Jinnah's Pakistan is dead, but has it also been buried forever?
The Objectives Resolution,
legislation which would never have been permitted by the founder of this
country, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, came into being in March 1949, a mere six months
after his death when his loyal lieutenants succumbed to the pressures of the
religious right which sought to impose its will on a country, the formation of
which it had either opposed or stood by silently while the Muslim League
struggled. It negated all that Jinnah had stood for, if we are to take as our
guideline his famed address to the constituent assembly of Aug 11, 1947, when he
declared that faith, caste or creed were to be put aside and all were to be
equal citizens of one country, and, most importantly, that religion was not the
business of the state.
The most
ominous words spoken that March day when the resolution was passed by the
constituent assembly were spoken by Hindu citizen of Pakistan, Sri
Chattopadhyay, who represented 25 per cent of the then East Pakistan population.
“I do not consider myself as a member of the minority community. I consider
myself as one of seven crores of Pakistanis. Let me retain that privilege. I
sadly remind myself of the great words of the Quaid-i-Azam that in state affairs
the Hindu will cease to be a Hindu; the Muslim shall cease to be a Muslim. But
alas, so soon after his demise what you do is that you virtually declare a state
religion.” ...
Those
who followed either exhibited little will to stem the rot or were hand in glove
with the forces of darkness, the enemies of tolerance. Jinnah’s Pakistan has
virtually ceased to exist, but there are still some who hope it has not yet been
interred for ever. -- Ardeshir Cowasjee
By Ardeshir Cowasjee
Jinnah’s Pakistan has virtually
ceased to exist, but there are still some who hope it has not yet been interred
forever.
We inhabit a land where death no
longer diminishes us, where those that hand it out do so with impunity, with no
fear or trepidation.
Day after dreary day it goes on
— a professor, a woman, shot and killed in a rickshaw in Quetta, four policemen
blown up in Peshawar, five ‘activists’ shot dead in Karachi, and more, much
more.
This land has a helmsman of
little consequence and the sub-leadership is habitually frugal with the truth,
always hoping that lies will sustain them. The future is hardly exhilarating,
and we heedlessly plod on. We are not even told the truth when the latest
political ‘triumph’ is bandied about, we are told about the 18th Amendment to
the constitution, to many a non-event, to others an affront to democracy, and to
those who brought it about a means to survive the parliamentary term extended to
them.
The latest amendment has not
restored the original 1973 constitution — those that claim that it has cannot be
that ignorant, so they are resorting to mendacity in aid of expediency. The
constitution is left, post-amendment, with vestiges of the 17th Amendment of
military dictator Gen Pervez Musharraf, and with its greatest polluter, the 8th
Amendment of military dictator Gen Ziaul Haq, littering its pages.
That being so, credit must be
given where due — and due it is as far as one insertion is concerned, though the
piece of legislation into which one word was restored should never have come
into being. Part of the 8th Amendment was the inclusion into the constitution of
the Objectives Resolution by Article 2(A) reproducing it in the annex and making
it a substantive part of the constitution — and this notwithstanding the fact
that the Objectives Resolution already formed its preamble.
There was one glaring difference
in preamble and annex — why and how it came about has never been explained but
it must be assumed that it was a mala fide exercise. One principle enunciated in
the resolution pertains to the minorities: “Wherein adequate provisions shall be
made for the minorities freely to profess and practise their religions and
develop their cultures.” Such is recorded in the preamble. But in the annex the
word ‘freely’ was omitted, thus altering the entire spirit of the provision. The
missing word has now been re-inserted by the 18th Amendment — so on that score,
well done!
The Objectives Resolution,
legislation which would never have been permitted by the founder maker of this
country, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, came into being in March 1949, a mere six months
after his death when his loyal lieutenants succumbed to the pressures of the
religious right which sought to impose its will on a country, the formation of
which it had either opposed or stood by silently while the Muslim League
struggled. It negated all that Jinnah had stood for, if we are to take as our
guideline his famed address to the constituent assembly of Aug 11, 1947, when he
declared that faith, caste or creed were to be put aside and all were to be
equal citizens of one country, and, most importantly, that religion was not the
business of the state.
The most ominous words spoken
that March day when the resolution was passed by the constituent assembly were
spoken by Hindu citizen of Pakistan, Sri Chattopadhyay, who represented 25 per
cent of the then East Pakistan population.
“I do not consider myself as a
member of the minority community. I consider myself as one of seven crores of
Pakistanis. Let me retain that privilege.”
“I sadly remind myself of the
great words of the Quaid-i-Azam that in state affairs the Hindu will cease to be
a Hindu; the Muslim shall cease to be a Muslim. But alas, so soon after his
demise what you do is that you virtually declare a state religion.”
“You could not get over the old
world way of thinking. What I hear in this resolution is not the voice of the
great creator of Pakistan — the Quaid-i-Azam, nor even that of the prime
minister of Pakistan, the honourable Mr Liaquat Ali Khan but of the ulemas of
the land.”
“This resolution in its present
form epitomises that spirit of reaction. That spirit will not remain confined to
the precincts of this house. It will send its waves to the countryside as well.
I have been passing sleepless nights pondering what shall I now tell my people
whom I have so long been advising to stick to the land of their birth.”
“And on the top of this all, by
this resolution you condemn them to a perpetual state of inferiority. A thick
curtain is drawn against all rays of hope, all prospects of an honourable life.
After this what advice shall I tender? What heart can I have to persuade the
people to maintain a stout heart?”
The waves indeed swept through
the country, the first manifestations of intolerance, bigotry and their
accompanying violence coming in 1953 with the anti-Ahmadi riots in Punjab. The
rot grew and was given full impetus in 1977 when socialist democrat Zulfikar Ali
Bhutto (who throughout his life showed few signs of fanatic zealotry) miserably
surrendered to the mullah fraternity in the hope that he could cling on to a
fast disappearing power seat. From then on, with the advent of Gen Ziaul Haq and
his particular brand of religion, the descent has been swift.
Those who followed either
exhibited little will to stem the rot or were hand in glove with the forces of
darkness, the enemies of tolerance. Jinnah’s Pakistan has virtually ceased to
exist, but there are still some who hope it has not yet been interred
forever.
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