Father
of the Nation Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah's achievement
as the founder of Pakistan, dominates everything else he did in his long
and crowded public life spanning some
42
years. Yet, by any standard, his was an
eventful life, his personality multidimensional and his achievements in
other fields were many, if not equally great. Indeed, several were the
roles he had played with distinction: at one time or another, he was one
of the greatest legal luminaries India had produced during the first half
of the century, an `ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity, a great constitutionalist,
a distinguished parliamentarian, a top-notch politician, an indefatigable
freedom-fighter, a dynamic Muslim leader, a political strategist and, above
all one of the great nation-builders of modern times. What, however, makes
him so remarkable is the fact that while similar other leaders assumed
the leadership of traditionally well-defined nations and espoused their
cause, or led them to freedom, he created a nation out of an inchoate and
down-trodeen minority and established a cultural and national home for
it. And all that within a decase. For over three decades before the successful
culmination in 1947,
of the Muslim struggle for freedom in the South-Asian subcontinent, Jinnah
had provided political leadership to the Indian Muslims: initially as one
of the leaders, but later, since 1947, as the only prominent leader- the
Quaid-i-Azam. For over thirty years, he had guided their affairs; he had
given expression, coherence and direction to their ligitimate aspirations
and cherished dreams; he had formulated these into concerete demands; and,
above all, he had striven all the while to get them conceded by both the
ruling British and the numerous Hindus the dominant segment of India's
population. And for over thirty years he had fought, relentlessly and inexorably,
for the inherent rights of the Muslims for an honourable existence in the
subcontinent. Indeed, his life story constitutes, as it were, the story
of the rebirth of the Muslims of the subcontinent and their spectacular
rise to nationhood, phoenixlike.
Saturday, 4 May 2013
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