After Independence, Jawaharlal Nehru [ Images ] lived at Teen Murti Bhavan in New Delhi [Images ]. Now, it has been converted into the Nehru Memorial and Museum Library. It was an irony that in the auditorium of this historic complex, where Nehru's personal memorabilia has been preserved, a book that implicates Nehru Nehru for his acts of ommission and comission in making of history of India [ Images ] during the independence struggle was released. Bhartiya Janata Party's leader and former foreign minister Jaswant Singh's [ Images ] book on Mohammad Ali Jinnah [ Images ] was released in presence of scholar and writer Namvar Singh, Hameed Haroon, chief of The Dawn, the newspaper that Jinnah founded, M J Akbar, writer and author of Nehru, The Making of India and Sir Mark Tully, British journalist who has meticulously reported on India from the days of Indira Gandhi [ Images ]. Along with them B G Verghese, fan of Nehru and Lord Meghnad Desai were also present. Jinnah – India, Partition, Independence has become controversial before it could launch. L K Advani [ Images ], who also re-invented Jinnah as a secular leader, did not come for the launch. George Fernandes [ Images ], who is keeping fragile health, came with two assistants to help him walk. The function that went on beyond listener's patience was about the book on Jinnah but few speakers stuck to the subject as is normally the case in such functions. The book is likely to sell well because readers want to know Jaswant Singh's views on two questions. Was Jinnah secular? Was he the creator of Pakistan? Namwar Singh, a highly respected author, gave a taste of his reputation to the audience. Instead of commenting on Jaswant's book he read out a passage from a Hindi writer's book and told Jaswant Singh that his book is published in footsteps of a Hindi book. In the cover of Jaswant's book, the publisher has claimed that "no Indian or Pakistani politician or Member of Parliament has ventured an analytical political biography of Jinnah'. But Namwar Singh said that before Jaswant Singh, a retired income tax commissioner has written a book on Jinnah asking similar questions.