In 1923, Ali left Calcutta as a stoker on a ship bound for the United States.[4] There he jumped ship, seeking employment, education, and experience.[5] He returned to Bengal in 1925, having been exposed to trade unionism and politics in the US, and with first hand experience of the poor working conditions of Indian seamen.[4] This experience led to the foundations of his social work for the rights of South Asian lascars.[2]
In 1925, Ali joined the Indian Seamen's Union in Calcutta and eventually rose to become the organisation's general secretary. In January 1937, Ali united all of the various unions (namely the Indian Quartermaster's Union, Bengal Mariner's Union, Seamen's Welfare League of India and Karachi Seamen's Union) under one large federation known as the All-India Seamen's Federation.[6] Ali also joined the Bengal Legislative Assembly in that year, following the 1937 Indian provincial elections.
During a visit to London in 1933 for the Round Table Conference, not only did he represent the interests of Indian seamen but also Indian labourers, film-extras and peddlers in the United Kingdom.[7] Ali arrived at the United Kingdom in July 1939, spending a month in the country. He attended Surat Alley's Indian Workers' Conference in London. Ali appointed Alley as the London representative for his federation.[citation needed] Ali also had a good relationship with Krishna Menon[8] and was invited by Menon to the Glasgow Trades Council meeting on 23 August.
He was also invited to another meeting by Benjamin Francis Bradley in Manchester with some Trade Union executives. Ali was also known to have visited Dundee before proceeding off to Switzerland with Faiz Ahmad Faiz and Abdul Mannan Chaudhury for the International Labour Conference in Geneva where he put forward the proposal for a 56-hour week at sea and a 48-hour week at port balance for Indian seamen.[3][9] As World War II approached Britain, Ali, Alley and Tahsil Miya played crucial roles in breaking the deadlock between British ship-owners and Asian lascars. Rallies were organised with lascars striking against their unequal treatment in income and working conditions. Finally reaching an agreement with the British government, Ali called off the strikes. However, the federation continued to campaign in other fields such as the release and re-employment of imprisoned lascars. They lobbied the Home Secretary, Samuel Hoare, and called on the Trades Union Congress in Glasgow for support.[10]
Following the Partition of India in 1947, Ali moved to East Bengal in Pakistan and became an independent Member of Parliament. He was not a supporter of partition.[4] His social work for British Asian lascars continued, and he encouraged lascars to remain and settle in the United Kingdom. In the 1950s, he founded the Overseas Seamen's Welfare Association,[4] which campaigned for distressed seamen and their families to be granted British passports.[citation needed] Ali also played an instrumental role by opening a passport office in his house in Sylhet.[7] He was a colleague of Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy.[11]
He attended the International Labour Conference hosted in Geneva in 1951, and in Havana in 1953. Ali visited Soviet Georgia in 1957. The following year, he visited Ceylon where he was invited to the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions conference. The following year he was part of an Indian Labour delegation to Indonesia. He became the first Minister of Labour for East Pakistan[citation needed] and member of the 3rd National Assembly of Pakistan. During this time, he lived in Mirboxtula.[12] As part of a Labour delegation, he visited China in 1964.
Death and legacy
Ali died on 22 December 1972 while in London. He was buried in Brookwood Cemetery.[7] A housing estate was built in 1995 on Tent Street (off Brady Street, East London) and named after him as Aftab Terrace.[13]
^ abcdAdams, Caroline (1987). Across Seven Seas and Thirteen Rivers. London: THAP Books. pp. 59–62. ISBN0-906698-14-6.
^Balachandran, G. (2016). "South Asian Seafarers and Their Worlds c. 1870–1930s". In Jerry H. Bentley; Renate Bridenthal; Karen Wigen (eds.). Seascapes: Maritime Histories, Littoral Cultures, and Transoceanic Exchanges. University of Hawaiʻi Press. p. 197. ISBN978-0-8248-3027-4.
^Ahmed, Rehana (2012). "Networks of Resistance: Krishna Menon and Working-Class South Asians in Inter-War Britain". In Ahmed, Rehana; Mukherjee, Sumita (eds.). South Asian Resistances in Britain, 1858 – 1947. Continuum. p. 74. ISBN978-1-4411-9529-6.
^Jazeel, Tariq; Legg, Stephen (2019). "Reading Subaltern Studies Politically". Subaltern Geographies. University of Georgia Press. p. 111.
^Glynn, Sarah (2015). Class, Ethnicity and Religion in the Bengali East End: A Political History. Manchester University Press. p. 54. ISBN978-1-84779-958-6. Suhrawardy ... [was] a former trade unionist colleague of Aftab Ali.