M. Sarmad
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I guess we simply disagree on what can be used as primary source material. Curiously, the earliest reference I have used is Professor Leonard Binder’s (1961). And he is a contemporary of the event.
As far finding this in the constituent assembly records, we most certainly will not because the committee was a parliamentary committee of the ML.
Usmani died in 1951. Not enough time for him to give interviews that would leave artifacts. The artifacts we do have that are primary source are of those members that lived a long time after. Ofc, students of members that died, ie Usmani and Nadwi, also record this event. But that’s secondary source by definition. Given how pedagogy works in Islamic circles, the claim of his students is proof of his own claims.
My friend, you are entitled to your own opinions but not to your own facts. The sources you're referring to as primary sources are actually irrelevant secondary sources in this context, and even they don't explicitly support the deductions and assumptions you're making based on them.
To sum it up, we concur on the following points:
1) The national archives do not contain any records of a government committee consisting of Mullahs being formed during Jinnah's lifetime to provide advice on constitution-making.
2) Jinnah himself never made any reference to such a committee.
3) Shabbir Usmani, who is purported to be the chairman of this fictional committee, has never asserted his involvement or leadership in any such committee.
4) There is no direct testimony available from anyone claiming to have been a member of such a committee.
5) We don't even have any secondary sources that explicitly confirm the establishment of such a committee by Jinnah, or give any details about the formation or constitution of this imaginary committee
May I ask what are we even trying to discuss here?