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Quaid death anniversary

Xeric

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Quaid death anniversary today

Published: September 11, 2009

LAHORE - The 61st death anniversary of the founder of Pakistan Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah will be observed today (Friday) across the country.
The day will dawn with the special prayers in the mosques and other places of worship. Different organisations and educational institutions have also planned special seminars and ceremonies.
To mark the day, Tehreek-i-Paksitan Workers Trust and Nazria-i-Pakistan Trust are also organising a ceremony at Aiwan-i-Karkunan-i-Paksitan at 10:00 am, in which the workers of the independence movement will pay tribute to the great leader.
APP adds: In this connection Nazriya Pakistan Council would organize Quran Khawani at Faisal Mosque in Islamabad today.
Federal ministers, senior government functionaries, parliamentarians, ambassadors of the Muslim countries and workers of Pakistan Movement would participate in the Quran Khawani.
Jinnah’s goal was well defined and crystal clear, based on the historic Two-Nation Theory. Despite heavy odds against him, Jinnah won, without leading a single protests rally on the roads, without giving a single protest call or shutter down or wheel jamming as is the order of the day.
Against the political and religious environment at that time which was sweeping Indo-Pak sub continent, the young barrister Jinnah, emerged as the sole representative of the Muslims of India forcing an eminent British writer Beverly Nicholas in 1945 to proclaim him as one of the greatest world leaders of the 20th century. Jinnah was acclaimed as Quaid-e-Azam by no less a person than Mahatma Gandhi, the undisputed ‘bapu’ of Hindu India.

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i am surprised that no one opened a thread on this!
 
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Quaid-i-Azam through the years

Dec 25, 1876 Born at Karachi
1882 Education started at home
July 4, 1887 Admitted to Sind Madrasatul Islam, Karachi
1892 Married Emibai at the age of 16
1892 Left Karachi for Europe
1896 Returned to Karachi from London
1900 Appointed Presidency Magistrate, Bombay
1906 Appointed Personal Secretary to Dadabhoy Naoroji
Apr 18, 1918 Married Rattenbai at Calcutta
Aug 15, 1919 Daughter (Dina) born
1928 Rattenabi died
Dec 25, 1947 First official birthday
Sep 11, 1948 Breathed his last
Political
1909 Elected to the Supreme Imperial Council uncontested
1910 Elected to the Legislative Assembly, Bombay
1913 Joined All-India Muslim League
Dec 1916 Presided over the All-India Muslim League Lucknow session; Lucknow Pact signed
1919 Resigned from the Imperial Legislative Council as a protest against Rowlatt Act
Oct 3, 1920 Resigned from Home Rule League
1920 Resigned from the Congress on differences with Gandhi
1922 Participated in All Parties Conference in Bombay as one of the three Secretaries
1923 Elected to the Imperial Legislative Council from Bombay
1924 Preside over the All-India Muslim League session in Lahore
1927 Boycotted the Simon Commission.
Dec 1928 Attended National Convention at Calcutta
Jan 1929 JinnahÕs amendments to Nehru Report rejected
Mar 1929 All-India Muslim League rejects Nehru Report at its Delhi session
1929 JinnahÕs Fourteen Points
1930 Attended Round Table Conference in London
1931 Stayed on in England; gave up political activities temporarily
Apr 1934 Returned to India, got actively engaged in politics
1934 Again elected to the Central Legislative Assembly
1934 Elected Permanent President of the All-India Muslim League
1934 Elected leader of the Independent Party in the Assembly
1935 Government of India Act, 1935 passed
1935 Jinnah-Rajendra Prasad Formula
1936 Constituted All-India Muslim League Central
Parliamentary Board to fight elections under 1935 Act
1937 Provincial elections under the 193 Act
July 1937 Congress forms Ministries in six provinces; Congress raj begins
Oct 1937 Jinnah presides over League session at Lucknow. All India Muslim League turned into a mass organisation and complete independence adopted as goal.
Apr 1938 Presides over Special League Session at Calcutta
Dec 1938 Presides over League Session at Patna
1939 Demands Royal Commission to inquire into Muslim grievances under Congress rule
Dec 22, 1939 Day of Deliverance observed (on exit of Congress Ministries)
Mar23, 1940 Historic Lahore Resolution passed
July 26, 1943 Rejected Rajagopalachariya formula
Dec 24, 1943 Presided over All-India Muslim LeagueÕs Karachi Session. Toured the subcontinent like a storm
Sept 1944 Jinnah-Gandhi Talks
1945 Participated in Simla Conference. Elected to Central Legislative Assembly
Jan11, 1946 All-India Muslim League sweeps the polls in Muslim constituencies; Victory Day
Apr 4, 1946 Meeting with Cabinet Mission
Apr 9, 1946 Called a convention of All Muslim members of the Central and Provincial Assemblies at Delhi
May 16, 1946 Cabinet Mission Plan announced
June 1946 League accepts Cabinet Mission Plan. League also accepts Short-term (Interim Government) Plan.
July 1946 Conditional acceptance of Cabinet Mission Plan by Congress. Congress rejects Short-Term Plan. ViceoryÕs volte face on the formation of Interim Government. All-India Muslim League withdraws earlier acceptance, rejects Cabinet Mission Plan and announces boycott of Constituent Assembly. Called upon Members to renounce all British titles and honours in protest against British attitude towards Muslims and decides to launch Direct Action to wrest Pakistan
Aug 16, 1946 Direct Action Day
Oct 25, 1946 All-India Muslim League agrees to participate in the Interim Government
Dec 2, 1946 Reached London on invitation from Secretary of State
Dec 6, 1946 British GovernmentÕs clarification upholds LeagueÕs viewpoint on Cabinet Mission Plan
Feb 20, 1947 Prime Minister Attlee announces that the British would relinquish power in India by June 1948
June 3, 1947 Plan envisaging partition of India and establishment of Pakistan announced. JinnahÕs historic broadcast accepting the Plan
July, 1947 Indian Independence Act passed by British Parliament
Aug 7, 1947 Left Delhi for Karachi by air
Aug 11, 1947 Elected President of Pakistan Constituent Assembly. Presidential address in the Constituent Assembly. Title of ÔQuaid-i-AzamÓ conferred on him
Aug 14, 1947 Pakistan comes into being; the Quaid-i-Azam sworn in as the first Governor General
Oct 1947 Set up Headquarters at Lahore to supervise settlement of refugees in the Punjab.
July 1, 1948 Inaugurated State Bank of Pakistan; gave a call for involving a new economic system
July 14, 1948 Left Karachi again for rest at Ziarat
Aug 14, 1948 First Independence Day; last message to the nation
Sept 11, 1948 Returned to Karachi from Ziarat; Breathed his last
 
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Sept 11, 1948 returned to Karachi from Ziarat, he breathed his last, beside a broken ambulance.

He was a great man but unfortunately “most neglected” personality by this nation.

A great mind and a text book example of a man with unshakable will power who should be applauded for making Pakistan from nowhere and from nothing.

As nation we need to follow his principles more than ever.
 
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A sailor of Pakistan’s Navy salutes at the grave of Pakistan’s founder Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah. — Photo by Reuters



ISLAMABAD: The nation observed the 61st death anniversary of Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah on Friday with a pledge to make the country a progressive, modern and moderate Islamic state.

Special prayers were offered in mosques after Fajr prayers and at Juma congregation for prosperity, solidarity and integrity of the country.

Various social, cultural and literary organisations arranged special programmes to pay tribute to the Quaid-i-Azam for creating a separate homeland for the Muslims of the subcontinent.

Nazriya Pakistan Council organised Quran Khawani at the Faisal Mosque here. It was attended by ministers, parliamentarians, senior officials, ambassadors of Muslim countries and veterans of the Pakistan movement.

Educational institutions held seminars and ceremonies to pay homage to the father of the nation.

— APP
 
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i mean we were more concerned about 9/11 then this tragedy which i consider no less then 9/11 itself.

We should remember those whose perished during those attacks but should not forget our Father!
 
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"We should have a State in which we could live and breathe as free men and which we could develop according to our own lights and culture and where principles of Islamic social justice could find free play."


Address to Civil, Naval, Military and Air Force Officers of Pakistan Government, Karachi October 11, 1947
 
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"Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan"


Lord Pethick Lawrence
 
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Hi friends following post is The Hindu’s editorial of September 13, 1948 titled ‘Mr. Jinnah.’ It was published two days after the death of the founder of Pakistan. Though I posted on thread “Jinnah — a visionary for all ages” but with relevance to Quaid’s death anniversary I am posting again. It gives us some reflection of what few were thinking of Quaid in India at that time

The news of the sudden death of Mr. Jinnah will be received with widespread regret in this country. Till barely a twelvemonth ago he was, next to Gandhiji, the most powerful leader in undivided India. And not only among his fellow-Muslims but among members of all communities there was great admiration for his sterling personal qualities even while the goal which he pursued with increasing fanaticism was deplored. For more than half the period of nearly forty years in which he was a towering figure in our public life he identified himself so completely with the struggle that the Indian National Congress carried on for freedom that he came to be as nearly a popular idol as it was possible for a man so aristocratic and aloof by temperament to be. During the last years of his life, as the architect of Pakistan, he achieved a unique authority in his own community by virtue of the blind allegiance which the mass, dazzled by his political triumphs, gave him though the sane and sober elements of the community became more and more doubtful of the wisdom of his policies. In an age which saw centuries-old empires crumble this Bombay lawyer began late in life to dream of founding a new Empire; in an era of rampant secularism this Muslim, who had never been known to be very austere in his religion, began to dally with the notion that that Empire should be an Islamic State. And the dream became a reality overnight, and perhaps no man was more surprised at his success than Mr. Jinnah himself.
Mr. Jinnah was an astute lawyer. And his success was largely due to the fact that he was quick to seize the tactical implications of any development. His strength lay not in any firm body of general principle, any deeply cogitated philosophy of life, but in throwing all his tremendous powers of tenacity, strategy and dialectical skill into a cause which had been nursed by others and shaped in many of its most important phases by external factors. In this he offers a marked contrast to the Mahatma with whom rested the initiative during the thirty years he dominated Indian political life and who, however much he might adapt himself to the thrusts of circumstance, was able to maintain on a long range a remarkable consistency. Pakistan began with Iqbal as a poetic fancy. Rahmat Ali and his English allies at Cambridge provided it with ideology and dogma. Britain’s Divide and Rule diplomacy over a period of half a century was driving blindly towards this goal. What Mr. Jinnah did was to build up a political organisation, out of the moribund Muslim League, which gave coherence to the inchoate longings of the mass by yoking it to the realisation of the doctrinaires’ dream. Two world wars within a generation, bringing in their train a vast proliferation of nation-States as well as the decay of established Imperialisms and the rise of the Totalitarian Idea, were as much responsible for the emergence of Pakistan as the aggressive communalism to which Mr. Jinnah gave point and direction.
We must not forget that Mr. Jinnah began his political life as a child of the Enlightenment the seeds of which were planted in India by the statesmen of Victorian England. He stood for parliamentary democracy after the British pattern and with a conscientious care practised the art of debate in which he attained a formidable proficiency. At the time of the Minto-Morley Reforms, he set his face sternly against the British attempts to entice the Muslims away from their allegiance to the Congress. For long he kept aloof from the Muslim League. And when at last he joined it his aim was to utilise it for promoting amity between the two communities and not for widening the gulf. But Mr. Jinnah was a man of ambition. He had a very high opinion of his own abilities and the success, professional and political, that had come to him early in life, seemed fully to justify it. It irked him to play second fiddle. The Congress in those early days was dominated by mighty personalities, Dadabhai Nowroji, Mehta and Gokhale, not to mention leaders of the Left like Tilak. That no doubt accounts for the fact that Mr. Jinnah gradually withdrew from the Congress organisation and cast about for materials wherewith to build a separate platform for himself. At this time the first World War broke out and the idea of self-determination was in the air. It was not a mere accident that Mr. Jinnah came to formulate the safeguards which he deemed necessary for the Muslim minority in his famous Fourteen Points so reminiscent of the Wilsonian formula.
But in those days he would have pooh-poohed the idea of the Muslim community cutting itself off from the rest of India. He was so little in sympathy with the Ali Brothers’ Khilafat campaign because it seemed to him to play with fire. He was deeply suspicious of the unrestrained passions of the mob and he was too good a student of history not to realise that once the dormant fires of fanaticism were stoked there was no knowing where it might end. He kept aloof from the Congress at the same time. Satyagraha with its jail-going and other hardships could not appeal to a hedonist like him; but the main reason for his avoiding the Gandhian Congress was the same nervousness about the consequences of rousing mass enthusiasm. The result was that he went into political hibernation for some years. But he remained keenly observant; and the dynamic energy generated by a successful policy of mass contact deeply impressed him. He came to see that a backward community like the Muslims could be roused to action only by an appeal, simplified almost to the point of crudeness, to what touched it most deeply, its religious faith. And a close study of the arts by which the European dictators, Mussolini, Hitler and a host of lesser men rose to power led him to perfect a technique of propaganda and mass instigation to which ‘atrocity’-mongering was central. But Mr. Jinnah could not have been entirely happy over the Frankenstein monster that he had invoked, especially when the stark horrors of the Punjab issued with all the inevitability of Attic tragedy from the contention and strife that he had sown. He was a prudent man to whom by nature and training anarchy was repellant. At the first Round Table Conference he took a lone stand in favour of a unitary Government for India because he felt that Federation in a country made up of such diverse elements would strengthen fissiparous tendencies. It was an irony that such a man should have become the instrument of a policy which, by imposing an unnatural division on a country meant by Nature to be one, has started a fatal course the end of which no man may foresee. Mr. Jinnah was too weak to withstand the momentum of the forces that he had helped to unleash. And the megalomania which unfortunately he came to develop would hardly allow him to admit that he was wrong.
Mr. Jinnah has passed away at the peak of his earthly career. He is sure of his place in history. But during the last months of his life he must have been visited by anxious thoughts about the future of the State which he had carved. Pakistan has many able men who may be expected to devote themselves with wholehearted zeal to its service according to their lights. And India will wish them well in a task of extraordinary difficulty. But it is no easy thing to don the mantle of the Quaid-i-Azam. No other Pakistani has anything like the international stature that Mr. Jinnah had achieved; and assuredly none else has that unquestioned authority with the masses. The freedom that Pakistan has won, largely as the result of a century of unremitting effort by India’s noblest sons, is yet to be consolidated. It is a task that calls for the highest qualities of statesmanship. Many are the teething troubles of the infant State. Apart from the refugee problem, which is Britain’s parting gift to both parts of distracted India, the Pakistan Government has by its handling of the Kashmir question and its unfortunate attitude towards the Indian Union’s difficulties with Hyderabad, raised in an acute form the future of the relations between Pakistan and India. Mr. Jinnah at his bitterest never forgot that firm friendship between the two States was not only feasible but indispensable if freedom was to be no Dead-Sea apple. It is earnestly to be hoped that the leaders of Pakistan will strive to be true to that ideal.
 
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