All India Momin Conference

The All India Momin Conference (Urdu: آل انڈیا مومن کانفرنس), commonly abbreviated as Momin Conference and also known as Jamaat-ul-Ansar (Urdu: جماعت الانصار), was a political party that was founded in India in 1911.

[2] In particular, the All India Momin Conference "aimed to revive the traditional crafts of weavers, promote self-respect and devout religious conduct among the weavers and restore their independent status.

[1] It said: "the Partition scheme was not only impracticable and unpatriotic but altogether un-Islamic and unnatural, because the geographical position of the different provinces of India and the intermingled population of the Hindus and Muslims are against the proposal and because the two communities have been living together for centuries, and they have many things in common between them.

[4] In 1941, a CID report states that thousands of Muslim weavers under the banner of Momin Conference and coming from Bihar and Eastern U.P.

A gathering of more than fifty thousand people from an unorganized sector was not usual at that time, so its importance should be duly recognized.