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Rajah-Moonje Pact: The Forgotten Model For Social Justice And Integration Of Dalits

  • Rajah-Moonje Pact saw through the British ploy to perpetuate minorities in India for their own political ends, and batted for joint electorates to achieve social integration.
  • The pact served as a model for the scheduled communities not to compromise on justice nor fall prey to the divide and rule policy of the British.

Aravindan NeelakandanAug 16, 2016, 05:17 PM | Updated 05:16 PM IST
Rajah and Moonje

Rajah and Moonje


It is one of the least read pages in the history of social emancipation in India. It provided a model for walking a path that would not compromise on justice nor would fall prey to the divide and rule policy created by the British. It is the ‘Rajah-Moonje Pact’ (R-MP) signed in early 1932 between Dr B.S. Moonje  and M. C. Rajah.

The bitter lessons learned in the circumstances surrounding the controversy led to the pact becoming important in building unity among the then scheduled communities (SCs). In fact, R-MP served as the precursor to the much celebrated ‘Ambedkar-Gandhi’ Pact (A-GP).

The Signatories

Mylai Chinna Thambi Pillai Rajah (17 June 1883-20 August 1943) was a Dalit politician and social and political activist from Tamil Nadu.

Born to a poor Tamil family in Madras, he entered politics after graduating from college and became a leader of Paraiyars (a Scheduled Castes community) in the Justice Party. But he left the party in 1923 over the treatment of Dalits and allied with Dr BR Ambedkar.

At one point Rajah was considered to be a person equal in stature to Ambedkar. Rajah, along with Ambedkar and Rettamalai Srinivasan, represented the Dalits at the Second Round Table Conference in London.

During late 1935, Rajah chose to not support Dr Ambedkar’s decision to leave Hinduism. Rajah, felt that conversion from Hinduism would weaken the determination of the Dalit and Hindu social reformers involved in fighting caste anomalies.

Balakrishna Shivram Moonje (BS Moonje, also BS Munje, 12 December 1872-3 March 1948) was an Indian freedom fighter. He was a resilient follower of Lokmanya Tilak. He was the general secretary of Central Indian Provincial Congress for many years.


A prominent social reformer, Moonje founded many social institutions including schools,gymnasiums, and hostels for Dalit children. The Bhonsala Military School in Nashik was started by him to provide military training to young Hindus irrespective of caste .

It is a historical fact today that R-MP was the first-ever agreement on reservation between the so-called Caste Hindus and the SCs. Later, M C Rajah pointed out the significance of the pact as the one between ‘the only central organisation of the depressed classes’ and the ‘organised body of Hindus taken as a whole’.

He also hailed the ‘hand of fraternity’ extended by ‘our co-religionists, the Caste Hindus’. At the heart of the problem was the issue of joint or separate electorates for the so-called depressed classes.

Dr Ambedkar had returned from the round table conference and started vehemently supporting separate electorates for the scheduled communities. On the other hand, M C Rajah was in favour of joint electorates.

The then British prime minister had favoured separate electorates through the ‘Communal Award’ by which the separate electorates, hitherto given to the Muslims, were now extended to the SCs. Gandhi wrote a letter to the British prime minister that he would launch a fast unto death if separate electorates for the SCs were not withdrawn. But Dr Ambedkar considered the communal award ‘a priceless privilege’ and declared that with dual vote and separate electorate the ‘untouchables would have been in a position to determine if not dictate the issue of the general election’.

However, Rajah pointed out that the communal award actually took more than it gave. Thus while the Simon Commission gave 117 seats out of 1,436 in provincial legislature for the SCs, and 237 under minorities pact (which Dr Ambedkar himself had signed), 90 seats according to the recommendations of the Indian Central Committee, the communal award gave scheduled communities just 71 seats.

Rajah further argued in favour of the joint electorates with reservation for SCs from the point of view of a healthy democracy and social empowerment:


The British were over-concerned about the R-MP, and secretary of state for India from London asked the viceroy if he could send ‘any estimates’ regarding ‘the extent to which the pact is likely to receive general acceptance by the interests involved.’ 

In Tamil Nadu, K Bashyam, a Gandhian leader, who was active in anti-untouchability campaign met Rajah and expressed his support for the R-MP. This was duly noted by British intelligence. (Under Secretary’s Safe File No 804) That was in 1932. The British interest was not in social justice but in the ‘politically very considerable advantages in having two substantial minorities’ as Lord Amery wrote to Viceroy Lord Linlithgow, a decade after the separate electorate-communal award was thwarted.


In the Hindustan Times dated 29 February 1932 the special correspondent reported that the R-MP was sent to the prime minister of England. On 9 March the paper reported that ‘Hindu and Sikh MLAs support ‘ the R-MP. On 16 March 1932 a procession was taken out in support of the pact by Deorukhker, a nationalist SCs leader. On 17 March, on behalf of Shraddhanand Memorial Trust, the pact was hailed by SCs leaders.

The Tribune from Lahore in its issue dated 25 March1932 hailed the pact as ‘the best solution’ and it wrote:

The Statesman dated 30 March1932, reported that in New Delhi All India Shradhanand Dalit-Uddhar Sabha took out a procession in support of the pact. They raised the ‘Bharat Mata ki Jai’ slogan and carried banners that declared ‘We are Hindus of Hindus.’ When the Pune Pact was signed between Gandhi and Dr Ambedkar, Rajah gave his full support to the pact without any ego though it was mostly a replica of R-MP.


It is interesting that in the context of present day Indian politics, the words of Dr Ambedkar on minority rights (social minorities and not religious minorities) echo the spirit of R-MP. He saw reservations as provisions for homogenising the majority and minorities. He said:


In other words, R-MP saw the British plan to perpetuate minorities in India for their political advantage and opted joint electorates with reservations as a means to achieve social integration.


[The data for this article is taken from the excellent documentation done on Rajah-Moonje Pact by Devendra Swarup and Meenakshi Jain: ‘The Rajah-Moonje Pact : Documents on a forgotten chapter of Indian History’, Originals, Delhi.]

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