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・ All India Institute of Medical Sciences Patna
・ All India Institute of Medical Sciences Raipur
・ All India Institute of Medical Sciences Rishikesh
・ All India Institute of Speech and Hearing
・ All India Institute Of Technology
・ All India Insurance Employees Association
・ All India Jharkhand Party
・ All India Jute Textile Workers' Federation
・ All India Kashmiri Samaj
・ All India Kisan Sabha
・ All India Kisan Sabha (Ajoy Bhavan)
・ All India Kisan Sabha (Ashoka Road)
・ All India Kisan Sabha delegation to Europe, 1955
・ All India Konkani Parishad
・ All India Krishak Khet Majdoor Sangathan
All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha
・ All India Latchiya Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
・ All India Law Students' Association
・ All India Mahila Congress
・ All India Mahila Sanskritik Sanghathan
・ All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen
・ All India Makkal Munnetra Kazhagam
・ All India Management Association
・ All India Mazdoor Ekta Party
・ All India Minorities Front
・ All India Mixed Martial Arts Association
・ All India Moovendar Munnani Kazhagam
・ All India Muhammadan Educational Conference
・ All India Muslim Forum
・ All India Muslim League (2002)


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All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha : ウィキペディア英語版
All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha
The All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha (AIKKM) is an organisation that was established in 1910 to promote the interests of the Kurmi community.
== Origin ==

The Kurmi agriculturist community had a reputation as hard-working but were considered to be a tribe rather than a caste by the authorities of the British Raj. They were at one time classified as a criminal tribe and had a reputation for being violent and ruthless in their attempts to dominate untouchable communities.〔 Desiring recognition as a caste, the first Kurmi community association was formed in 1894 at Lucknow to protest against the recruitment policy that debarred them from entry to the police service. This was followed by an organisation in Awadh that sought to draw other communities — such as the Patidars, Marathas, Kapus and Naidus — under the umbrella of the Kurmi name. This body then campaigned for Kurmis to classify themselves as Kshatriya in the 1901 census and, according to Christophe Jaffrelot, this led to the formation of the All India Kurmi Kshatriya Mahasabha in 1910. Other sources agree with this general history, which reflected a wider trend among Indian communities for social and political recognition, but consider the AIKKM to have formed in 1894.
In the 1940s and after, following the independence of India, the position of the AIKKM as a focal point for the community changed. In common with many other caste associations, it had been concerned primarily with resolving disputes among members of the community and with maintaining cohesion but a new breed of educated, youthful Kurmi activists sought a more politicised agenda. They appealed to the upwardly-mobile landowning members of the community to support their goal of recognition for Chhattisgarh as an independent state within the Republic of India. Some of these people, who included Purushottam Kaushik, formed organisations such as the Nau Yuvak Sangh (1946), while Khubchand Bagel was elected as head of the AIKKM in 1948 but, like Kaushik, was primarily interested the Chhattisgarh issue.

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