neutral_person
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No, its not wrong. All Muslims who live in Pakistan now were previously Indians. They were a minority in British India. People in current geography of Pakistan opted for a separate country so they got it, many other Muslims from eastern states migrated to the newly created country.
Or in other words, Indian Muslims (who live in Pakistan and Kashmir now) wanted to have a country where they would be in majority and would have able to run the country the way they want.
Let me put out my disclaimer first that I think Pakistan was a good idea and that I am not trying to imply that we should have stayed as the same nation.
I see what you are trying to do here but I respectfully disagree. Pakistanis and Bangladeshis can never be classified as Indian Muslims because they never lived as Indians. They separated from India and formed their own nations before India came into existence. Politically, they formed their own nations because they thought they did not have enough rights, but this was in the British India model. Economically, Muslims were doing very badly in pre-1947, and this was the major (and in many ways sole reason) for the demand for a separate nation.
As you tried to portray, They did not want a separate nation so that they could live as a majority (at least not a major reason); thats something that made its way in Pakistani textbooks in the last 60 years, the major reason was for the economic well-being of Muslims. The fact is that a lot of poor people, usually low-castes converted to Islam and expected that by converting to Islam their poverty would go away.
Now there have been countless debates (many on this very forum) on the topic of partition. It is a very complex topic in my opinion, and you are trying to present a very simplified view of it, and frankly a very wrong view as well. To truly explore the complexity of the 1947 partition, there are many contradictions to keep in mind:
- Most of the support for Pakistan came from present day Bangladesh, who were economically the worst off in the subcontinent
- There were many "secular minded" Muslims living in present day Pakistan/Bangladesh who moved to India, a prominent example being Shah Rukh Khan's grandfather, who was an Afghani living in Peshawar
- What initially was a movement for the financial well-being of Muslims in the subcontinent, then became a political and religious mess of ethnic clashes(1971), and finally the distortion of history in Pakistani textbooks made people believe that Pakistan was created for a variety of reasons other than the original goal of financial well-being.