Sure you certainly have negated the slogan, now learn to live with the consequences. You are a vassal state not a sovereign one, stop pretending to be as such.
I'm only addressing yourself as the individual you are engaging with has probably never read a history book. His pseudohistory is riddled with cognitive dissonance. Of course both go hand in hand. My post is off topic only because I'm sick and tired of the wE mAdE pAkIsTAn retarded narrative I keep reading from the same inbred imbecilic moron. Should mods wish break this post in order to create a separate thread is welcome.
For the record, east Bengal was never supposed to be part of Pakistan. It was added to the Lahore resolution in 1946 at the Delhi conference after Bengalee leaders of the Bengal provincial Muslim League failed to accomplish United Bengal. Mr Jinnah accepted their request to be part of Pakistan after their abysmal failure. Furthermore, the Ahsan manzil family who founded the Muslim League are not, never have and never will be bengalee. They are the dhakaiya Urdu community who had to hide under the bengalee identity for fear of their lives after 1971 whom they have been living in East Bengal for centuries. Former VC of Dhaka U Dr Syed Sajjad Hussein further corroborates this in his book the wastes of time.
Bongo cognitive dissonance is shocking when it comes to history but it's interesting how some proudly admit and boast to be judge jury and executioner of their own court. Such individuals are nothing more than wastes of chemical elements not even worthy to be compost on an allotment patch more better relegated to the sewage gutters along with their hindutva compatriots who share many parallels in historical methodology.
Here's to the Pakistanis of east Bengal:
"I did not see any ray of hope in my heart in the way the Muslim League movement was going on.
Suddenly, the day when League leader Quaid-i-Azam shouted about Pakistan - "We will fight for India's full independence on the British and Hindu fronts" - I shouted with joy - "Yes, a Sipahsalar commander has finally arrived." Then the sword of
my pride shone."
— Kazi Nazrul Islam, the national poet of Bangladesh/Compiled by Shahed Ali, 1989.
“Honestly, there is no bound to our debt to Quaid-i-Azam. We Muslims will never forget him.
The secure life we are living today only because of him. Otherwise, we would have had to shrink in fear of the Hindus, and the shrinkage would have squashed and destroyed our inner strength. We would get depressed. Even if we were able to make a living in some way, we would remain untouched of success in that unhappy life. That is why we have to be adulated in praising Quaid-i-Azam. That is not an exaggeration at all.”
Quaid-i-Azam Zindabad / Motaher Hossain Chowdhury
- Motaher Hossain Chowdhury rachanabali (First Volume) / Edited by: Syed Abul Maqsood. [Bangla Academy - June, 1995. Pp. 503-512]
“All are gathered together under the flag of nation Remembering you again and again, Your reside still in everyone's heart It is full of you. In every age with your undeniable contribution You will live forever in your divine glory.
Quaid-i-Azam, Your contribution will remain glowy till the eternity.”
Begum Sufia Kama, poet and political activist
— Mahe-Nao. Dhaka, December 1955
“From the dream that only you possess
The dignity of freedom we got
So this day has no decay
Of this day we all are witness
Great Father of the Nation :
Today, in your memory we pay homage.”
Nishaan Bardaar/Sikandar Abu Zafar (Poet & Journalist)
— Mahe-Nao. September 1955
“Suddenly the light shone
A spirit awoke in my soul
The door of darkness opened in front
Who are you, the new-path-seeking enlightener?
Who are you, the creator of the new soil?
...
Who brings reassurance across the mind,
Who gave the belief in living with entity
In the hearts of countless people
- Is my Quaid-i-Azam
The unity of faith in my strings
Commotion of discipline is rising
Pretty sweet pleasant”
— Mazharul Islam/Former vice-chancellor of the University of Rajshahi. In 1972, he was appointed as the first Director General of Bangla Academy.
O Father of the Nation - Salam!
Your name is written in the Pak-India history.
It is written on the page of eternity,
Knocking the door of the dark prison of century
O enlightened one, you have come to the subjugated Muslim world.
The chains of slavery fell on your advent. ”
- Bande Ali Mia (Poet)
— Mahe-Nao. Dhaka
Poet Benazir Ahmed wrote,
“O Quaid of the new day,
This day is your contribution
The song of light ending the darkness of lies
Is also your contribution .
….
O Quaid of the new day
No death is the end for you,
Like the living sun
You too are the conqueror of death, the immortal child in the heart of the earth.
- Kabya Bithi, 1954
All above poets from east Bengal.
@ThunderCat @El Sidd