As always, I find myself agreeing in essence with everything you say, but there are important technical points to be raised that I feel would otherwise work against our interests if ignored.
Thanks, As always your posts make very educative reading.
1) the WHOLE of Jammu and Kashmir is Pakistani by rights. Indeed, Jammu has undergone a brutal genocide such that it may no longer be a sustainable claim for us, but justice MUST still be exercised with regards to Jammu's 20th century history, as a minimum. The whole of Kashmir is Pakistani, and several other regions require our ongoing territorial claim to fulfil the mandate of the original vision of Pakistan (e.g. junagadh). It is vital that we do not forget these ground realities, lest the essence of Pakistan be diluted over the coming decades.
I agree about the legal and traditional basis for Pakistan's claim. Political events, even over a short time, result in dramatic population changes ( like the change in Pakistan's constituent population after 1971). Jammu is majority Hindu area, and the Hindu population is extremely hostile to Muslims and Pakistan. In the remote and hypothetical event of a union with Pakistan this population would be as hostile as the population of our former eastern wing.
I was considering populations also from an identity angle, not just geographical. That is identifying as Pakistanis or
Pakistaniyat for want of another word.
Even the Kashmiris in the valley talk about
Azadi rather than Pakistan.
An Indian Marxist friend of mine said that if he was incharge he would hand Kashmir over to Pakistan on a platter and watch the fun. Like the East Bengali Muslims before the Kashmiri Muslims are on a centuries old quest for self determination and are riding piggyback on Pakistan. Once free of Indian / ( Hindu) domination it won't take them long to turn their guns on Pakistan.
Are we making the same mistake as in East Pakistan here?
2) We categorically ARE SOUTH ASIANS as well as being Pakistani. In the last ten years, a major incident occurred in a USA education institution where sanghees attempted to declare IVC history as " Indian" while more balanced analysts pushed back and declared it "south Asian". We cannot declare pre-1947 history as "Pakistani" in a strict literal sense, hence "south Asian" is perfectly acceptable. The problem here is with Nehru's appropriation of "India". Jinnah was enraged for this precise reason. He felt the hindu successor state to the British Raj should be termed "Bharat" or something else PRECISELY IN ORDER TO DISSOCIATE THE MODERN HINDU NATION FROM PAKISTAN'S HERITAGE. JINNAH KNEW THAT BY THESE FKERS CALLING THEMSELVES "INDIA", THEY COULD MANIPULATE OUR HISTORY INTO THEIR OWN ABRIDGED AND FALSIFIED VERSION.
Agree, but are we not transforming? India can manipulate any history they want, should we care? The Mongols tried to manipulate history too, and much of the history of the pre-Mongol population of Central Asia has been lost forever. Even the demographic and genetic make up of the population changed. But enough of the Oghuz Turks survived the Mongol onslaught to populate Turkey today, where some of their heritage and genetic pool was preserved. Do we know what Pakistan will be 100 years hence? Unlike our former Eastern Wing which is locked into an insular mono-cultural pocket, we are a dynamic evolving society with an outreach to China, Iran, Central Asia and Middle East. No nation in the so-called "sub-continent" has the geographical and cultural connectivity of Pakistan. Post 1947 and post 1971 we cannot be tied to our former political and geographical status and as we transform we will hopefully ( hopefully
) appropriate the heritage of Central Asia as our own. So studying Jalaluddin, the Tiger of Khwarzim would be more relevant to us than Rajendra Chola III of Tamil Nadu of roughly the same era.
So the question is should we carry the historical baggage of studying the Chola dynasty because we are "South Asians"?
3) We are connected to Indian Muslims and there is no issue with this. We share their heritage through the Mughal empire. The historical record of our empires are being eroded by hindutva and Pakistan must push back alongside Indian Muslims. Certainly, we have many differences and plenty of Indian Muslims will betray these shared interests. But similarly, plenty of Pakistani Muslims would betray our interests, so the perceived "loyalties" of Indian Muslims should not automatically lead to a single broad brush stroke being applied.
On the question of Indian Muslims I will continue to differ with you.
The Indian Muslims fought for Pakistan in the 1940s, and the generation that did so is gone. The Indian Muslims fought for Pakistan realizing that they would pay fearful price for their actions, and the vengeance would be exacted on them by the majority Hindu community for two to three generations till they were finally annihilated.
Like the Oghuz Turks against the Mongols in the 1200s they did this so that a portion of the Muslim population may survive the Hindu fundamentalist onslaught. Their mission was accomplished within the lifetime of those who fought for Pakistan. India was broken and the Muslim majority regions comprise Pakistan and Bangladesh today. The generation today is in a survival mode and they will say anything to delay their doom at the hands of the fascists. If 5 opportunists out 200 million silent Indian Muslims make a statement "betraying " Pakistan ww should not make a big deal out of it. Indian Muslims have not massacred Pakistani armed forces personnel and raped their spouses and they haven't targeted isolated pockets of Pakistani civilians and massacred them. On the contrary IMs have deteriorated to the bottom of the socio-economic ladder. They are raped, lynched, burnt, hounded, dispossessed, masasacred all the time. They are also starved into submission and hounded into ghettos. What this sorry mass of humanity says ( or does) to "betray" Pakistan is of little consequence.
My question: Must we as Pakistanis continue to associate ourselves with a doomed population?
Our connection with Indian Muslims ended on 14 August 1947. They did their duty, and as our Founding Father himself indicated we should only pray for those left behind the Radcliff line.
I hope the above points make sense to you as in its current format, your original post has missed the mark on several key issues and would actually erode our interests if it were adopted as a subconscious mission statement.
The last issue you touched on is a genetic issue and I would again advise some further research in this regard. Our genetic history cannot be simplified as you have done.
Liked your post.Please do keep interacting.