Adil Najam
Sixty-two years ago, on this day, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, Founder of Pakistan, made one of the most important speeches of his – and of Pakistan’s – life. A speech in which he laid out – in the most unambiguous terms – his vision for Pakistan and the rationale for that vision.
In this speech Mr. Jinnah laid out a detailed case for his argument and famously proclaimed:
…in course of time Hindus would cease to be Hindus and Muslims would cease to be Muslims, not in the religious sense, because that is the personal faith of each individual, but in the political sense as citizens of the [Pakistan].
Read full text and a detailed analysis of the speech here.
Today is August 11.
Barely ten days ago in Gojra, in Mr. Jinnah’s Pakistan, over 50 houses belonging to Pakistani Christians were burnt down by a mob and at least half a dozen Pakistani Christians were murdered for still unproven charges under a draconian law neither whose intent nor whose vigilante implementation Mr. Jinnah could ever have tolerated.
Today is August 11.
Our government has declared today to be ‘Minorities Day,’ but neither our government nor we as a people are willing to repeal the draconian laws that enable the bigots amongst us to persecute the vulnerable and the marginalized amongst us.
Today is August 11.
Today, once again, we will shower platitudes on Mr. Jinnah’s vision of a tolerant Pakistan and then conveniently ignore that vision. A Pakistan for all Pakistanis, irrespective of, as he would say, “caste and creed.” A Pakistan where neither Mr. Jinnah’s vision nor our Pakistaniat would be high-jacked by the sanctimonious custodians of righteousness, the self-styled gate-keepers of morality, and the arrogant arbiters of patriotism.
We are sorry, Mr. Jinnah.
We are sorry that we have not been able to actualize the Pakistan of your vision. At least, not yet. Cursed by the very intolerance that you had warned us of, we have not only failed to bridge the divisions that existed already, we have worked hard to create new divisions. We have not only failed the minorities that were, we have created new ones by legislating exclusion.
We are sorry, Mr. Jinnah.
We are sorry for being so drunk in intolerance that we made ourselves the arbiters of who was Muslim enough to be Muslim, or Pakistani enough to be Pakistani.
We are sorry, Mr. Jinnah.
We are sorry not only for the Gojra that happened ten days ago. We are sorry for the Gojra that happens every day in the Pakistan you created.
I wonder whether we, as a nation, have ever considered this question: Is it necessary to build up a country and nation according to the vision and ideology, if any, of one person regardless to the fact how much respected and dignified he was? Jinnah was admittedly the greatest leader among the given cohort but the there is no valid reason that we should romanticize the development of a country according to his ideals. In a democratic setting and through a democratic process the nation can take a different course too, totally different from Jinnah
This is an important and timely post. The best thing that the government can do on this August 14 is to move to repeal the blasphemy law. As a Muslim I think that law is blasphemy itself!
@Adam Insaan:
PS: Don’t justify bigotry. Living in ‘high north of Europe’ you should be aware of human rights and that 295c grossly violates human rights. One rule for yourself and another for others, huh?
@Adam Insaan:
“I do know quite a few Ahmadiya/Qadiani,
they themselves don`t see that they are a part of the Umma, ”
Ahmadis certainly consider themselves Muslim. Don’t know what you mean by Umma. For last 1400 years Umma is filed with people who call each other kafir. That doesn’t mean it takes away anyone
Sameen@
I do know quite a few Ahmadiya/Qadiani,
they themselves don`t see that they are a part of the Umma, they are something strictly different, that is what they say/express and mean themselves,
-and this is not something I am putting in their mouth,
I can