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Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah
The
Founder of Pakistan
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Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah's
achievement as the founder of
Pakistan, dominates everything else he did in his
long and crowded public life spanning some 42 years.
Yet, by any standard, his was an eventful life,
his personality multidimensional and his achievements
in other fields were many, if not equally great.
Indeed, several were the roles he had played with
distinction: at one time or another, he was one
of the greatest legal luminaries India had produced
during the first half of the century, an `ambassador
of Hindu-Muslim unity, a great constitutionalist,
a distinguished parliamentarian, a top-notch politician,
an indefatigable freedom-fighter, a dynamic Muslim
leader, a political strategist and, above all one
of the great nation-builders of modern times. What,
however, makes him so remarkable is the fact that
while similar other leaders assumed the leadership
of traditionally well-defined nations and espoused
their cause, or led them to freedom, he created
a nation out of an inchoate and down-trodeen minority
and established a cultural and national home for
it. And all that within a decase. For over three
decades before the successful culmination in 1947,
of the Muslim struggle for freedom in the South-Asian
subcontinent, Jinnah had provided political leadership
to the Indian Muslims: initially as one of the leaders,
but later, since 1947, as the only prominent leader-
the Quaid-i-Azam. For over thirty years, he had
guided their affairs; he had given expression, coherence
and direction to their ligitimate aspirations and
cherished dreams; he had formulated these into concerete
demands; and, above all, he had striven all the
while to get them conceded by both the ruling British
and the numerous Hindus the dominant segment of
India's population. And for over thirty years he
had fought, relentlessly and inexorably, for the
inherent rights of the Muslims for an honourable
existence in the subcontinent. Indeed, his life
story constitutes, as it were, the story of the
rebirth of the Muslims of the subcontinent and their
spectacular rise to nationhood, phoenixlike.
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Early Life: Born on December 25, 1876, in
a prominent mercantile family in Karachi and educated
at the Sindh Madrassat-ul-Islam and the Christian
Mission School at his birth place,Jinnah joined
the Lincoln's Inn in 1893 to become the youngest
Indian to be called to the Bar, three years later.
Starting out in the legal profession withknothing
to fall back upon except his native ability and
determination, young Jinnah rose to prominence and
became Bombay's most successful lawyer, as few did,
within a few years. Once he was firmly established
in the legal profession, Jinnah formally entered
politics in 1905 from the platform of the Indian
National Congress. He went to England in that year
alongwith Gopal Krishna Gokhale (1866-1915), as
a member of a Congress delegation to plead the cause
of Indian self-governemnt during the British elections.
A year later, he served as Secretary to Dadabhai
Noaroji(1825-1917), the then Indian National Congress
President, which was considered a great honour for
a budding politician. Here, at the Calcutta Congress
session (December 1906), he also made his first
political speech in support of the resolution on
self-government. |
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| Political Career:
Three years later, in January
1910, Jinnah was elected to the newly-constituted
Imperial Legislative Council. All through his
parliamentary career, which spanned some four
decades, he was probably the most powerful voice
in the cause of Indian freedom and Indian rights.
Jinnah, who was also the first Indian to pilot
a private member's Bill through the Council, soon
became a leader of a group inside the legislature.
Mr. Montagu (1879-1924), Secretary of State for
India, at the close of the First World War, considered
Jinnah "perfect mannered, impressive-looking,
armed to the teeth with dialecties..."Jinnah,
he felt, "is a very clever man, and it is, of
course, an outrage that such a man should have
no chance of running the affairs of his own country."
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For about three decades since
his entry into politics in 1906, Jinnah passionately
believed in and assiduously worked for Hindu-Muslim
unity. Gokhale, the foremost Hindu leader before
Gandhi, had once said of him, "He has the true
stuff in him and that freedom from all sectarian
prejudice which will make him the best ambassador
of Hindu-Muslim Unity: And, to be sure, he did
become the architect of Hindu-Muslim Unity: he
was responsible for the Congress-League Pact of
1916, known popularly as Lucknow Pact- the only
pact ever signed between the two political organisations,
the Congress and the All-India Muslim League,
representing, as they did, the two major communities
in the subcontinent.
The Congress-League scheme embodied
in this pact was to become the basis for the Montagu-Chemlsford
Reforms, also known as the Act of 1919. In retrospect,
the Lucknow Pact represented a milestone in the
evolution of Indian politics. For one thing, it
conceded Muslims the right to separate electorate,
reservation of seats in the legislatures and weightage
in representation both at the Centre and the minority
provinces. Thus, their retention was ensured in
the next phase of reforms. For another, it represented
a tacit recognition of the All-India Muslim League
as the representative organisation of the Muslims,
thus strengthening the trend towards Muslim individuality
in Indian politics. And to Jinnah goes the credit
for all this. Thus, by 1917, Jinnah came to be recognised
among both Hindus and Muslims as one of India's
most outstanding political leaders. Not only was
he prominent in the Congress and the Imperial Legislative
Council, he was also the President of the All-India
Muslim and that of lthe Bombay Branch of the Home
Rule League. More important, because of his key-role
in the Congress-League entente at Lucknow, he was
hailed as the ambassador, as well as the embodiment,
of Hindu-Muslim unity.
"We are a nation", they claimed
in the ever eloquent words of the Quaid-i-Azam-
"We are a nation with our own distinctive culture
and civilization, language and literature, art
and architecture, names and nomenclature, sense
of values and proportion, legal laws and moral
code, customs and calandar, history and tradition,
aptitudes and ambitions; in short, we have our
own distinctive outlook on life and of life. By
all canons of international law, we are a nation".
The formulation of the Musim demand for Pakistan
in 1940 had a tremendous impact on the nature
and course of Indian politics. On the one hand,
it shattered for ever the Hindu dreams of a pseudo-Indian,
in fact, Hindu empire on British exit from India:
on the other, it heralded an era of Islamic renaissance
and creativity in which the Indian Muslims were
to be active participants. The Hindu reaction
was quick, bitter, malicious.
Demand for Pakistan: Equally
hostile were the British to the Muslim demand,
their hostility having stemmed from their belief
that the unity of India was their main achievement
and their foremost contribution. The irony was
that both the Hindus and the British had not anticipated
the astonishingly tremendous response that the
Pakistan demand had elicited from the Muslim masses.
Above all, they faild to realize how a hundred
million people had suddenly become supremely conscious
of their distinct nationhood and their high destiny.
In channelling the course of Muslim politics towards
Pakistan, no less than in directing it towards
its consummation in the establishment of Pakistan
in 1947, non played a more decisive role than
did Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah. It was his
powerful advocacy of the case of Pakistan and
his remarkable strategy in the delicate negotiations,
that followed the formulation of the Pakistan
demand, particularly in the post-war period, that
made Pakistan inevitable.
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