Father
of the Nation 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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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.

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."
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.

In subsequent years, however, he felt
dismayed at the injection of violence
into politics. Since Jinnah stood for
"ordered progress", moderation,
gradualism and constitutionalism, he
felt that political terrorism was not
the pathway to national liberation
but, the dark alley to disaster and
destruction. Hence, the
constitutionalist Jinnah could not
possibly, countenance Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi's novel methods of
Satyagrah (civil disobedience) and the
triple boycott of government-aided
schools and colleges, courts and
councils and British textiles.
Earlier, in October 1920, when Gandhi,
having been elected President of the
Home Rule League, sought to change its
constitution as well as its
nomenclature, Jinnah had resigned from
the Home Rule League, saying: "Your
extreme programme has for the moment
struck the imagination mostly of the
inexperienced youth and the ignorant
and the illiterate. All this means
disorganisation and choas". Jinnah did
not believe that ends justified the
means.
In the ever-growing frustration among
the masses caused by colonial rule,
there was ample cause for extremism.
But, Gandhi's doctrine of
non-cooperation, Jinnah felt, even as
Rabindranath Tagore(1861-1941) did
also feel, was at best one of negation
and despair: it might lead to the
building up of resentment, but nothing
constructive. Hence, he opposed tooth
and nail the tactics adopted by Gandhi
to exploit the Khilafat and wrongful
tactics in the Punjab in the early
twenties. On the eve of its adoption
of the Gandhian programme, Jinnah
warned the Nagpur Congress Session
(1920): "you are making a declaration
(of Swaraj within a year) and
committing the Indian National
Congress to a programme, which you
will not be able to carry out". He
felt that there was no short-cut to
independence and that Gandhi's
extra-constitutional methods could
only lead to political terrorism,
lawlessness and chaos, without
bringing India nearer to the threshold
of freedom.
The future course of events was not
only to confirm Jinnah's worst fears,
but also to prove him right. Although
Jinnah left the Congress soon
thereafter, he continued his efforts
towards bringing about a Hindu-Muslim
entente, which he rightly considered
"the most vital condition of Swaraj".
However, because of the deep distrust
between the two communities as
evidenced by the country-wide communal
riots, and because the Hindus failed
to meet the genuine demands of the
Muslims, his efforts came to naught.
One such effort was the formulation of
the Delhi Muslim Proposals in March,
1927. In order to bridge Hindu-Muslim
differences on the constitutional
plan, these proposals even waived the
Muslim right to separate electorate,
the most basic Muslim demand since
1906, which though recognised by the
congress in the Lucknow Pact, had
again become a source of friction
between the two communities.
surprisingly though, the Nehru Report
(1928), which represented the
Congress-sponsored proposals for the
future constitution of India, negated
the minimum Muslim demands embodied in
the Delhi Muslim Proposals.
In vain did Jinnah argue at the
National convention (1928): "What we
want is that Hindus and Mussalmans
should march together until our object
is achieved...These two communities
have got to be reconciled and united
and made to feel that their interests
are common". The Convention's blank
refusal to accept Muslim demands
represented the most devastating
setback to Jinnah's life-long efforts
to bring about Hindu-Muslim unity, it
meant "the last straw" for the
Muslims, and "the parting of the ways"
for him, as he confessed to a Parsee
friend at that time. Jinnah's
disillusionment at the course of
politics in the subcontinent prompted
him to migrate and settle down in
London in the early thirties. He was,
however, to return to India in 1934,
at the pleadings of his
co-religionists, and assume their
leadership. But, the Muslims presented
a sad spectacle at that time. They
were a mass of disgruntled and
demoralised men and women, politically
disorganised and destitute of a
clear-cut political programme.

Thus,
the task that awaited Jinnah was
anything but easy. The Muslim League
was dormant: primary branches it had
none; even its provincial
organisations were, for the most part,
ineffective and only nominally under
the control of the central
organisation. Nor did the central body
have any coherent policy of its own
till the Bombay session (1936), which
Jinnah organised. To make matters
worse, the provincial scene presented
a sort of a jigsaw puzzle: in the
Punjab, Bengal, Sindh, the North West
Frontier, Assam, Bihar and the United
Provinces, various Muslim leaders had
set up their own provincial parties to
serve their personal ends. Extremely
frustrating as the situation was, the
only consulation Jinnah had at this
juncture was in Allama
Iqbal(1877-1938), the
poet-philosopher, who stood steadfast
by him and helped to charter the
course of Indian politics from behind
the scene.
Undismayed by this bleak situation,
Jinnah devoted himself with singleness
of purpose to organising the Muslims
on one platform. He embarked upon
country-wide tours. He pleaded with
provincial Muslim leaders to sink
their differences and make common
cause with the League. He exhorted the
Muslim masses to organise themselves
and join the League. He gave coherence
and direction to Muslim sentiments on
the Government of India Act, 1935. He
advocated that the Federal Scheme
should be scrapped as it was
subversive of India's cherished goal
of complete responsible Government,
while the provincial scheme, which
conceded provincial autonomy for the
first time, should be worked for what
it was worth, despite its certain
objectionable features. He also
formulated a viable League manifesto
for the election scheduled for early
1937. He was, it seemed, struggling
against time to make Muslim India a
power to be reckoned with.
Despite all the manifold odds stacked
against it, the Muslim Leauge won some
108 (about 23 per cent) seats out of a
total of 485 Muslim seats in the
various legislature. Though not very
impressive in itself, the League's
partial success assumed added
significance in view of the fact that
the League won the largest number of
Muslim seats and that it was the only
all-India party of the Muslims in the
country. Thus, the elections
represented the first milestone on the
long road to putting Muslim India on
the map of the subcontinent. Congress
in Power With the year 1937 opened the
most mementous decade in modern Indian
history. In that year came into force
the provincial part of the Government
of India Act, 1935, granting autonomy
to Indians for the first time, in the
provinces.
The Congress, having become the
dominant party in Indian politics,
came to power in seven provinces
exclusively, spurning the League's
offer of cooperation, turning its back
finally on the coalition idea and
excluding Muslims as a kpolitical
entity from the portals of power. In
that year, also, the Muslim League,
under Jinnah's dynamic leadership, was
reorganised de novo, transformed into
a mass organisation, and made the
spokesman of Indian Muslims as never
before. Above all, in that momentous
lyear were initiated certain trends in
Indian politics, lthe crystallisation
of which in subsequent years made the
partition of the subcontinent
inevitable. The practical
manifestation of the policy of the
Congress which took office in July,
1937, in seven out of eleven
provinces, convinced Muslims that, in
the Congress scheme of things, they
could live only on sufferance of
Hindus and as "second class" citizens.
The Congress provincial governments,
it may be remembered, had embarked
upon a policy and launched a programme
in which Muslims felt that their
religion, language and culture were
not safe. This blatantly aggressive
Congress policy was seized upon by
Jinnah to awaken the Muslims to a new
consciousness, organize them on
all-India platoform, and make them a
power to be reckoned with. He also
gave coherence, direction and
articulation to their innermost, lyet
vague, urges and aspirations. Above
all, the filled them with his
indomitable will, his own unflinching
faith in their destiny.

As a
result of Jinnah's ceaseless efforts,
the Muslims awakened from what
Professor Baker calls(their)
"unreflective silence" (in which they
had so complacently basked for long
decades), and to "the spiritual
essence of nationality" that had
existed among them for a pretty long
time. Roused by the imapct of
successive Congress hammerings, the
Muslims, as Ambedkar (principal author
of independent India's Constitution)
says, "searched their social
consciousness in a desperate attempt
to find coherent and meaningful
articulation to their cherished
yearnings. To their great relief, they
discovered that their sentiments of
nationality had flamed into
nationalism". In addition, not only
lhad they developed" the will to live
as a "nation", had also endwoed them
with a territory which they could
occupy and make a State as well as a
cultural home for the newly discovered
nation. These two pre-requisites, as
laid down by Renan, provided the
Muslims with the intellectual
justification for claiming a distinct
nationalism (apart from Indian or
Hindu nationalism) for themselves. So
that when, after their long pause, the
Muslims gave expression to their
innermost yearnings, these turned out
to be in favour of a separate Muslim
nationhood and of a separate Muslim
state.
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.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.

While
the British reaction to the Pakistan
demand came in the form of the Cripps
offer of April, 1942, which conceded
the principle of self-determination to
provinces on a territorial basis, the
Rajaji Formula (called after the
eminent Congress leader
C.Rajagopalacharia, which became the
basis of prolonged Jinnah-Gandhi talks
in September, 1944), represented the
Congress alternative to Pakistan. The
Cripps offer was rejected because it
did not concede the Muslim demand the
whole way, while the Rajaji Formula
was found unacceptable since it
offered a "moth-eaten, mutilated"
Pakistan and the too appended with a
plethora of pre-conditions which made
its emergence in any shape remote, if
not altogether impossible. Cabinet
Mission The most delicate as well as
the most tortuous negotiations,
however, took place during 1946-47,
after the elections which showed that
the country was sharply and somewhat
evenly divided between two parties-
the Congress and the League- and that
the central issue in Indian politics
was Pakistan.
These negotiations began with the
arrival, in March 1946, of a
three-member British Cabinet Mission.
The crucial task with which the
Cabinet Mission was entrusted was that
of devising in consultation with the
various political parties, a
constitution-making machinery, and of
setting up a popular interim
government. But, because the
Congress-League gulf could not be
bridged, despite the Mission's (and
the Viceroy's) prolonged efforts, the
Mission had to make its own proposals
in May, 1946. Known as the Cabinet
Mission Plan, these proposals
stipulated a limited centre, supreme
only in foreign affairs, defence and
communications and three autonomous
groups of provinces. Two of these
groups were to have Muslim majorities
in the north-west and the north-east
of the subcontinent, while the third
one, comprising the Indian mainland,
was to have a Hindu majority. A
consummate statesman that he was,
Jinnah saw his chance. He interpreted
the clauses relating to a limited
centre and the grouping as "the
foundation of Pakistan", and induced
the Muslim League Council to accept
the Plan in June 1946; and this he did
much against the calculations of the
Congress and to its utter dismay.
Tragically though, the League's
acceptance was put down to its
supposed weakness and the Congress put
up a posture of defiance, designed to
swamp the Leauge into submitting to
its dictates and its interpretations
of the plan. Faced thus, what
alternative had Jinnah and the League
but to rescind their earlier
acceptance, reiterate and reaffirm
their original stance, and decide to
launch direct action (if need be) to
wrest Pakistan. The way Jinnah
manoeuvred to turn the tide of events
at a time when all seemed lost
indicated, above all, his masterly
grasp of the situation and his
adeptness at making strategic and
tactical moves. Partition Plan By the
close of 1946, the communal riots had
flared up to murderous heights,
engulfing almost the entire
subcontinent. The two peoples, it
seemed, were engaged in a fight to the
finish. The time for a peaceful
transfer of power was fast running
out. Realising the gravity of the
situation. His Majesty's Government
sent down to India a new Viceroy- Lord
Mountbatten. His protracted
negotiations with the various
political leaders resulted in 3
June.(1947) Plan by which the British
decided to partition the subcontinent,
and hand over power to two successor
States on 15 August, 1947. The plan
was duly accepted by the three Indian
parties to the dispute- the Congress
the League and the Akali
Dal(representing the Sikhs).

The treasury was empty, India having
denied Pakistan the major share of its
cash balances.On top of all this, the
still unorganized nation was called
upon to feed some eight million
refugees who had fled the insecurities
and barbarities of the north Indian
plains that long, hot summer. If all
this was symptomatic of Pakistan's
administrative and economic weakness,
the Indian annexation, through
military action in November 1947, of
Junagadh (which had originally acceded
to Pakistan) and the Kashmir war over
the State's accession (October
1947-December 1948) exposed her
military weakness. In the circumsances,
therefore, it was nothing short of a
miracle that Pakistan survived at all.
That it survived and forged ahead was
mainly due to one man-Mohammad Ali
Jinnah. The nation desperately needed
in the person of a charismatic leader
at that critical juncture in the
nation's history, and he fulfilled
that need profoundly. After all, he
was more than a mere Governor-General:
he was the Quaid-i-Azam who had
brought the State into being.
In the ultimate analysis, his very
presence at the helm of affairs was
responsible for enabling the newly
born nation to overcome the terrible
crisis on the morrow of its
cataclysmic birth. He mustered up the
immense prestige and the unquestioning
loyalty he commanded among the people
to energize them, to raise their
morale, land directed the profound
feelings of patriotism that the
freedom had generated, along
constructive channels. Though tired
and in poor health, Jinnah yet carried
the heaviest part of the burden in
that first crucial year. He laid down
the policies of the new state, called
attention to the immediate problems
confronting the nation and told the
members of the Constituent Assembly,
the civil servants and the Armed
Forces what to do and what the nation
expected of them. He saw to it that
law and order was maintained at all
costs, despite the provocation that
the large-scale riots in north India
had provided. He moved from Karachi to
Lahore for a while and supervised the
immediate refugee problem in the
Punjab. In a time of fierce
excitement, he remained sober, cool
and steady. He advised his excited
audence in Lahore to concentrate on
helping the refugees,to avoaid
retaliation, exercise restraint and
protect the minorities. He assured the
minorities of a fair deal, assuaged
their inured sentiments, and gave them
hope and comfort. He toured the
various provinces, attended to their
particular problems and instilled in
the people a sense ofbelonging. He
reversed the British policy in the
North-West Frontier and ordered the
withdrawal of the troops from the
tribal territory of Waziristan,
thereby making the Pathans feel
themselves an integral part of
Pakistan's body-politics. He created a
new Ministry of States and Frontier
Regions, and assumed responsibility
for ushering in a new era in
Balochistan. He settled the
controversial question of the states
of Karachi, secured the accession of
States, especially of Kalat which
seemed problematical and carried on
negotiations with Lord Mountbatten for
the settlement of the Kashmir Issue.

It was,
therefore, with a sense of supreme
satisfaction at the fulfilment of his
mission that Jinnah told the nation in
his last message on 14 August, 1948:
"The foundations of your State have
been laid and it is now for you to
build and build as quickly and as well
as you can". In accomplishing the task
he had taken upon himself on the
morrow of Pakistan's birth, Jinnah had
worked himself to death, but he had,
to quote richard Symons, "contributed
more than any other man to Pakistan's
survivial". He died on 11 September,
1948. How true was Lord Pethick
Lawrence, the former Secretary of
State for India, when he said, "Gandhi
died by the hands of an assassin;
Jinnah died by his devotion to
Pakistan".
A man such as Jinnah, who had fought
for the inherent rights of his people
all through his life and who had taken
up the somewhat unconventional and the
largely mininterpreted cause of
Pakistan, was bound to generate
violent opposition and excite
implacable hostility and was likely to
be largely misunderstood. But what is
most remarkable about Jinnah is that
he was the recepient of some of the
greatest tributes paid to any one in
modern times, some of them even from
those who held a diametrically opposed
viewpoint.
The Aga Khan considered him "the
greatest man he ever met", Beverley
Nichols, the author of `Verdict on
India', called him "the most important
man in Asia", and Dr. Kailashnath
Katju, the West Bengal Governor in
1948, thought of him as "an
outstanding figure of this century not
only in India, but in the whole
world". While Abdul Rahman Azzam
Pasha, Secretary General of the Arab
League, called him "one of the
greatest leaders in the Muslim world",
the Grand Mufti of Palestine
considered his death as a "great loss"
to the entire world of Islam. It was,
however, given to Surat Chandra Bose,
leader of the Forward Bloc wing of the
Indian National Congress, to sum up
succinctly his personal and political
achievements. "Mr Jinnah",he said on
his death in 1948, "was great as a
lawyer, once great as a Congressman,
great as a leader of Muslims, great as
a world politician and diplomat, and
greatestof all as a man of action, By
Mr. Jinnah's passing away, the world
has lost one of the greatst statesmen
and Pakistan its life-giver,
philosopher and guide". Such was
Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the
man and his mission, such the range of
his accomplishments and achievements.
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