Xeric
RETIRED THINK TANK
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YLH is perhaps the most dedicated guy amongst the youth.
@Xeric:- History cannot be viewed through one lens. If you read Ayesha Jalal's work, she concludes that even until Jan. 1947, Jinnah was not really asking for Independence, rather a far greater share in a confederation and the call for Pakistan was a political tool. For people like us to disagree with her, it is wrong for her work is based on decades of study. Other historians have disagreed with her. Even those who agree with the liberalist point of view including Mubarak Ali.
Some of the letters in the Jinnah Papers do lay credence to these claims. The fact of the matter is that anybody who tries to interpret today the two nation theory outside the state sponsored version is somehow labeled anti-Pakistan and questioning the very nature of our existence. It is the historian's duty to analyze it but people start calling them "go back to India" and stuff, which is dis heartening.
This happens to be a very concise article by YLH. You can go through his work at PTH and Chowk to get a better gist of his work. He has a very good grasp on history.
Chowk writers: Yasser Hamdani intro and articles
SW, my concern is not over 'digging' the truth from those dirt laden manuscripts hidden deep inside some library or museum. What concerns me is the 'exaggeration' that is engineered even though the 'truth' can yet not be ascertained. See, it's too early to give a verdict over something just on the basis of some new study and research. Yes, either the researcher should prove his claim a 100% and let others to roll over their beds or he/she should acknowledge that his/her research is still underway and whatever he/she has written is subject to the conclusion of the research i.e. his claims can be wrong or not exactly what he/she had initially thought them to be.
It's just like one man who comes up with some credible (though insufficient) proof and gives a verdict over the 63 years old understanding that most of us like to believe in. i hope you must have seen that '50 Minute' program on Geo News where Hamid Mir suggested that our current National Anthem in fact is not our 'real' NA. It was an enchanting debate. Though his 'research' did present some proofs but then those were quite rubbished off by his opponents. It was clear by the end of that debate that Mir's claim though gave us a new direction to look in, but they are not at all worthy enough to change our current NA.
So that's what i demand.
One should debate but this holds good ONLY for those issues that are controversial and has some loophole among them. Jinnah created a whole new country and today after 6 decades we are still in doubts whether he exactly wanted a separate country or otherwise!
If i still remember my social studies (and that something that i have read from independent sources) Jinnah joined the Congress in 1896. Like most of the Congressmen at the time Jinnah did not favor outright independence for the sole reason of acceding to the British influences on education, law, culture and industry as beneficial to India.
It was Jinnah who was appointed to the Sandhurst committee, which helped establish the Indian Military Academy at Dehra Dun. Moreover, during WW I Jinnah joined other Indian moderates in supporting the British war effort, hoping that Indians would be rewarded with political freedoms.
Interestingly, Jinnah had initially avoided joining Muslim League when it was founded regarding it as too Muslim oriented. But then he decided to provide leadership to the Muslim minority and joined the league in 1913. So now some uber liberals can claim that see, Jinnah never wanted to join the ML as he was not a maulana, he just did it (on temporary basis) so that the Muslims minority can be given some revival, but guess what he indeed lead ML to the creation of Pakistan and also served the Nation as its leader therefater. So it's just a rubbish claim.
As for the Two Nation Theory, well as i have pointed out earlier that the theory did had a religion connection, which can be termed equal or may be more in intensity to the nationalistic factors, but then it never did had any linkage with the kind of Islam that we see today. Just to present Pakistan as a 'moderate' Islamic country and to gain that liberal, moderate and tolerant tag as a writer it is not at all worthy enough to put our (basis) of existence at stake, believe me there are other ways to gain those fancy trademarks.
So to conclude, neither Jinnah wanted a Molvi Pakistan nor did the Two Nation Theory was based on zibah kar do, goli mar do Islam. Pakistan was created as a Muslim state on the basis of (but not this was not the sole basis/reason) Islam as at that time religion was used to gather people in addition to that cultural, lingual, traditional, food, life style, customs related factors.
Religion was just another serial in that long list which formed the basis of Pakistan and nothing else!