Jinnah's Pakistan_ Islam & Inclusivity

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Jinnah's Pakistan: An inclusive one After seven decades of independence, the people of our country remain oblivious of Jinnah’s vision

Khawaja AkbarAugust 14, 2018

Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah and his sister Fatima Jinnah. PHOTO: AFP

“We must get Pakistan at any cost. For it we will live and for it we will die. The Musalmans have to struggle and struggle hard for their honourable existence … you must work and work hard. By doing so you will contribute substantially not only to the honour of ten crores of Muslims but to the crystallisation of a free Muslim state of Pakistan where Muslims will be able to offer – the ideology of Islamic rule.” Muhammad Ali Jinnah (Address, Public Meeting, Mardan, 24th November 1945) After seven decades of independence, the people of our country remain oblivious of Jinnah’s vision, regarding the role of Islam in Pakistan. Some misinterpret a few lines, from an address given to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan in Karachi on 11 August, 1947, while others ignore Jinnah, erroneously questioning his religious inclinations. A brief review of Jinnah’s speeches, made between 1940-1948, reveal a perspective that neither supports left-wing secular progressives nor right-wing theocrats. On 19 February 1948, in a broadcast talk to the people of Australia, Jinnah said: “We follow the teachings of the Prophet (pbuh) … but make no mistake: Pakistan is not a theocracy or anything like it.” Two days later, on 21 February 1948, in an address to the 5th Ack Ack and 6th light Ack Ack regiments, he stated:


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