APP Users: If unable to download, please re-install our APP.
Only logged in User can create notes
Only logged in User can create notes

General Studies 2 >> Governance

audio may take few seconds to load

GUJARAT AND MAHARASHTRA

GUJARAT AND MAHARASHTRA

1. Context 

Both Gujarat and Maharashtra celebrate their 63rd foundation day on May 1.
Public functions are being held across the two states to mark the day of their creation.

2. Key points

  • The two states were created out of the bilingual Bombay State, which used to cover nearly one-sixth of all land in India.
  • But Gujarati and Marathi linguistic sub-nationalism eventually won out, leading to the bifurcation of the Bombay State into a Gujarati-speaking and a Marathi-speaking state.
  • The history of the two States' creation and how the city of Bombay came to be at the centre of the struggle for statehood.

3. The situation in 1947

  • At the time of independence, present Gujarat comprised over half of India's 565 princely states and the centrally administered Baroda, Western India and Gujarat States Agency.
  • In 1948, over 220 princely states in the Kathiawar region came together to form the Saurashtra state.
  • Except for Junagadh, whose Nawab initially attempted to join Pakistan, the creation of the Saurashtra state largely went without a hitch.
  • The northern Kutch region was given the status of a Part C state, remaining under the direct administration of the union government.
  • However the eastern region of present-day Gujarat, again a patchwork of tiny princely states with Baroda being the largest, merged with the erstwhile Bombay State in 1949.
  • Leading up to 1947, the Bombay Province was one of British India's three large administrative regions stretching from Mysore in the south beyond Karachi in the West.
  • It enveloped the patchwork of princely states that would later become a part of Gujarat but did not include Marathi-speaking regions of Vidarbha (in Central Provinces) and Marathwada (Hyderabad State).
  • Present-day Maharashtra would be formed via the integration of these Marathi-speaking regions with a large part of the erstwhile Bombay state.
The red outline marks the bilingual Bombay State created in 1956. In green are the Marathwada districts which were previously a part of Hyderabad State, in blue are the Vidarbha districts previously a part of the Central Provinces and in the two shades of yellow are the Kutch (north) and Saurashtra regions. In red is the erstwhile Bombay province unified with Baroda and other princely states in present-day eastern Gujarat. Outside the red outline, to the south, in pink are Kannada-speaking districts that were transferred from Bombay to what today is known as Karnataka. 

4. The Question of Bombay City

  • Movements to unify Marathi-speaking regions into a single administrative unit went as far back as 1918.
  • In 1953, the Nagpur Pact was signed by representatives of Bombay State, Vidarbha and Marathawada formally proposing the creation of a unified Marathi-speaking state. However, there was a fundamental problem with this plan.
  • While Southern and Eastern regions of the proposed state were overwhelmingly Marathi-speaking, Bombay City and north-western regions of the proposed state (Baroda and surrounding territories) had a heavy Gujarati presence.
  • The proposal to create a unified Marathi state saw bitter opposition from Gujaratis, especially around the question of the cosmopolitan Bombay City.
  • While the city too consisted of a majority Marathi population and was surrounded by Marathi-speaking districts from which it drew much of its resources, Gujaratis argued that it was their contributions which gave Bombay much of its financial might.
  • Instead of handing over the city of Bombay to Marathis, Gujaratis argued for a trifurcation of the region into a Gujarati state, a Marathi state and the union territory of Greater Bombay.
  • However, the matter remained inconclusive until the States Reorganisation Commission (SRC) adjudicated upon the issue in its 1955 report.

5. A bilingual state fails to assuage any community

  • Going against the principle of linguistic states, the SRC recommended the creation of a single, bilingual Bombay state which included all Marathi and Gujarati-speaking territories.
  • At the time of its creation in 1956, it was by far the biggest state in India, covering roughly one-sixth of India's total landmass. But the compromise left both linguistic groups unsatisfied.
  • From 1956 onwards, powerful linguistic sub-nationalist movements gathered steam in the state.
  • On one hand, was the Mahagujarat Andolan, led by Indulal Yagnik, and on the other was the Samyukta Maharashtra Samiti, led by Keshavrao Jedhe.
  • The movements were marked by massive demonstrations on the streets some of which even turned violent.
  • Finally, in 1959, the ruling Congress government succumbed to political pressure and acknowledged that the creation of the bilingual state had been a failure.
  • Finally, on May 1, 1960, the states of Gujarat and Maharashtra were carved out of the united Bombay State.
  • Notably, while Gujarat was able to secure the region around Baroda for itself, Bombay City went on to become the capital of the new Marathi-speaking state.
  • This was a major loss for Gujarat which set up its capital first in Ahmedabad and later in the newly built city of Gandhinagar.
For Prelims: Gujarat, Maharashtra, Baroda, Nagpur Pact, States Reorganisation Commission, 
For Mains:
1. What is the States Reorganisation Commission report said about the Bificuraction of states? Discuss the pros and cons of bifurcations of states (250 Words) 
 
Previous Year Questions
 
1. A Commission for the Re-organisation of States, according to language and culture was set up by the Indian Government, in the year 1953, under the Chairmanship of  (HSSC Group D 2018)
A. Syed Fazal Ali Mahatma
B. Gandhi
C. Jawaharlal Nehru
D. Subhaschandra Bose
 
Answer: A
 
2. In 1960, the erstwhile state of Bombay was bifurcated to create the present-day states of Maharashtra and ______.  (RRB NTPC 2022) 
A. Chhattisgarh         B. Karnataka          C. Gujarat           D. Goa
 
Answer: C
 
Source: The Indian Express

Share to Social