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Happy Independence Day Pakistan | 14 August 2013.

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oh good luck with the job, hope you like it here :tup:

p.s. any help you need, information or anything at all. will be my pleasure to help you out.

well my almost whole of my nanka family has left village and half of them live in Lahore :lol: still I never visited them :sick:

but yeah surely looking forward to meet you :D
 
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well my almost whole of my nanka family has left village and half of them live in Lahore :lol: still I never visited them :sick:

but yeah surely looking forward to meet you :D

you are welcome anytime...:cheers:
 
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@Major Sam Jashn-e-Azadi Mubarak to you too……:cheers:
HAPPY JASHAN E AZADI MUBARAK ???
I hope you would have got my point…:sleep:
 
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Happy azadi to all my brothers and sisters in the fatherland and to all the expat communities the world over. After being given this gift it is the duty of all our people now and the coming generations to preserve it and make it a success. May the lord almighty keep us steadfast in doing so.

From where my family come from, the Neeelum valley. God bless Pakistan.

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Happy independence day Pakistanis.

Hope you lot have a great day.

And why are some Indians still questioning creation of Pakistan? Jo hona tha woh ho gaya. It's been 66 years. Grow up!

If you can't wish them at least don't ruin it for them!
 
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Happy Independence Day
By Yasser Latif Hamdani
Published: August 13, 2013


The writer is a Lahore-based lawyer and author of the book Jinnah: Myth and Reality (Vanguard). He specialises in cyber laws, internet freedom and public interest litigation and tweets @therealylh

What is it that we as a nation celebrate on this day? Do we celebrate the coming into existence of a Muslim majority nation state in the subcontinent? Given that Pakistan is home not just to Muslims but millions of non-Muslims as well, this alone, in my opinion, cannot be a justification for the celebration of this day.

Furthermore, did Partition solve the Hindu-Muslim problem and serve the interests of those who had demanded it in the first place? The answer to that question depends on the individual’s perspective. Many Muslims benefited from the creation of Pakistan, many of whom may not have demanded Pakistan or were at best ambivalent towards its creation. A new bourgeoisie class emerged in what is now Pakistan out of the lower peasantry. The Muslims of what is now India were the net losers (even though they initially gained so long as borders between Pakistan and India remained permeable). Not only did they lose their best and brightest to the new nation, but have been viewed with suspicion having put their lot entirely behind the creation of Pakistan. Hindus who were forced to leave Pakistan following riots also lost considerably. It must also be said that while a new Muslim bourgeoisie class emerged, the loss of the existing Hindu bourgeoisie and capitalist classes hurt the region that is Pakistan.

India — though it does not like to admit it — was as a whole better off without the northwest regions. This allowed India to have a more manageable Muslim minority while it remained free to follow its destiny with minimal losses. This is the real reason why the Congress had torpedoed the Cabinet Mission Plan, which would have been the best solution to keep India united.

It is time we revisited and at any rate, reimagined our national identity. First and foremost must come the realisation that all nation-states are borne out of accidents of history. One could argue that the inability of the Congress and the Muslim League to agree on a constitution for a United India played a major role in the eventual creation of Pakistan. That means we should see that date as a historical milestone when the modern nation of Pakistan came into existence. The idea of Pakistan and Pakistaniat must transcend the limited nationalism which may or may not have created it.

We should not remain wedded to ideological myths and canards promoted by people who ironically had opposed the creation of Pakistan. Furthermore, to suggest that Pakistan was created in the name of Islam is a historically inaccurate narrative. Without a sense of rootedness in the land, we may never be able to develop a sense of unity and purpose.

Iqbal’s dream is not linked to the idea of a territorial Pakistani nationality. Of the two founding fathers of Pakistan, Jinnah as a man of action remains more relevant as he understood more than anyone else that Pakistan had to separate religion from the state in order to survive. To him the idea of Pakistan was a horizontal division to end the vertical division in the subcontinent and not some vague and undefined faith-based utopia. So let us celebrate August 14, 1947 both as a starting point and an ending point. Let us fashion a state that instead of being wedded to the past looks towards the future.

Each generation faces its own challenges. Ours is a particularly tested generation. We face religious extremism, terrorism, political instability and separatism. We need to rise up to the challenge. Therefore this August 14, we ought to pledge ourselves to the idea that Pakistan is a territorial nation state, man-made and temporal, which can survive only if we let go of pipedreams and shadows that we have been chasing for the last 66 years.

Happy Independence Day.
 
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