2 1 0 2 t s u g u A 8 2 4 0 : 6 0 t a ] e r t n e C T E N B I L F N I [ y b d e d a o l n w o D Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic identity 2 1 0 2 ‘I hugely enjoyed the book…a welcome and much needed reassessment of t Jinnah’s reputation after decades of ill-informed propaganda and s u g criticism.’ u A Andrew Roberts, author of Eminent Churchillians 8 2 4 ‘A courageous book, based on careful and original research. Professor 0 Ahmed has rendered all persons of goodwill an extremely important : 6 0 service.’ at Dr Julius Lipner, Director of the Dharam Hinduja Institute of Indic e] Research, University of Cambridge r t n Ce ‘Every generation needs to reinterpret its great men of the past. Akbar T Ahmed, by revealing Jinnah’s human face alongside his heroic E achievement, both makes this statesman accessible to the current age and N B renders his greatness even clearer than before.’ I L Professor Francis Robinson, University of London F N I ‘A Mahabharata…readable, human orientated, multi-dimensional. [ y Unique. Superb.’ b d Professor Sharif al Mujahid, founder Director of Quaid-i-Azam Academy, e d Karachi a o l n Four men shaped the end of British rule in India: Nehru, Gandhi, Mountbatten w o and Jinnah. We know a great deal about the first three, but Mohammed Ali D Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, has mostly either been ignored or in the case of Richard Attenborough’s hugely successful film, Gandhi, portrayed as a cold megalomaniac, bent on the bloody partition of India. Akbar Ahmed’s major study tells a different story of heroism and tragedy and of backstage manoeuvring among the governing élite of the Raj, and argues for Jinnah’s continuing relevance as contemporary Islam debates its future direction. Akbar S.Ahmed is a Fellow of Selwyn College, Cambridge, and the author of many books, including Discovering Islam (1988), Postmodernism and Islam ii (1992), and Living Islam (1993). He is the executive producer of a feature film and a documentary on Jinnah. 2 1 0 2 t s u g u A 8 2 4 0 : 6 0 t a ] e r t n e C T E N B I L F N I [ y b d e d a o l n w o D Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic Identity The search for Saladin 2 1 0 2 t s u Akbar S.Ahmed g u A 8 2 4 0 : 6 0 t a ] e r t n e C T E N B I L F N I [ y b d e d a o l n w o D London and New York First published 1997 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” 2 Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada 1 0 by Routledge 2 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 t s u © 1997 Akbar S.Ahmed g u All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or A 8 reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, 2 mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter 4 invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any 0 information storage or retrieval system, without permission in : 6 writing from the publishers. 0 at British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data ] A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library e r nt Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data Ce Ahmed, Akbar S. T Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic identity: the search for Saladin/Akbar S.Ahmed. E p. cm. N Includes bibliographical references and index. B 1. Jinnah, Mohammed Ali, 1876–1948. 2. India—Politics and LI government—1919–1947. 3. Pakistan—History—1947– 4. Islam and F state—Pakistan. 5. Statesmen—Pakistan—Biography. I. Title. N DS385.J5A69 1997 I [ 954.03′5′092–dc21 97–10613 y b CIP d e ISBN 0-203-99099-4 Master e-book ISBN d a o l n w o D ISBN 0-415-14965-7 (hbk) ISBN 0-415-14966-5 (pbk) For Mina, Amineh and Arsallah with love 2 1 0 2 t s u g u A 8 2 4 0 : 6 0 t a ] e r t n e C T E N B I L F N I [ y b d e d a o l n w o D Contents List of plates viii 2 Preface x 1 0 2 Introduction: Seeking Saladin xv t us List of maps xxvi g u A 8 2 Part I: Who’s Afraid of Mr Jinnah? 4 0 1 Understanding Jinnah 2 : 6 0 t Jinnah: a life 2 a e] The role of Jinnah’s family 11 r t n Imagining Jinnah: why different people see different Jinnahs 19 e C T E Part II: Divide and Quit: The Road to the Partition and N Independence of India B I L 2 The Struggle for History 37 F N Constructing the past 37 I [ y Hierarchy and purity: the clash of civilizations 49 b d e Muslim awakening 58 d a o 3 Jinnah’s Conversion 66 l n w The causes of Jinnah’s conversion 66 o D The passing of the flame: Iqbal and Jinnah 77 Crossing the Rubicon 85 4 Jinnah and the Pakistan Movement 94 Seeing Saladin: what Muslims saw in Jinnah 94 Gandhi and Ram Raj 109 The path to Pakistan 119 vii 5 Mountbatten: Last Viceroy and First Paki-Basher 128 Mountbatten’s mission 129 The clash of the titans 139 Paki-bashing 147 6 Partition: In the Heat of Passion 158 Romancing the Vicereine 158 Shielding the Vicereine 171 2 1 0 Summer savagery 176 2 t us Part III: A Tryst with Destiny? g u A 7 Pakistan: Ethnic versus Religious Identity 188 8 2 Jinnah’s Pakistan: the rising of the moon 189 4 0 Jinnah’s passing: growing crisis 202 : 6 0 t Jinnah as metaphor: ‘secularist’ or ‘fundamentalist’? 212 a e] 8 Is Jinnah still Relevant? 223 r t n From crisis to crisis: sidelining Jinnah in Pakistan 223 e C T From Anandamath to Ayodhya: Muslim fate in India 240 E N Bangladesh: the struggle for identity 258 B I L F N Epilogue: Preparing for the Next Millennium 270 I y [ References 286 b d Index 296 e d a o l n w o D Plates 1 Jinnah as a young barrister 4 2 Jinnah with his sister Fatima, on his right, and Dina, his daughter, on 12 2 his left 1 0 3 Photograph of Ruttie, wife of Jinnah 15 2 t 4 Fatima (to the right) and Dina (on the extreme left) weep at the grave 19 us of Jinnah, 12 September 1948 g u 5 Jinnah in Delhi with the central Mughal mosque in the background, 103 A April 1943; photograph courtesy of Yahya Bakhtiar 8 2 6 Jinnah being received at Jullundur railway station; photograph 105 4 courtesy of Yahya Bakhtiar 0 6: 7 Close-up photograph at Jullundur station showing Jinnah 106 0 t uncomfortable when surrounded by an unruly mob; photograph a ] courtesy of Yahya Bakhtiar e r 8 Jinnah arriving on the soil of Pakistan for the first time with Fatima 109 t n Jinnah, Karachi, 7 August 1947; photograph courtesy of Douglas e C Crook T E 9 Map of a projected Pakistan in the mid-1940s which includes Punjab 123 N and Bengal as full provinces in Pakistan B I 10 The author with Countess Mountbatten and Lady Pamela Hicks in 134 L F 1994 N 11 Nehru with the Mountbattens in a photograph which hints at their 164 I y [ intimacy b 12 Jinnah replying to the address by Lord Mountbatten in the Constituent 191 d e Assembly in Karachi, August 1947 d a 13 Refugees coming to Pakistan in trains, summer 1947 199 o l 14 One of Jinnah’s last public functions, the opening of the State Bank of 202 n w Pakistan, July 1948 o D 15 Thousands accompanying Jinnah’s cortege, drawn by naval 205 personnel, on its last journey in Karachi in September 1948 16 A cartoon in the Friday Times (30 May to 5 June 1996) of a 1,000-rupee 235 note with Jinnah crying at the condition of his Pakistan 17 A cartoon in the Friday Times (16–22 May 1996) depicting an India 279 obsessed with Pakistan 18 A cartoon in the Jang (26 May 1996) showing the corruption in 280 Pakistan, with politicians fighting each other for plots of land while ignoring the Hindu menace ix 2 1 0 2 t s u g u A 8 2 4 0 : 6 0 t a ] e r t n e C T E N B I L F N I [ y b d e d a o l n w o D
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