, the founder of All India Muhammadan Educational Conference After the Congress sponsored agitation against the partition of Bengal (1905) an All India Muhammadan Educational Conference was held at
Shahbag in
Dhaka, capital of the then
East Bengal and Assam Province in the year 1906. The conference was sponsored by
Nawab Khwaja Salimullah the
Nawab of Dhaka. The conference was inaugurated on 27 December 1906 and continued till 29 December 1906 as Conference on Education. The inaugural session was chaired by Nawab Justice Sharfuddin, the newly appointed justice of Calcutta High Court. Those assembled met again on 30 December 1906, the day after the conclusion of the Educational Conference. The assembly was chaired by
Nawab Viqar-ul-Mulk. At the meeting a motion to form an
All India Muslim League (AIML) was passed. Initially a party styled as
All India Muslim Confederacy was discussed. But, in the process the name
All India Muslim League, proposed by Nawab Khawaja Sir Salimullah Bahadur and seconded by
Hakim Ajmal Khan, was resolved in the meeting. All delegates were registered as members of the proposed party led by
Janab Muhsin-ul-mulk and Janab Viqar-ul-mulk was Joint Conveners. AIML was first Muslim political party in the history of India. From the even date Muslims of all Indian provinces were under the mainstream political umbrella of Muslim League until independence achieved in the year 1947 under the leadership of Muslim League. Awami Muslim League and Awami League was also formed as a late production of the party in the Pakistan Period. In Indo pak Bangla sub continent those parties have the part
League possess heritage of Muslim League till date. Political awareness, eagerness and rising of Muslims was organised and institutionalised from the starting point of establishing
All India Muslim League.
Venue The place where All India Muhammadan Educational Conference were held was known to all as
Ishrat Manzil, a mansion of the Dhaka Nawab Family that was later donated for the establishment of the Dhaka University. After 5 years of this conference in the year 1911 Partition of Bengal was annulled in the Delhi Durbar. In the year 1912 A delegation headed by Khawaja Nawab Sir Salimulla met Lord Hardinge Lt. Governor, to the same venue demanding establishment of a university at Dacca and it was agreed. Upon whom present Dhaka University was started its functioning on 1 July 1921 in the same venue. Now the Eshrat Manzil lapsed its heritage, fame and name of Dhaka's Nawab family and prevailed as a canteen named
Madhur Canteen.
Delegates A total of 1955 delegates attended the event. The conference was attended by most of the Muslim
zamindars, educationists, pleaders, and other leaders of the community. The programme was attended among others by: •
Nawab Muhsinul Mulk Bahadur • Mumtazul Mulk Khalifa Syed Muhammad Hussain from Patiala •
Hakim Ajmal Khan Delhi •
Khan Bahadur Raja Sir Mohammad Ali Mohammad Khan of
Mahmudabad • H.M. Malek of Nagpur • Khan Bahadur Ahmad Muhiuddin of Madras • Khan Bahadur Sheikh Gulam Sadik of Amritsar • Raja Naushad Ali Khan, Talukder of Audh •
Syed Nabiullah, Bar at law, Lucknow •
Syed Zahur Ahmad, lawyer, Lucknow • Honourable Khan-Bahadur Nawab Syed Navaab Ali Chowdhury, Zaminder of Mymensingh •
Syed Nawab Ali Chowdhury, Zaminder, Comilla •
Honourable Moulvi Khan Bahadur Syed Abdul Majid, District Session Judge, Assam • Abdul Karim, School Inspector, Chittagong Division • Khan Bahadur Moulvi Syed Muhammad, Inspector General of Registration, Bengal • Mr. Sharp, Director of Public Instructions, East Bengal • H.P. Mosurior, CIE, Commissioner, Dacca • B.C. Allen, Magistrate and Collector, Dacca • Mr H Stapleton • Mr. Kelp, editor, Bengal Times • Colonel J Hardinge, CIE • Mr Campbell •
Rafiuddin Ahmed, Bar-at-law, of Bombay • Nizamuddin Ahmed, B.A.B.L.Deputy Commissioner, Berar ==References==