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Visionary
Allama Iqbal [1877-1938]
Allama Iqbal writings
Ideology
of Pakistan
The ideology of Pakistan
The ideology of Pakistan stems from the instinct of
the Muslim community of South Asia to maintain their
individuality by resisting all attempts by the Hindu
society to absorb it. Muslims of South Asia believe
that Islam and Hinduism are not only two religions,
but also two social orders that have given birth to
two distinct cultures with no similarities. A deep
study of the history of this land proves that the
differences between Hindus and Muslims were not
confined to the struggle for political supremacy,
but were also manifested in the clash of two social
orders. Despite living together for more than a
thousand years, they continued to develop different
cultures and traditions. Their eating habits, music,
architecture and script, are all poles apart. Even
the language they speak and the dresses they wear
are entirely different.
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Sir Syed Ahmad Khan

|Al-Biruni |
The ideology of Pakistan took shape through an
evolutionary process. Historical experience provided
the base; with Sir Syed Ahmad Khan began the period
of Muslim self-awakening; Allama Iqbal provided the
philosophical explanation; Quaid-i-Azam translated
it into a political reality; and the Constituent
Assembly of Pakistan, by passing Objectives
Resolution in March 1949, gave it legal sanction. It
was due to the realization of Muslims of South Asia
that they are different from the Hindus that they
demanded separate electorates. When they realized
that their future in a 'Democratic India' dominated
by Hindu majority was not safe; they put forward
their demand for a separate state.
The Muslims of South Asia believe that they are a
nation in the modern sense of the word. The basis of
their nationhood is neither territorial, racial,
linguistic nor ethnic; rather they are a nation
because they belong to the same faith, Islam. On
this basis they consider it their fundamental right
to be entitled to self-determination. They demanded
that areas where they were in majority should be
constituted into a sovereign state, wherein they
would be enabled to order their lives in individual
and collective spheres in accordance with the
teachings of Holy Quran and Sunnah of the Holy
Prophet (S. A. W.). They further want their state to
strengthen the bonds of unity among Muslim
countries.
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The flag of Pakistan |
As early as in the beginning of the 11th century,
Al-Biruni observed that Hindus differed from the
Muslims in all matters and habits. He further
elaborated his argument by writing that the Hindus
considered Muslims "Mlachha", or impure. And they
forbid having any connection with them, be it
intermarriage or any other bond of relationship.
They even avoid sitting, eating and drinking with
them, because they feel "polluted". The speech made
by Quaid-i-Azam at Minto Park, Lahore on March 22,
1940 was very similar to Al-Biruni's thesis in theme
and tone. In this speech, he stated that Hindus and
Muslims belong to two different religious
philosophies, with different social customs and
literature. They neither intermarry, nor eat
together, and indeed belong to two different
civilizations whose very foundations are based on
conflicting ideas and concepts. Their outlook on
life and of life is different. He emphasized that in
spite of the passage of about 1,000 years the
relations between the Hindus and Muslims could not
attain the level of cordiality. The only difference
between the writing of Al-Biruni and the speech of
Quaid-i-Azam was that Al-Biruni made calculated
predictions, while Quaid-i-Azam had history behind
him to support his argument.
The Ideology of Pakistan has its roots deep in
history. The history of South Asia is largely a
history of rivalry and conflict between the Hindus
and Muslims of the region. Both communities have
been living together in the same area since the
early 8th century, since the advent of Islam in
India. Yet, the two have failed to develop
harmonious relations. In the beginning, one could
find the Muslims and Hindus struggling for supremacy
in the battlefield. Starting with the war between
Muhammad bin Qasim and Raja Dahir in 712, armed
conflicts between Hindus and Muslims run in
thousands. Clashes between Mahmud of Ghazni and
Jaypal, Muhammad Ghuri and Prithvi Raj, Babur and
Rana Sanga and Aurangzeb and Shivaji are cases in
point.
When the Hindus of South Asia failed to establish
Hindu Padshahi through force, they opted for back
door conspiracies. Bhakti Movement with the desire
to merge Islam and Hinduism was one of the biggest
attacks on the ideology of the Muslims of the
region. Akbar's diversion from the main stream
Islamic ideology was one of the Hindus' greatest
success stories. However, due to the immediate
counterattack by Mujaddid Alf Sani and his pupils,
this era proved to be a short one. Muslims once
again proved their separate identity during the
regimes of Jehangir, Shah Jehan and particularly
Aurangzeb. The attempts to bring the two communities
close could not succeed because the differences
between the two are fundamental and have no meeting
point. At the root of the problem lies the
difference between the two religions. So long as the
two people want to lead their lives according to
their respective faith, they cannot be one.
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Allama Iqbal |
With the advent of the British rule in India in
1858, Hindu-Muslim relations entered a new phase.
The British brought with them a new political
philosophy commonly known as 'territorial
nationalism'. Before the coming of the British,
there was no concept of a 'nation' in South Asia and
the region had never been a single political unit.
The British attempt to weld the two communities in
to a 'nation' failed. The British concept of a
nation did not fit the religious-social system of
South Asia. Similarly, the British political system
did not suite the political culture of South Asia.
The British political system, commonly known as
'democracy', gave majority the right to rule. But
unlike Britain, the basis of majority and minority
in South Asia was not political but religious and
ethnic. The attempt to enforce the British political
model in South Asia, instead of solving the
political problems, only served to make the
situation more complex. The Hindus supported the
idea while it was strongly opposed by the Muslims.
The Muslims knew that implementation of the new
order would mean the end of their separate identity
and endless rule of the Hindu majority in the name
of nationalism and democracy. The Muslims refused to
go the British way. They claimed that they were a
separate nation and the basis of their nation was
the common religion Islam. They refused to accept a
political system that would reduce them to a
permanent minority. They first demanded separate
electorates and later a separate state. Religious
and cultural differences between Hindus and Muslims
increased due to political rivalry under the British
rule.
On March 24, 1940, the Muslims finally abandoned the
idea of federalism and defined a separate homeland
as their target. Quaid-i-Azam considered the
creation of Pakistan a means to an end and not the
end in itself. He wanted Pakistan to be an Islamic
and democratic state. According to his wishes and in
accordance with the inspirations of the people of
Pakistan, the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan
passed the Objectives Resolution. The adoption of
Objectives Resolution removed all doubts, if there
were any, about the ideology of Pakistan. The
Muslims of Pakistan decided once and for all to make
Pakistan a state wherein the Muslims shall be
enabled to order their lives in their individual and
collective spheres, in accordance to the teachings
and requirements of Islam as set out in the Holy
Quran and Sunnah. |