Can the Creation of Pakistan Be Justified On the Religious Grounds?
With the Slogan, “Pakistan ka Matlab kia? la illah ila Allah”, almost everyone is familiar. We have been listening to this since
our childhood. Now, the question is: was this slogan really popular among the
Muslims of Sub-continent before independence?
Or is it really true that Pakistan was solely the end-result of efforts
of religious groups; upon which basis, they demand the state to be “an Islamic
Republic”. The answers can conveniently be found in our textbooks, but
distorted ones. Those nations can never reach the height of glory, that feed
its people with untruthful version of history. George Santayana has a piece of advice
for such nations, “Those who do not remember their past are condemned to repeat it".
It is a well-known fact that religious figures like Molana Al
Maududi And Abdul Kalam Azad were opposed to the creation of Pakistan. They called
the region Dar-ul-Islam, meaning “House Of Islam”. On this basis, they refuted
the partition of the sub-continent, saying that it was against the spirit of Islam.
What is more, some renowned scholars used to call Muhammad Ali Jinnah “Kafir-e-Azam”
instead of “Quaid-e-Azam”. After
independence, the same scholars, ironically, started claiming themselves as the
guardians of the newly-independent country.
Cabinet mission,
1946, was a marked event in the political history of the sub-continent. When the
plan was proposed by the commission, the demand for Pakistan was nowhere in the papers.
The Muslim league was at the lowest position of bargaining. Quaid-e-Azam was
even content on the proposal of separate constitutions for the Hindus and
Muslims. But, it was Jawaharlal Nehru
who was averse to this proposal and did not want to see anybody equal to his match and grandeur in the
Sub-continent. Therefore, fearing the charisma and popularity of Quaid-e-Azam,
Mr. Nehru acquiesced on the demand of Pakistan. Christina Lamb has well documented these
accounts in her book, “Waiting for Allah”.
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There is also a considerable contradiction in the speeches
of Quaid-e-Azam about what type of state, he actually wanted. On his first
address of 11th August in the constituent assembly, he said: “In the
course of time, Hindus will cease to be Hindus, and Muslims will cease to be
Muslims, not in a religious sense because that is the personal faith of each
individual, but in the political sense as the citizens of the nation”. Here one
can get a fair idea that what he got through religion-that is, Pakistan- has
nothing to do with politics now. Moreover, one can also imply here that he indicated having a secular state for the Pakistani Muslims. Was it not the same thing Mr. Nehru also wanted
for India? In this case, the question of
Kashmir is very intriguing, as Sheikh Abdullah- a Kashmiri politician- once
remarked, “We have a religion in common with Jinnah, but a dream in common with
Nehru”. Paradoxically, three of these leaders were on the same ideological
lines. Then why all this hullabaloo? If religion determines borders, why is the
Muslim Gulf divided into 12 states?
According to Christina Lamb, Pakistan was just the demand of a narrow elite that was meant to rule the country later on. It was not the
popular demand of the common or middle-class people. In Addition, the renowned
scholar, Mubashir Javed Akbar, states that Pakistan was not created by the
Muslim masses; it owed its birth to a handful of leaders who were not content with
beliefs- they wanted separate electorates, a separate language, separate dress,
separate identities, and finally separate homes”.
Broadly speaking, in today’s Pakistan, people call themselves Sindhis, Punjabis,
Balochis first, Muslims second, and finally Pakistanis. This very order negates
the creation of Pakistan on religious grounds. Paraphrasing Christina Lamb’s
harsh words, “Pakistan has gone from a nation searching for a country to a
country searching for a nation”.
To ensure Pakistani nationalism, the above order must be
reversed. It is time the authorities tried
to enforce the Quaid-e-Azam's envisioned version of Pakistan. Long live Pakistan !!
Wah zabardast ada
ReplyDeletethank you brother
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