activities were carried out
through Workers and Peasants Parties. The
Comintern organiser,
M.N.
Roy, took part in the build-up of the
WPP.
A WPP was formed in Bombay in January 1927. D.R. Thengdi was
elected president and
S.S. Mirajkar general secretary. The WPPs gained
influence within the Bombay and Bengal
Pradesh Congress Committees. From
the WPP of Bombay, K.N. Joglekar, R.S. Nimbkar and D.R. Tengdi were
elected to the All India Congress Committee. From the WPP of
Bengal, two party representatives were elected to the AICC. The WPP
representatives together with Nehru were able to convince the AICC
to make the Indian National Congress an associate member of the
League against
Imperialism.
Madras Congress
At the
1927 annual Congress session in Madras
a leader of
the WPP of Bombay, K.N.
Joglekar presented a proposal for a
resolution in the Subjects Committee, that the Indian National
Congress should demand full independence for India. The proposal
was seconded by Jawaharlal Nehru. At the open session of the Madras
Congress, Nehru moved the resolution and Joglekar seconded it. The
resolution was passed unanimously. This was the first time in
history that the Indian National Congress officially demanded full
independence from British rule. During the Madras session, the WPP
functioned as a fraction. Directly after the Madras Congress, the
WPP took part in a 'Republican Congress' meeting together with
other left elements of the Congress Party and radical
trade unionists. Nehru chaired the
meeting.
Trade union struggles
Particularly the WPP of Bombay was successful in mobilising trade
union work. It built unions amongst printing press, municipal and
dock workers. It gained influence amongst the workers of the
Great Indian Peninsular
Railway. During 1928 the WPP led a
general strike in Bombay, which lasted for
months. At the time of the strike, the
Girni Kamgar Union was founded.
Anti-Simon struggle
During the protests against the
Simon
Commission, the WPP played a major role in organising
manifestations in Calcutta and Bombay. In Bombay it also mobilised
'
hartal' (general strike) in protest against
the Simon Commission.
1928 Bengal party conference
The WPP of
Bengal held its third conference in Bhatpara
, in March 1928. After the conference the
executive of the party published the conference documents in a book
titled
A Call for Action. In the book an argument is
presented that national independence was not possible as long as
capitalists dominated the freedom struggle. British intelligence
sources claimed that Spratt had been the author of the book.
Formation of WPPs in Punjab and UP
At a conference in
Lyallpur in September
1928 the Punjab Kirti Kisan Party (Workers and Peasants Party of
Punjab) was formed by the
Kirti group.
Chabil Das, a Lahore
propagandist
of the Naujawan Bharat Sabha,
was elected president of the party. In October 1928 two WPPs
were formed in the
United Provinces. One of
them was the Bundelkhand Workers and Peasants Party, with N.L.
Kadam as
its secretary and headquartered in Jhansi
. The
party held its founding conference in Jhansi on
October 28-
October 29
1928. Jhavwala from Bombay presided over the
conference. The other was the U.P.
Peasants and Workers Party which was
founded at a conference in Meerut
.
P.C. Joshi was
elected president and Dharamvir Singh was elected general secretary
The Meerut conference was attended by
Philip Spratt,
Muzaffar Ahmed and
Kedar Nath Sahgol.
All India WPP conference
In late November 1928 the WPP of Bengal executive committee met
with Philipp Spratt and Muzaffar Ahmed. They decided to appoint
Sohan Singh Josh of the Punjab Kirti Kisan Party to chair the All
India Workers and Peasants Conference, to be held in Calcutta in
December.
The provincial WPPs attended All India
Workers and Peasants Conference in Calcutta
on December 22-December 24 1928, at which
the All India Workers and Peasants Party was formed. A
16-member national executive was elected. The Bengal, Bombay,
Punjab and United Provinces were allocated four seats each in the
national executive. Out of these 16, ten were either identified as
CPI members or as 'communists'. R.S. Nimbkar was the general
secretary of the party. The conference discussed an affiliation of
the party with the League against Imperialism. Spratt and Ahmed
urged the conference to approve the affiliation of the party to the
League. The conference decision to postpone a decision on the issue
to a later occasion.
1929 Bombay municipal election
The party contested the January 1929 Bombay municipal election,
mustering around 12 500 votes.
Comintern turns against the WPP
The political fortunes of the WPP was to be terminated by changes
in policy of the Communist International. The July 1928 sixth
congress of the Communist International declared that 'The Union of
all communist groups and individuals scattered throughout the
country into a single, illegal, independent and centralized party
represent the first task for Indian communists.' This was a
statement made in opposition to the building of the 'multi-class'
WPP.
The
new line was promoted at the congress by the Finnish
communist Otto
Kuusinen. In his report, he stated that it was
'necessary to reject the formation of any kind of bloc between the
Communist Party and the national-reformist opposition' in the
colonies. Moreover, he claimed that parties like WPP could develop
into petty bourgeois parties.
Trotsky
concurred with this view. In June 1928, he had submitted a document
which called WPP an invention of
Stalin and
that the party was a 'thoroughly anti-Marxist formation'.
Abani Mukherji, a founding member of CPI, had
described WPP as a '
Kuomintang Party' and
that WPP 'is accumulating by itself the elements of future Indian
Fascism.'. S.N. Tagore and the delegates of the
Communist Party of Great
Britain argued for retaining the WPP. This declaration created
confusion amongst the communist ranks in India. On
December 2,
1928, the
Executive Committee of the Communist International had drafted a
letter to the WPP, which singled out the WPP as consisting
'...largely of petit-bourgeois intellectuals, and they were tied up
with either the system of landlordism and usury or straight away
capitalist interests.' The letter did however take long time to
reach the WPP. The Tenth Plenum of the ECCI,
July
3-
July 19 1929,
directed the Indian communists to break with WPP. When the
communists deserted it, the WPP fell apart.
Meerut Conspiracy case
[[Image:Meerut prisoners outside the
jail.jpg|thumb|600px|right|
Portrait of 25 of Meerut
Prisoners taken outside the jail.
Backrow:(left to right) K.N. Sehgal,
S.S. Josh, H.L. Hutchinson, Shaukat
Usmani, B.F. Bradly, A. Prasad,
P. Spratt, and G. Adhikari.
Middle Row: K.R. Mitra, Gopan Chakravarthy,
Kishore Lal Ghosh, K.L. Kadam, D.R.
Thengdi, Goura Shanker, S. Banerjee,
K.N. Joglekar, P.C. Joshi, and
Muzaffar Ahmed.Front Row: M.G. Desai, G. Goswami, R.S.
Nimkar, S.S. Mirajkar, S.A. Dange, G.V. Ghate and Gopal Basak.]]On
March 20,
1929, arrests
against WPP, CPI and other labour leaders were made in several
parts of India, in what became known as the
Meerut Conspiracy Case. Most of the
WPP leadership was now put behind bars. The trial proceedings were
to last for four years, thus outliving the WPP. Tengdi, the WPP of
Bombay president, died whilst the trial was still going on.
S.S. Mirajkar stated in his defense that
"It has already been pointed out to the Court that the
Workers' and Peasants' Party was a party inaugurated with a view to
establish national independence through revolution."
Abdul Majid on his behalf stated that
"If there is any resemblance between the Communist
Party and the Workers' and Peasants' Party is that the immediate
programme of the former and the ultimate programme of the latter is
one and the same ...
As both are revolutionary bodies it is necessary that
their national revolutionary programme should resemble each
other."
The judgement in the case was ended with the following passage;
"As to the progress made in this conspiracy its main
achievements have been the establishment of Workers and Peasant
Parties in Bengal, Bombay and Punjab and the U.P., but perhaps of
deeper gravity was the hold that the members of the Bombay Party
acquired over the workers in the textile industry in Bombay as
shown by the extent of the control which they exercised during the
strike of 1928 and the success they were achieving in pushing
forward a thoroughly revolutionary policy in the Girni Kamgar Union
after the strike came to an end."
After the arrests of its main leaders, the WPP was dissolved.
Policies
The founding manifesto of the Labour Swaraj Party stressed that the
party was organised on the basis of
class
struggle, for the liberation of the masses. The party combined
demand for full independence with socio-economic demands. In 1927,
the WPP of Bombay presented a programme of action to the All India
Congress Committee. The programme proposed struggle for full
independence combined with active socio-economic policies for the
toiling classes. The WPP of Bengal had submitted a manifesto the
Madras Congress session, which sought that the Congress should
engage in mass struggles for full independence and that a
Constituent Assembly should determine the constitution of an
independent India. The party also worked for the abolishment of
'
zamindari' system in agriculture.
Publications
The organ of the Labour Swaraj Party, and later the WPP of Bengal,
was
Langal ('Plough'). The chief editor of
Langal
was Kazi Nazrul Islam and the editor was Manibhusan Mukhopadhaya.
Langal stopped publication after 15 issues. On
August 12,
1926 it was
substituted by
Ganavani. In 1928, the party also had a
weekly
Hindi organ,
Lal Nishan ('Red
Flag').
A
weekly newspaper in Kushtia
, Jagaran ('Awakening'), was politically
close to the party.
In Punjab the publication
Kirti ('Worker') had been
started in 1926 by Santokh Singh of the
Ghadar Party. Soon it became the organ of the
Punjab Kirti Kisan Party and managed by Sohan Singh Josh.
Youth wing
The youth wing of the party was the Young Comrades League. P.C.
Joshi played an important role in organising the youth
league.
References
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