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Mr. Jinnah's Anniversary Today : Liberator of muslims of Two modern day countries : Dawn : Article b

Yes I am aware of that.
It is 2:1

Point is Muslims would only make 30-33% in a United South Asia.

And I Thank Allah, that a United India never worked out.

You only need 30-40% votes to obtain a majority in multi-party system like India.

Rajiv Gandhi got 2/3rds majority with 49% vote share in 1984 while Modi got simple majority with 31% vote share in 2014.

Only Syed Abul A'la Maududi of Jamaat-e-Islami understood this.


How The Jamiat Ulama-I-Hind Fought Against The Partition Of India
By VENKAT DHULIPALA | 8 March 2015
alb7_00029-325x500.jpg






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In the mid 1940s, as the Muslim League began to realise its vision of a separate nation state for the subcontinent's Muslim population under Muhammad Ali Jinnah, it met with resistance not only from the Congress' high command but also from the Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind (JUH), a political organisation that was founded in 1919. In this excerpt from Venkat Dhulipala's Creating a New Medina, the leader of the JUH, Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani, presents his reasons for his opposition to the Muslim League and the two-nation theory.

The JUH now formed a separate party, the Azad Muslim Parliamentary Board, to fight the elections and ward off the criticism that it was merely a handmaiden of the Congress. Its chief campaigner was Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, the principal of the Darul Uloom, Deoband, and one of the foremost Islamic scholars in the country. Madani, as his name suggests, had an intimate connection with Medina as he had been a renowned teacher of Hadith in that holy city for nearly fifteen years. Madani remained steadfast in his advocacy of a composite undivided India and emerged as the most prominent alim opposed to the ML and its Pakistan demand. Reacting to the accusation that he had ‘joined the Hindus’, he wrote to a correspondent in Rawalpindi

You write that I have joined the Hindus and you are stunned by that. Why do you get affected by such propaganda? Muslims have been together with the Hindus since they moved to Hindustan. And I have been with them since I was born. I was born and raised here. If two people live together in the same country, same city, they will share lot of things with each other. Till the time there are Muslims in India, they will be together with the Hindus. In the bazaars, in homes, in railways, trams, in buses, lorries, in stations, colleges, post offices, jails, police stations, courts, councils, assemblies, hotels, etc. You tell me where and when we don’t meet them or are not together with them? You are a zamindar. Are not your tenants Hindus? You are a trader; don’t you buy and sell from Hindus? You are a lawyer don’t you have Hindu clients? You are in a district or municipal board; won’t you be dealing with Hindus? Who is not with the Hindus? All ten crore Muslims of India are guilty then of being with the Hindus.

Madani believed that the ‘fundamental institution of contemporary political life was the territorial nation-state’ and India was indeed such a State . The main problem facing India was British imperialism which could only be overthrown through a joint Hindu-Muslim struggle. This would have the effect of also freeing other parts of Islamic world from British yoke, since it was control over India that allowed them to hold on to their worldwide Empire. Madani opposed Pakistan since he saw it as a British ploy to divide and weaken the nationalist movement and extend British control over the subcontinent. He pointed to their dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire and reducing its component parts to colonial appendages. Madani therefore attacked ML and Pakistan in a number of different ways. To begin with, he accused Jinnah of deliberately not coming up with a concrete plan about Pakistan. Quoting a news report from the Haqiqat of Lucknow, he pointed out that when Jinnah was asked at a press conference in Karachi about what Pakistan meant, the Qaid asked for more time to provide clarifications on the matter. On being pressed further, Jinnah directed the inquisitive newsman to existing writings and his own statements on Pakistan. When a Muslim editor reportedly pointed out that he had read all the existing literature and concluded that Pakistan was suicidal for the Indian Muslims, Jinnah got upset and refused to take further questions. For Madani this meant that Mr. Jinnah till date had not fully thought through or worked out the implications of Pakistan.

By contrast, Madani claimed that he himself had thought deeply on the matter and proceeded to lay out Pakistan’s devastating consequences for the Indian Muslims. While earlier JUH commentators had highlighted its dangers for the ‘minority provinces’ Muslims, Madani added that even those belonging to the majority provinces would find themselves in the lurch. He made it clear that according to the principles of the Lahore Resolution itself, existing provincial boundaries would have to be altered. It would entail Muslims in eastern Punjab and western Bengal being excluded from Pakistan. After all numerical majority was the deemed principle for partition, and non-Muslim districts in the Muslim majority areas could not be forced to join Pakistan. Assam too would not be a part of Pakistan as Muslims were a small minority in the Brahmaputra Valley. Madani noted that Iqbal too had talked of severing the Ambala division from Punjab to make it more religiously homogenous. By echoing the official Congress stance on the issue of territorial division Madani squarely called into question Jinnah and Liaquat’s claims that Pakistan would include six provinces in their entirety.

Madani also ridiculed the idea that Pakistan would be an Islamic State based on principles of the Sharia. He noted that the Asr-i Jadid of Calcutta had quoted Jinnah as saying that Pakistan’s constitution would be created by a Constituent Assembly elected by its people. Madani also referred to the Shahbazof Lahore that carried an Urdu translation of Jinnah’s interview to the News Chronicle of London, in which he likened Pakistan to a European style democracy. Jinnah had also made it clear that Pakistan’s basic industries would be state controlled thus making it more akin to a socialist State. Madani’s extensive and careful citation of various newspaper reports in his pamphlets against Pakistan attests to the importance of the popular press not only in terms of being a critical site for debating Pakistan but also as a vehicle for dissemination of information and ideas to a wide audience.

Madani was however selective in quoting Jinnah since he largely ignored his many public statements wherein the Qaid asserted that Pakistan’s government would be established according the principles of the Sharia. Even if Madani quoted one such speech where Jinnah asked the minority provinces Muslims to sacrifice themselves for the purpose of establishing such a State, he dismissed it as a charade (dhong). After all Jinnah was not a practicing Muslim and Islamic practices had no meaning for him. The JUH ulama would go on to call Jinnah Kafir-iAzam and Churchill’s showboy. Madani also pointed out that Jinnah did not particularly care for even the worldly needs of fellow Muslims. Jinnah had after all sacrificed Muslim legislative majorities in Punjab and Bengal in the 1916 Pact. Closer home, Madani noted that the staff of Jinnah’s newspaper the Dawn, included only three Muslims while it had six Hindus, two Christians, a Jew, and even a Qadiani such as Z.A Suleri.

The League’s anti-Islamic character, its close association with the imperialist government, its dangerous ploy of Pakistan and the devastating consequences it would have for Indian Muslims were themes that Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani reiterated in a number of pamphlets on the eve of the elections as he tried to wean Muslim voters away from the ML. These were pithily summarized in a widely circulated appeal to the Muslim voter that listed all the anti-Muslim activities of the ML over the past three decades.

1) The ML had betrayed Islam by undermining a comprehensive Shariat Bill in the Central Assembly by adding conditions that rendered it useless and dead.

2) The ML toed the government line by passing the Divorce (Khula) Bill which made it unnecessary for Muslim judges to adjudicate divorce in Muslim families. When the JUH ulama sought to redress this issue by introducing a Qazi Bill, the ML at the government’s behest opposed and killed this bill since it did not want the ulama to be invested with any authority.

3) The ML had co-operated with the government to enable the passage of the Army Bill even though 500 ulama signed a fatwa opposing it.

4) The ML had not objected to the transfer of the Shahidgunj court case from Punjab to Calcutta thus sinking the Muslim cause forever in the Bay of Bengal.

5) The ML supported amendments to the Civil Marriage Act allowing marriages between Muslims and non-Muslims even though it knew that such marriages were against the Quran.

6) The ML forced the Sarda bill upon Muslims with government help even though the ulama protested against such an imposition.

7) The ML signed the Lucknow Pact of 1916 reducing the Muslims to legislative minorities in the provinces of Punjab and Bengal.

8) During the 1930 Round Table Conference, the ML got together with Europeans, Indian Christians, and Anglo-Indians and again reduced Bengal and Punjab Muslims to a minority in their own province, making their demand for establishing Pakistan in these very areas rather ironic.

9) The ML repeated this despicable tactic again after the Communal Award of 1932.

10) The ML supported the government in imposing stiff conditions for obtaining drivers licenses making life more difficult for poor drivers.

11) The ML did not condemn the government for shooting dead 47 Muslims who were part of a public procession mourning the hanging of Abdul Qayyum by the Sind government.

12) The ML government in Bengal was responsible for the death of 35 lakh people during the Bengal famine, a majority of who were Muslims.

13) The government of Sir Nazimuddin was extremely corrupt and government contracts were mostly handed over to friends and relatives of the high and mighty including many Hindus.

14) The Central government dropped 700 bombs from the air upon the NWFP as part of its offensive against the rebellion killing a number of Muslims. When the Congress member from Madras, Mr. Satyamurthy introduced a motion to condemn these wanton acts of the government, the ML did not support him and instead kept silent.

15) While the ML raised a hue and cry over atrocities perpetrated upon Muslims in the minority provinces by the Congress governments, when Rajendra Prasad offered an enquiry to be headed by the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, the ML flatly declined and instead demanded a royal commission to probe the charges.

16) The ML did not raise even a murmur of protest when the government itself declined to set up a Royal Commission for this purpose.

17) The ML did nothing for the cause of the Palestinians or the Muslims of Zanzibar.

An excerpt from Venkat Dhulipala's Creating a New Medina: State Power, Islam and the Quest for Pakistan in Late Colonial North India. Reproduced with the permission of Cambridge University Press.

Venkat Dhulipala is Assistant Professor of History at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, and teaches courses on the history of modern South Asia, comparative colonial histories and introductory surveys in Global History.

http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/madani-jinnah-muslim-league-partition
 
Good to know you support minorities separation in the areas they are in majority.i will reply to this a little later
Only if they form the majority in a huge province. And if they are linguistically, ethnically, and culturally different.

You are just a retarded troll.

You are going to try to use the same principle for Pakistan.

LOL :lol:

Get lost Indian rat.

The Muslim demand for Pakistan was quite legitimate from Hindu India.

I don't have time for your bullcrap.

You only need 30-40% votes to obtain a majority in multi-party system like India.

Rajiv Gandhi got 2/3rds majority with 49% vote share in 1984 while Modi got simple majority with 31% vote share in 2014.

Only Syed Abul A'la Maududi of Jamaat-e-Islami understood this.


How The Jamiat Ulama-I-Hind Fought Against The Partition Of India
By VENKAT DHULIPALA | 8 March 2015
alb7_00029-325x500.jpg






PreviousNext

3640 1100

Print | E-mail |
Single Page
In the mid 1940s, as the Muslim League began to realise its vision of a separate nation state for the subcontinent's Muslim population under Muhammad Ali Jinnah, it met with resistance not only from the Congress' high command but also from the Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind (JUH), a political organisation that was founded in 1919. In this excerpt from Venkat Dhulipala's Creating a New Medina, the leader of the JUH, Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani, presents his reasons for his opposition to the Muslim League and the two-nation theory.

The JUH now formed a separate party, the Azad Muslim Parliamentary Board, to fight the elections and ward off the criticism that it was merely a handmaiden of the Congress. Its chief campaigner was Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, the principal of the Darul Uloom, Deoband, and one of the foremost Islamic scholars in the country. Madani, as his name suggests, had an intimate connection with Medina as he had been a renowned teacher of Hadith in that holy city for nearly fifteen years. Madani remained steadfast in his advocacy of a composite undivided India and emerged as the most prominent alim opposed to the ML and its Pakistan demand. Reacting to the accusation that he had ‘joined the Hindus’, he wrote to a correspondent in Rawalpindi

You write that I have joined the Hindus and you are stunned by that. Why do you get affected by such propaganda? Muslims have been together with the Hindus since they moved to Hindustan. And I have been with them since I was born. I was born and raised here. If two people live together in the same country, same city, they will share lot of things with each other. Till the time there are Muslims in India, they will be together with the Hindus. In the bazaars, in homes, in railways, trams, in buses, lorries, in stations, colleges, post offices, jails, police stations, courts, councils, assemblies, hotels, etc. You tell me where and when we don’t meet them or are not together with them? You are a zamindar. Are not your tenants Hindus? You are a trader; don’t you buy and sell from Hindus? You are a lawyer don’t you have Hindu clients? You are in a district or municipal board; won’t you be dealing with Hindus? Who is not with the Hindus? All ten crore Muslims of India are guilty then of being with the Hindus.

Madani believed that the ‘fundamental institution of contemporary political life was the territorial nation-state’ and India was indeed such a State . The main problem facing India was British imperialism which could only be overthrown through a joint Hindu-Muslim struggle. This would have the effect of also freeing other parts of Islamic world from British yoke, since it was control over India that allowed them to hold on to their worldwide Empire. Madani opposed Pakistan since he saw it as a British ploy to divide and weaken the nationalist movement and extend British control over the subcontinent. He pointed to their dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire and reducing its component parts to colonial appendages. Madani therefore attacked ML and Pakistan in a number of different ways. To begin with, he accused Jinnah of deliberately not coming up with a concrete plan about Pakistan. Quoting a news report from the Haqiqat of Lucknow, he pointed out that when Jinnah was asked at a press conference in Karachi about what Pakistan meant, the Qaid asked for more time to provide clarifications on the matter. On being pressed further, Jinnah directed the inquisitive newsman to existing writings and his own statements on Pakistan. When a Muslim editor reportedly pointed out that he had read all the existing literature and concluded that Pakistan was suicidal for the Indian Muslims, Jinnah got upset and refused to take further questions. For Madani this meant that Mr. Jinnah till date had not fully thought through or worked out the implications of Pakistan.

By contrast, Madani claimed that he himself had thought deeply on the matter and proceeded to lay out Pakistan’s devastating consequences for the Indian Muslims. While earlier JUH commentators had highlighted its dangers for the ‘minority provinces’ Muslims, Madani added that even those belonging to the majority provinces would find themselves in the lurch. He made it clear that according to the principles of the Lahore Resolution itself, existing provincial boundaries would have to be altered. It would entail Muslims in eastern Punjab and western Bengal being excluded from Pakistan. After all numerical majority was the deemed principle for partition, and non-Muslim districts in the Muslim majority areas could not be forced to join Pakistan. Assam too would not be a part of Pakistan as Muslims were a small minority in the Brahmaputra Valley. Madani noted that Iqbal too had talked of severing the Ambala division from Punjab to make it more religiously homogenous. By echoing the official Congress stance on the issue of territorial division Madani squarely called into question Jinnah and Liaquat’s claims that Pakistan would include six provinces in their entirety.

Madani also ridiculed the idea that Pakistan would be an Islamic State based on principles of the Sharia. He noted that the Asr-i Jadid of Calcutta had quoted Jinnah as saying that Pakistan’s constitution would be created by a Constituent Assembly elected by its people. Madani also referred to the Shahbazof Lahore that carried an Urdu translation of Jinnah’s interview to the News Chronicle of London, in which he likened Pakistan to a European style democracy. Jinnah had also made it clear that Pakistan’s basic industries would be state controlled thus making it more akin to a socialist State. Madani’s extensive and careful citation of various newspaper reports in his pamphlets against Pakistan attests to the importance of the popular press not only in terms of being a critical site for debating Pakistan but also as a vehicle for dissemination of information and ideas to a wide audience.

Madani was however selective in quoting Jinnah since he largely ignored his many public statements wherein the Qaid asserted that Pakistan’s government would be established according the principles of the Sharia. Even if Madani quoted one such speech where Jinnah asked the minority provinces Muslims to sacrifice themselves for the purpose of establishing such a State, he dismissed it as a charade (dhong). After all Jinnah was not a practicing Muslim and Islamic practices had no meaning for him. The JUH ulama would go on to call Jinnah Kafir-iAzam and Churchill’s showboy. Madani also pointed out that Jinnah did not particularly care for even the worldly needs of fellow Muslims. Jinnah had after all sacrificed Muslim legislative majorities in Punjab and Bengal in the 1916 Pact. Closer home, Madani noted that the staff of Jinnah’s newspaper the Dawn, included only three Muslims while it had six Hindus, two Christians, a Jew, and even a Qadiani such as Z.A Suleri.

The League’s anti-Islamic character, its close association with the imperialist government, its dangerous ploy of Pakistan and the devastating consequences it would have for Indian Muslims were themes that Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani reiterated in a number of pamphlets on the eve of the elections as he tried to wean Muslim voters away from the ML. These were pithily summarized in a widely circulated appeal to the Muslim voter that listed all the anti-Muslim activities of the ML over the past three decades.

1) The ML had betrayed Islam by undermining a comprehensive Shariat Bill in the Central Assembly by adding conditions that rendered it useless and dead.

2) The ML toed the government line by passing the Divorce (Khula) Bill which made it unnecessary for Muslim judges to adjudicate divorce in Muslim families. When the JUH ulama sought to redress this issue by introducing a Qazi Bill, the ML at the government’s behest opposed and killed this bill since it did not want the ulama to be invested with any authority.

3) The ML had co-operated with the government to enable the passage of the Army Bill even though 500 ulama signed a fatwa opposing it.

4) The ML had not objected to the transfer of the Shahidgunj court case from Punjab to Calcutta thus sinking the Muslim cause forever in the Bay of Bengal.

5) The ML supported amendments to the Civil Marriage Act allowing marriages between Muslims and non-Muslims even though it knew that such marriages were against the Quran.

6) The ML forced the Sarda bill upon Muslims with government help even though the ulama protested against such an imposition.

7) The ML signed the Lucknow Pact of 1916 reducing the Muslims to legislative minorities in the provinces of Punjab and Bengal.

8) During the 1930 Round Table Conference, the ML got together with Europeans, Indian Christians, and Anglo-Indians and again reduced Bengal and Punjab Muslims to a minority in their own province, making their demand for establishing Pakistan in these very areas rather ironic.

9) The ML repeated this despicable tactic again after the Communal Award of 1932.

10) The ML supported the government in imposing stiff conditions for obtaining drivers licenses making life more difficult for poor drivers.

11) The ML did not condemn the government for shooting dead 47 Muslims who were part of a public procession mourning the hanging of Abdul Qayyum by the Sind government.

12) The ML government in Bengal was responsible for the death of 35 lakh people during the Bengal famine, a majority of who were Muslims.

13) The government of Sir Nazimuddin was extremely corrupt and government contracts were mostly handed over to friends and relatives of the high and mighty including many Hindus.

14) The Central government dropped 700 bombs from the air upon the NWFP as part of its offensive against the rebellion killing a number of Muslims. When the Congress member from Madras, Mr. Satyamurthy introduced a motion to condemn these wanton acts of the government, the ML did not support him and instead kept silent.

15) While the ML raised a hue and cry over atrocities perpetrated upon Muslims in the minority provinces by the Congress governments, when Rajendra Prasad offered an enquiry to be headed by the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, the ML flatly declined and instead demanded a royal commission to probe the charges.

16) The ML did not raise even a murmur of protest when the government itself declined to set up a Royal Commission for this purpose.

17) The ML did nothing for the cause of the Palestinians or the Muslims of Zanzibar.

An excerpt from Venkat Dhulipala's Creating a New Medina: State Power, Islam and the Quest for Pakistan in Late Colonial North India. Reproduced with the permission of Cambridge University Press.

Venkat Dhulipala is Assistant Professor of History at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, and teaches courses on the history of modern South Asia, comparative colonial histories and introductory surveys in Global History.

http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/madani-jinnah-muslim-league-partition
Get lost troll.

Most Muslims supported the Pakistan cause

Good to know you support minorities separation in the areas they are in majority.i will reply to this a little later
Actually I do not have time for your crap or trolling.

The Demand for Pakistan was quite legitimate.

When we have a different culture, language, and history from India.

Being the majority in our provinces were NOT THE ONLY REASON.

You are looking for a ban.

I have connections here, you can get a ban here.

@waz can you please delete these Indian posts on this thread.

They are clearly trolling in a Pakistani forum.

The Indians are being stupid and obnoxious.

I don't have time to waste my energy on these Indian buffoons.
 
Is that what they teach you in schools? what a retard

And what do they teach in Pakistan?

Do you know Jinnah first joined the Congress Party in 1906 and later became a member of the Muslim League in 1913. He maintained the membership of both these parties until 1920, when he decided to quit the Congress Party and devoted fully to the cause of the Muslim community?

Jinnah was also instrumental in negotiating the 1916 Lucknow Pact between Indian National Congress and the Muslim League in which Congress agreed to separate electorate for the Muslims to elect their representatives and reservation of one-third seats in the central legislature for the Muslims.

Rising popularity of Gandhi-Nehru after the 1919 Jallianwala Bagh massacre had totally sidelined Jinnah within Congress resulting in he quitting the party in 1920, the same year when Gandhi took over the leadership of the Congress party. The Nehru Report of 1928 for formulating proposals for the new constitution for India rejected the separate electorate for the Muslims as agreed in the Lucknow pact. This lead to Jinnah & Iqbal going full throttle on the creation of Pakistan.
 
Jinnah’s ideology and political struggle


Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah was a statesman of extra-ordinary caliber who changed the course of history of Indian Sub-continent by leading the political struggle for the establishment of Pakistan as an independent state. His leadership and political discourse attracted much attention of historians and political analysts of the pre-and post-independence period.

Beverley Nichols, an eminent British journalist, described Muhammad Ali Jinnah as "the most important man in Asia" in his book "Verdict on India" published in 1944. He argued that "India is likely to be the world's greatest problem for some years to come, and Mr Jinnah is in a position of unique strategic importance he can sway the battle this way or that as he chooses. His 100 million Muslims will march to the left, to the right, to the front, to the rear at his bidding, and at nobody else's..." (p.216). American news-magazine, Time, carried a cover-story on Jinnah's personality and politics on April 22, 1946. In the post-independence period Jinnah's biographies that make a thorough analysis of his role and career are written by, among others, M.H. Saiyid (Originally published in 1945, reprinted in Pakistan), Hector Bolitho (1954), G. Allana (1967), Saleem M.M. Qureshi (1969), Shaif al Mujahid (1981), Stanley Wolpert (1984), Ayesha Jalal (1992), Akbar S. Ahmed (1997), S. Qalb-i-Abid (1999), Qutubuddin Aziz (2001), Sikandar Hayat (2008), Jaswant Singh (2009), and Qayyum Nizami (2010).

Jinnah's Ideological Disposition Quaid-i-Azam Jinnah's most outstanding contribution to history and politics was the creation of a new nationalism what was later described as the "Two Nations Theory" that challenged the Congress Party led nationalism that projected India as "One Nation." As an alternate Pakistan nationalism, it had to have a basis different from the Congress Party nationalism. Jinnah argued that the Muslims of the Sub-continent were not a community; they were a nation with their own "outlook of life" and "outlook on life", based on their distinct religio-political and cultural identity derived primarily from Islamic teachings, civilization and history. He invoked the right of self-determination for the Muslims of British India in view of the failure of the Hindu-dominated Congress Party to appreciate the impact of Islamic identity, culture and history on the Muslim mindset and its refusal to provide constitutional and legal assurances for the protection of the Muslim identity, rights and interests in independent India.

Jinnah neither subscribed to the classical Marxist distinction between religion and politics nor did he advocate religious domination of the state. He attempted to create, what Sir Agha Khan Third described in February 1950, a unity between the conservative and the progressive elements among the Muslims. He believed that the Quaid was "essentially a modern man to bring about this Spiritual and Intellectual Unity" in these two trends. Jinnah was inspired by the principles and teachings of Islam that emphasized social justice and equality. He viewed Islam as a civilization, culture, social order and an ethical foundation of the society rather than a set of puritanical legal injunctions. Like modernist Muslims of his era he believed that Islamic teachings and principles of social justice, fair-play and equality could be combined with modern notions of democratic governance, constitutionalism, civil and political rights, rule of law and equality of all citizens irrespective of religion, caste, ethnicity or region.

Pakistan was established on the basis of the "homeland" concept to secure the future of the Muslims of British India. There is no statement by Jinnah or any resolution of the Muslim League in the pre-independence period that Pakistan was needed because Islam was in danger in British India. Rather, it was the threat of insecurity of the future of the Muslims of British India that led Jinnah and his colleague to demand a separate state.

The Quaid's statements also do not support the notion of an Islamic-ideological state enforcing Islamic injunctions on fundamentalist lines as regulative, punitive and extractive commands. The Islamic teachings and principles were to serve as the ethical basis of the society and a source of inspiration in a society where the pre-dominant majority was Muslim. In other words, the idea of the state patronizing religious orthodoxy and extremism was alien to Jinnah's thought-process.

In the post-independence period, the Islamic political parties were the first to raise the slogan of establishment of an Islamic state on traditional lines with an emphasis on literalist interpretation of the religious text. These parties argued in the post Jinnah period that the Ideology of Pakistan was the Ideology of Islam and that Pakistan was created for Islam. The demand of religious political parties for an Islamic state aimed at enabling them to stage a political comeback after refusing to support Jinnah's political struggle for the establishment of Pakistan.

The military regime of General Yahya Khan invoked the term of Ideology of Pakistan at the official level for the first time. It was the military government of General Zia-ul-Haq that invoked Islamic orthodoxy to legitimize his rule and it used the state apparatus to enforce religious orthodoxy and militancy. This policy was strengthened by the support of the United States and conservative Arab states, especially Saudi Arabia, after the Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan in the last week of December 1979.

Jinnah's references to various Islamic idioms like Islamic principles and teachings, the Holy Quran, the Sharia, Islamic history and the earliest period of Islam in his speeches and statements were re-interpreted by the Zia government and its Islamist supporters to justify the military regime's policy of 'Islamization' on orthodox and fundamentalist lines.

Most of these interpretations were out of context and did not take into account the mindset and disposition of Jinnah.

Muslim Political Demands If we return to the political struggle of the Muslims in the post 1857 period, it is clear that the main goal of their leadership was to protect and advance Muslim identity, rights and interests in the context of the modern state system the British established in India during 1857-1947. There was no change in the objective over the years but they changed their strategies keeping in view the changed political context and their collective political experience. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan and his colleagues based in Aligarh advised the Muslims to concentrate on modern education and avoid active involvement in politics. They wanted Muslim youth to acquire modern education so that they get the opportunity to advance their career and compete effectively as the British introduced competitive recruitment to government services and gradually initiated the electoral process.

A major change in the strategies of the Muslim elite took place in 1906, when they demanded separate electorate for the elections of Muslim representatives to the assemblies. They established the All India Muslim League in December 1906, as a platform for educated Muslims for presenting their collective demands to the British government for protection and advancement of their distinct Muslim cultural and political identity, rights and interests.

Jinnah first joined the Congress Party in 1906 and became a member of the Muslim League in 1913. He maintained the membership of these two parties until 1920, when he decided to quit the Congress Party and devoted fully to the cause of the Muslim community. During these years, he was known as the 'ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity' and worked for evolving a political formula for accommodation between the two communities by ensuring constitutional and legal guarantees for Muslim representation in the legislatures, cabinets and government jobs.

The Muslim League and the Congress Party agreed in a political arrangement in 1916, popularly known as the Lucknow Pact, 1916, to provide constitutional guarantees and safeguards for ensuring effective Muslim representation in legislative bodies. The safeguards for the Muslims included separate electorate for the Muslims to elect their representatives and reservation of one-third seats in the central legislature for the Muslims. At the provincial level, religious minorities more given slightly more seats than their number qualified them in the provincial legislative assemblies. This meant that non-Muslims got more representation in Muslim majority provinces. In return, additional representation was made available to the Muslims in Muslim minority provinces.

These measures aimed at confidence building among religious minorities, ie Muslim in non-Muslim majority provinces and non-Muslims in Muslim-majority provinces. The Muslim demands for separate electorate and one-third seats in the central legislature, were also accepted by the Congress. However, these safeguards were rejected by the Congress Party in what was titled as the Nehru Report (1928) that formulated proposals for the new constitution for India.

Jinnah, in his address to the Muslim League session in Delhi in March 1929, gave a rejoinder to the Nehru Report so far as the interests and rights of the Muslims in the future constitutional arrangements for India. He presented 14 points as the Charter of Muslim demands calling for federalism in India, separate electorate for the Muslims, reservation of one-third seats for the Muslims in central legislature, electoral weightage to religious minorities but the Muslims could not be reduced to minority in Muslim majority provinces, Sindh be separated from Bombay and established as a province, and constitutional reforms should be introduced in North West Frontier Province and Balochistan. Most of these points were repeated by the Muslim League in the Roundtable conferences (1930-32).

Until 1937-39, the Muslim League was supportive of a federal system for India with constitutional guarantees for the distinct Muslim socio-cultural identity, rights and political interests. The underlying assumption was that in a federal system the Muslims could have the governments of their choice in Muslim-majority provinces and that in Muslim minority provinces, their effective representation in the legislature would enable them to protect their rights and interests.

What changed the Muslim League approach to the problems and issues of the Muslims in British India was the dismissive attitude of the Congress Party towards the Muslim League after the 1937 provincial elections in which the Muslim League performed poorly. Another factor that made the Muslim League leadership conscious of the problems of the Muslims even in a federal system was their bitter political and economic experience in the non-Muslim majority provinces where the Congress established its provincial governments. The Muslim socio-cultural identity and their rights and interests as members of the society and aspirants for government and semi-government jobs came under heavy pressure due to the discriminatory policies of the Congress provincial ministries (1937-39).

A Homeland for the Muslims The dismissive attitude of the Congress Party towards the Muslim League and the treatment of the Muslims by the Congress provincial ministries alienated the Muslim elite and the Muslim League from the notion of federalism for the future of India; they began to explore the option of a separate homeland for the Muslims to secure their identity, rights and interests.

It was after Jinnah's return from England in 1934 and especially after 1937, when he initiated the re-organization of the Muslim League, he started using Islamic idiom and references in his political discourse. He viewed Islamic teachings and principles as relevant to national identity formation and their political mobilization.

Jinnah's statements in the post-1938 period began to describe the Muslims of British India as a nation. In 1939-40 onwards he talked of a separate homeland comprising the Muslim majority provinces like the Punjab, NWFP, Sindh, Balochistan in the northwest and Bengal in the east. While invoking Islamic teachings and principles, culture, civilization and historical experience to articulate Muslim national identity and a homeland for them as a district nation, Jinnah never suggested a religious Islamic State as advocated by Islamic political parties. His interview with Beverley Nichols in December 1943 included an interesting question-answer exchange:

Beverly Nichols: "When you say the Muslims are a nation, are you thinking in terms of religion?"

Jinnah: "Partly, but by no means exclusively. You must remember that Islam is not merely a religious doctrine but a realistic and practical Code of Conduct. I am thinking in terms of life, of everything important in life. I am thinking in terms of our history, our heroes, our art, our architecture, our music, our laws, our jurisprudence .... In all these things our outlook is not only fundamentally different but often radically antagonistic to the Hindus."

There was a strong territorial basis to the demand for a separate Pakistani state. The four Muslim majority provinces in northwest were territorially linked which made it possible for the Muslim League to demand a separate homeland. Had there been no concentration of Muslim population in these provinces, demand for separate homeland would not have materialized. Therefore, it is important to protect Pakistan's territorial identity against the pressures built by those who do not recognize Pakistan's primacy as a nation-state or do not respect its territorial boundaries.

Pakistan is a territorial state based on the homeland concept for the Muslims of South Asia. However, it was never conceived as a homeland for all Muslims of British India. Given the fact that a section of Muslim political elite opposed the establishment of Pakistan, it was recognized that the Muslims would continue to live in India who were advised by Jinnah to be loyal to the Indian state.

Non-Muslims in Pakistan Jinnah and other Muslim League leaders knew that non-Muslims would be Pakistan's citizens. The Lahore Resolution (March 1940) that formally proposed a separate homeland for the Muslims of British India, carried a clear stipulation for the protection of the religion, culture and rights of non-Muslims. The subsequent resolutions of the Muslim League repeated this assurance. The most categorical commitment of equal citizenship for all irrespective of religion and that the state would not engage in a religion-based preference while dealing with its citizens was given in Jinnah's first address to the new constituent assembly of Pakistan on August 11, 1947. He referred back to this speech in October 1947 to dissuade the non-Muslims from leaving Pakistan. Non-Muslims were given representation in the first federal cabinet of Pakistan.

If the objective was to create a religious and Sharia-based state, Jinnah and the Muslim League should not have accepted the Cabinet Mission Plan (I946). Further, the Muslim League favoured the inclusion of the whole of the Punjab and Bengal in Pakistan because these were Muslim-majority provinces. Had this proposal been accepted by the British, Pakistan would have had a large non-Muslim population. Jinnah especially invited the Sikh leadership to join Pakistan. If the Muslim League leadership and Jinnah were in favour of a large number of non-Muslims to staying-on in Pakistan, they could not think of creating a puritanical Islamic state in Pakistan.

It can be safely concluded that the major objective of the Muslim political struggle in British India was to protect and advance Muslim cultural and civilizational identity, their interests and rights. They changed the methods and strategies over time to achieve this goal that remained constant in 1857-1947. The decision in 1940 to seek a separate homeland was the result of their political experience that the Congress Party would not provide any specific constitutional guarantees and safeguards for Muslim identity, rights and interests in one federal India. The Muslims were alienated from the federal model by 1939-40 and demanded a separate and independent homeland of Pakistan. After articulating the notion of Muslim nation in British India and the need of a separate homeland for them, Jinnah and the Muslim League engaged in popular mobilization for the demand for establishing Pakistan. By 1946, the demand for Pakistan had become the most favoured slogan at the common person level. Had the Muslim League not showed its electoral support in the 1946 elections, its demand for Pakistan would not have become credible.

The founders of Pakistan conceived it as a modern, democratic, constitutional state with an emphasis on the rule of law and equal citizenship for all. However, they did not altogether reject the role of teachings and principles of Islam and Muslim historical experience as a source of inspiration for the society and the people of Pakistan, who predominantly Muslim. Other qualities of Pakistan included socio-cultural and religious pluralism and no tolerance for religious extremism and terrorism. Any attempt to turn Pakistan into a puritanical religious state and a violence afflicted society distances it from Jinnah's political ideals.

(Hasan Askari Rizvi is an Independent Political and Defence Analyst He has the Doctoral Degree from the University of Pennsylvania, USA, and is a recipient of the Presidential Award "Sitara-i-Imtiaz" for academic excellence).

http://fp.brecorder.com/2016/12/20161225117150/
 
Get lost troll.

Most Muslims supported the Pakistan cause

In fact one could argue that All-India Muslim League never fought for Pakistan.

Jinnah fought for separate electorate for Muslims under British and he believed Congress' call for complete independence as not achievable.
 
independence as not achievable.
It was, but then Britain suffered heavily in WW2., which paved the way.. I mentioned 1945 as cabinet mission plan met a complete failure which was convincing both parties for a united nation. But Nehru didn't agree, Jinnah demands.

I heard Nehru said that "I am here to liberate you from English slavery/rule " that made angry the old Mehsud malik...
 
ThankYouJinnah for showing us the light back then, in 2017 it is true that muslims are oppressed in India and treated like 2nd class citizens be it the beef ban or other anti muslim ideology in India.

Thank you Jinnah for breaking up Hindustan into 3 parts.
 
ThankYouJinnah for showing us the light back then, in 2017 it is true that muslims are oppressed in India and treated like 2nd class citizens be it the beef ban or other anti muslim ideology in India.

Thank you Jinnah for breaking up Hindustan into 3 parts.
3 parts? How?
 
LOL Indian trolls.

I personally thank Jinnah for creating Pakistan.

Those who opposed the creation of Pakistan were either idiots or ignorant.

I also thank Chaudhry Rehmat Ali and Allama Iqbal for pushing for Pakistan.

long live Pakistan. Pakistan Zindabad.

@waz please clean up this thread from Indain trolls and please ban them. Thanks.
 
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