Mohammad Hasan Askari used to write a regular column “Jhalkian” in the Urdu monthly Saqi, published originally from Delhi and later, after Partition, from Karachi, under the editorship of Shahid Ahmad Dehlavi. These columns were collected in two volumes; the latter volume was titled Takhleeqi Amal aur Usloob. In this book, one may find Askari’s columns belonging to the second phase, justifying and supporting the promulgation of the Public Safety Act Ordinance (1948) and praising the adoption of the Objectives Resolution (1949). He even wrote a longish piece in support of the notoriously high-handed Qayyum Khan ministry in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (then called NWFP) imposed on the province after the elected provincial government led by the Congress and headed by Abdul Jabbar Khan (publicly known as Dr Khan Sahib) was dismissed on August 22, 1947 by the provincial governor on the advice of the first governor general of Pakistan.
Furthermore, Askari wholeheartedly supported the 1947-48 war between Pakistan and India as “Jihad-e Kashmir”. He even recommended that those who thought it was not a Jihad should be stopped from saying so for a period of 50 years, when, in his opinion, the Pakistani state would have become stable (mustahkam) enough to allow dissent. Later, in a letter addressed to Mohammad Tufail, editor of Nuqoosh, Lahore, he even termed the 1965 war a “Jihad”.
A correction is also in order. The short-lived journal jointly edited by Manto and Askari was called Urdu Adab, and not Pakistani Adab as Dr Asdar Ali has mentioned. Whatever else he has written in his comment is not relevant to the point I have tried to make.
Which is as follows. Askari’s case illuminates the fact that the kind of politics that reigned supreme in the newly-created state was deeply connected to the ‘national’ narrative about Partition and the heinous riots and ethnic cleansing that accompanied it. Upholding this kind of politics required one to accept without question that official line. It was adopted by the powerful ruling classes as the state policy and was gradually developed and refined by intellectuals like Askari and many others as the ‘national’ myth.
We are all too familiar with this neat narrative as it is fed to our youth through textbooks and other reading material and promoted by numerous ‘patriotic’ publications all the time. Put briefly, it states (i) that Partition was the result of a mass struggle (although in fact it wasn’t), (ii) that ‘lakhs’ of Muslims sacrificed their lives, honour (‘sacrificing honour’ being a euphemism for the incidents of rape) and property in the struggle (that ‘lakhs’ of Hindus and Sikhs too suffered the same fate is not mentioned at all), and (iii) since the ‘enemy’ is bent upon destroying ‘us Muslims’, our state is facing a constant, unending threat to its security, hence the need to prepare for Jihad.
This is the phenomenon that Dubravka Ugreši, the renowned and justifiably controversial Croatian writer from the — bloodied, partitioned and cleansed — former Yugoslavia, calls “the culture of lies” in which we get accustomed to believing as truth the lie created and promoted by the group we identify with. About her ‘identity’, she writes: “A few years ago my homeland was confiscated, and, along with it my passport. In exchange I was given a new homeland, far smaller and less comfortable. They handed me a passport, a ‘symbol’ of my new identity. Thousands of people paid for those new ‘identity symbols’ with their lives, thousands were driven out of their homes, scattered, humiliated, deprived of their rights, imprisoned and impoverished. I possess very expensive identity documents. The fact often fills me with horror. And shame. My passport has not made me a Croat. On the contrary, I am far less that today than I was before.”
Now, coming back to Ishtiaq Ahmed’s detailed book on the Partition riots in Punjab, I wanted to make the above point to show why, in my view, a detailed, stubbornly objective work based on unbiased research and first-person accounts done by him could not be undertaken by a social scientist living and working in Pakistan. Which is not to say that there has not been valuable academic research on events leading up to Partition and those followed by it. Here, I must mention Imran Ali and Mohammad Waseem, to name only two. Dr Imran Ali’s pioneering work on the establishment of the canal colonies in West Punjab and Sikh migration from East Punjab during the first half of the 20th century, and Dr Waseem’s research on the Muslim migration from East Punjab at the time of Partition and their settlement in West Punjab provided me the historical background and foreground, respectively, against which to read and appreciate Dr Ishtiaq Ahmed’s work.
I intend to share with you in this space during the coming weeks my meagre reading on the subject of the Partition riots and the tentative conclusions I draw from it to show how Ishtiaq Ahmed’s book makes a very valuable addition to it. To my mind, a work dealing with such a sensitive, painful and multifaceted subject can be judged by an honest intention at the outset to not cover up a specific group’s share of crimes just because the writer happens to be from that group — powerful or otherwise. Before I go into details, I must say that I found his book an honest work from that personal standard.
(To be continued)
Published in The Express Tribune, June 16th, 2012.
COMMENTS (71)
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"Islam cannot and will not coexist with pagan polytheism." if that is so why migrate to secular western countries Is it because of more opportunities and more Freedom? which is not there at Home?
@abhi
I envy your optimism (ref:your response to @Ejaaz).
@kamran
Will be greatful if you can provide the 'Title' of Vazira Zamindar's book as well as the name of the publisher.
Abhi
Wow! The confidence with which you made that statement tells us that you have made a deep study of Islamic ideas and their history. You probably also follow the behaviors of Islamic populations in European countries. Using your knowledge, please tell us more about how change will come about with education.
@A J Khan: Don't blame immigrants ( by your definition ) for the evils you see.The so called immigrants from east ,west,and north enriched your land of pure and enabled you to live a decent life with freedom.
@Ejaaz I think i understand your concern about islam vs pagan debate. I think with time and education things will improve. The time of religious fundamentalism is gone. Right now muslims are trying to follow a very rigid form of islam because they are too scared of the modern world and it gives them a sense of identity, but soon they will be over this fear, may be in next 20-30 years you will see that happening.
@Ayesha, All the big leaders of Muslim League, came from areas where Muslims were a minority and not a majority. Muslim Lagues base was in muslim nimority areas. Thats why it lost so badly in 1935-36 elections. Muslims in muslim majority areas voted for Congress candidates, who were muslims, over muslim league muslim candidates. That picture reversed in 10 years of propoganda ( 1936-1946 ) appealing to religious sentiments. The rest is history.
@not-an-indian:" Go ahead and conquer the world – I know you folks fantasize about it. " Original thought, may i remind you this is 2012
@not-an-indian:
The creation of Pakistan was based on hate towards Hindus in the begining. Now it is hate towards every body else in the world that survives this dangerous state.
The tragic Partition of 1947 cannot be undone. No sane person in India wants to absorb Pakistan. If this were the case, India would have engulfed Bangladesh in 1971 as its part.
Indians have moved way ahead while most Pakistanis are stuck in hate and delusion.
Indians are worried about fire in their neighborhood. That is why they show some interest.
Ishtiaq Sahab/ Ajmal sahab; I have ordered for the book, Punjab and bloodied partition today. Would like to understand the psyche, which created partition and mayhem. Same genes, but we are superior than you mentality played havoc. Khoon ka rang lal sab jagah hai. Main jyada wahashi hun, is liye main rule karoonga,, do not agree with this theory.
@Babloo, you and your fellow travelers can spend the rest of your life on these pages, as you seem to be doing, trying to convince us in Pakistan about the 'perfidious' demerits of the partition; if nothing else you will get full marks for trying. The fact is, the partition happened and we are glad it happened. We had, and have, no intention of accepting you as the local decision-makers or exerting any influence on our lives within the subcontinent. It is as simple as that - we consider your lifestyle and religion alien and disturbing. That you folks are still bitter about the partition and stuck in the past, is your problem. We want to deal with you in a way that reduces stress for both of us. That is it. Go ahead and conquer the world - I know you folks fantasize about it. Let us know when someone is paying attention to your self-declared importance.
Professor Ishtiaq Ahmed
You, Sir, have been and are an inspiration. I had not read Ajmal Kamal before coming to ET, but he too has quickly won my confidence for his sense of fairness and objectivity.
@A J Khan: "Pakistan has been destroyed by the immigrants invading this land both from east and west."
Another graduate from the Zaid Hamid school of higher learning. When in time and space did this Pakistan invaded by immigrants exist?
@Tch Tch
The few exception you will now cite (SRK, Aamir Khan,Abdul Kalam etc) do not prove the rule
Forget about exceptions and rules, just cite 5 Muslims as successful and as as respected as the ones you have cited and Azim Premji from Pakistan and I will accept all your complaints.
@Tch tch: Muslims have reached the top in whichever field they sought. Acting, classical music, music direction, playback singing, cricket, politics, business. These are all well known names.
SO please stop with your divisive stories.
@A J Khan: " ... Pakistan has been destroyed by the immigrants invading this land both from east and west. ... "
And ultimately, the fault lies with the native people who could not repel the invasion from the west - which centuries later resulted in an invasion of immigrants from the east.
But now you all seem to relish your captivity in an alien ideology.
@ejaz @Shyam: When you do not understand it must come across as irrational.
I dont understand the Theory of Relatively BUT I don' it say it is irrational because I am just not smart enough to know whether it is irrational or not. HOWEVER I and most of the world outside Pakistan (and definitely your circle) are at least smart enough to know that some of the statements above ARE irrational
@observer: Smugness never leads to understanding. India has far too many problems and has not put that far a distance between itself and Pakistan that you can afford to be comfortably smug. Iqbal was the son of a Kashmiri Brahmin who for various reasons rejected paganism. Iqbal also said many other things that Indians do not like and do not mention. Why do you think he is revered in Pakistan? ARRheman is a first generation convert, and largely because of his mother. 2 nuclear nations next to each other with unfinished business between them, and their young are cocky and smug?
If Mr Jinnah's daughter and or grand/kids went to Pakistan, they would be treated like "Royalty" there. There wish would be command for more than 1/2 the populace. But even so they chose to stay in democratic, secular India , instead of being the "Royal family of Pakistan. They did not feel there personal prosperity and freedoms compromised in any way. What does it say ?
@jssidhoo: irfan humming along means nothing. Think a little and ask why with all the self congratulatory nationalistic pride the Indian state has been unable to get any (ANY) Muslim organization to agree to singing peans to "Mother India" in schools. The comments are not poles apart. Preconceived notions may make them appear so. The central idea of the Two nation is undeniable. Islam cannot and will not coexist with pagan polytheism.
Thank you Ajmal Saheb for correcting me, indeed the short lived journal that Askari and Manto took out together was called, Urdu Adab. I humbly accept my mistake. But the point I wanted to make was that if Manto and Askari collaborated and if Askari wrote the introduction to Manto’s volume, Siah Hashiye, then there must have been some understanding between the two and Askari, at least in this early period, could not have been “exactly opposite” of Manto.Askari, in my view, like many writers, had his contradictions. I will be the first to admit, that the introduction to Manto’s book was written at a time when Askari and Manto found a common cause in their opposition of the Progressives. Hence, Askari’s reading of Manto’s stories may have something to do with his genuine appreciation of Manto’s craft, but it may also have to do with him momentarily using Manto’s text to attack the Progressives. The introduction is, in my opinion at least, a brilliant piece, but also shows Askari's his deep anti-communist feelings.
It seems Ajmal Saheb that you and I have read the same material by Askari from the late 1940s, but have a different takes on him as a writer. I would place him as an intellect with eclectic habits, who did say all that you ascribe to him, but he also wrote what I raised in my reply to your column. Askari, like many others had his contradictions. Specifically see “Pakistani Hakumat aur Adeeb” (October 1948), “Taqseem-e-Hind ke Ba’ad” (October 1948), and “Pakistani Adeeb” (November 1948) and other articles in Majmu’a (Lahore: Sang- e- Meel Press, 2000). I am also interested in Askari’s fiction, Phislan and Haram Jadi, stories that are much ahead of his time…There is more, Jehad, the support for the Kashmir and 1965 wars (there were many from the Left who also supported both wars and Manto himself was ambivalent about Kashmir, see his letter to Nehru) but hopefully we can discuss and debate our different points of view when we meet next. I look forward to it over a cup of tea.
That high culture based on standardized versions of printed material played a role in undermining folk culture and thus consolidated distinct Hindu, Muslim and Sikh communities a key argument in my book which I provide ample evidence of.
To Babloo and others,
Ajmal Saheb's point that Ishtiaq Saheb’s book needs to be read by one and all is very well taken. With this, I think Vazira Zamindar’s (2007) text, The Long Partition and Gyan Pandey’s (2002) Partition Remembered may make for excellent companion readings. However, not sure why the comments being offered on Partition seem to reflect nationalist perspectives, something this article has very eloquently criticized by speaking about national myth making. As a reply to these responses, following Aamir Mufti and his important book, Enlightenment in the Colony, I would maintain, that the creation of Pakistan has to be understood as one resolution (perhaps not the only) of the minority question in late colonial India. The question is too complex to resolve in this forum. But it is clear that Muslim League after receiving only 100 odd seats (out of almost 1500 nationally) in the 1937 elections (Congress won 25 of the 59 Muslim seats), by the 1945-1946 election it had won all Muslim seats to the central legislature (30) and 447 of the 507 Muslim seats in the provincial assemblies (this is before Direct Action). This was a major shift in mere 9-10 years. What happened? Further, there indeed were riots in August of 1946 in Calcutta under a Muslim League ministry (Suharwardy) and in Noahkhali in October of the same year there were widespread killings of Hindus. But there were also retaliatory riots and primarily Muslim lives were lost in Bihar during the same period (under a Congress Ministry) see Papiya Ghosh’s Muhajir and the Nation, Routledge India 2010. Yes Punjab saw the major violence during 1947, but the situation was not that stable in other parts of the larger sub-continent either.
Finally, let’s not idealize Indian secularism and the state of Indian Muslims (the minority question is alive, this does not mean that Pakistan is any way better, it is not about comparisons, but about the exclusionary principle in liberal thought itself… see the political theorist, Uday Mehta’s rereading of Lockean liberalism on this issue). So, like all modern nation states the Indian state too has its share of inclusions and exclusions and let’s leave it at that.
I am thankful to all those who scarified their life to make partition happened, though it was on a faulty 'two nation' theory. Partition created a secular India that can have progressive legislation (atleast for Hindus, if not muslims). A non-partitioned India would've been violent and much more regressive society. Also Pakistan acts a state absorbing the shock of the barbarians, who are still stuck in 7-8th century.
Those who dont wanna get seprated they got sepration and those who wanna seprated they didnot.
@A J Khan "Pakistan has been destroyed by the immigrants invading this land both from east and west."
The name pakistan came into existence less than 70 years ago! What immigrants? I thought pakistanis were arabs or central asians, hence immigrants themselves!! No? LOL!
.@Ejaaz
That is why you still cannot get any Muslim to agree to sing Vande Maatrem in your country.
Are you familiar with A R Rehman and his work? Make an effort, it will help you.
And, any idea, who wrote Saare Jehan se Achcha Hindoatan Hamaara, Hindi Hain Hum Watan hai Hindostan Hamaara.? Again,make an effort, you will be enlightened.
@Sinclair, The actions and rhetoric of Muslim League leaders of India , including ofcourse Mr Jinnah, and its government in Bengal leading upto the day of "Direct Action" , do provide direct and undeniable evidense that communal violence was a political tool to press the demand of Pkaistan by muslimLeague.
Well Gandhi surely did, about Nehru and Jinnah I doubt. However, it is important to note that it was Jinnah who relentlessly insisted on the Two-Nation Theory and hence partition, which Nehru agreed to in 1946 - later not seizing the opportunity for keeping India united in a loose federation as recommended by the Cabinet Mission. So, Nehru was a reluctant convert to partition and then believed it was the only solution as he perceived the Muslim League agreeing to the Cabinet Mission only when it meant an Indian union with virtually no powers with the Centre. Jinnah must have known that if India is partitioned, Punjab and Bengal will be partitioned. There is abundant reason to believe that this was clear. The Punjab governors had been warning that it would result in a bloodbath. This was not heeded by anyone.
@ashar:
"......that was the reason many muslim leaders like Jinnah Sahab parted their ways with Congress who were earlier advocates of hindu muslim co-existance in the sub continent." .
You summed it up. If one has never pondered seriously at, MA Jinnah (and many other's with him) getting disenchanted with the prevailing situation, can only cling to simplistic notions. Historian Pannikar has briefly touched on this.
. @Jai:
Very wise words by you, something totally alien to most of the contributors here at ET.
@Babloo Those who dont to get seprate got seprated and those want it did not got this is a story of India. @INDIAN I agreed.
@ashar: You are eaxctly the kind of brain-washed person that the author is trying to identify!
Before the British Raj did every village in every corner of Pakistan (and India) have the current form of Islam. I think not. We would be shocked at how muslims lived in those days. We would consider muslims of those times as half-hindu. The British introduced printing presses and railways which enabled the spread of more dogmatic doctrines. After partition this trend was magnified a thousand times. The 1% minority can brainwash the 99% majority because the majority are dominated with their day-to-day lives and don't think of the consequences of what they are being taught.
@Ejaaz: In that video you will find Irfan Pathan sinnging along at 4.20
@Ejaaz: Pl watch this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07UcGa4vZxI
@Ejaaz: Are there two Ejaazs on this page because the comments are poles apart
I am sure writer must have read Jaswant Singh's book on Jinnah.I get a feeling that the three main characters of pre partition India,Ghandi,Nehro and Jinnah had no clue of fallout of partition and if they had they just ignored it,resulting in loss of millions of lives.One possible reason may be the time they spent outside India .They may not have grasped the emotional side of people they would rule. Generally speaking ordinary Muslim of now India did not demand partition,but those who had vast tracks land did support two nation theory because of Nehru's land reform policy.The leadership of provinces now forming Pakistan played wait and see game till last quarter of 1946. Now the only alternative for both countries is to live in peace ant let their people have feedon of movement.
Dear Ajmal Kamal Sahib, I am reading your columns with great interest as my book has graciously been praised by you and I look forward to your considered opinion about it in forthcoming articles of yours. I think you have done a great service in putting Askari's role in the correct perspective. I suggest you publish a more detailed paper on the influence that he and others wielded in ascribing legitimation to the jihad argument and the ulema are often times incorrectly blamed for hijacking the idea of Pakistan from its supposed secular credentials and converting into its opposite. Please continue to enlighten us more, Best regards, Ishtiaq Ahmed (author The Punjab Bloodied, Partitioned and Cleansed).
@Shyam: When you do not understand it must come across as irrational.
"Culture of lies", a most befitting term deep seeded in our society. We are to do with this culture wherein every individual group has its own logic, truth and justifications. Sanity is nowhere and there seems little this society will ever gain balance,
@Mahakaalchakra: "There were some exceptions in Punjab because unlike Hindus, Sikhs were strong and warrior people". I see you subscribe to the same martial races theory nonsense that the Brits invented. The reason Sikhism has a more militant overwhelming response from majority Sikhs is because it's a monotheistic religion with a militant Khalsa identity forged in a political climate of Mughal oppression. It has nothing to do with some mythical martial prowess as opposed to your classification of Hindus as Non martial. Pakistan also subscribed to this nonsense of being more Martial than the Bengalis but they paid the price for that in Bangladesh. Hinduism isn't a centralized religion with religious fatwas like Islam or Hukumnamas like Sikhism issued from a central body. Hindus are more individualistic due to the nature of their religion a decentralized worship where individuals relate to God on a personal level and cannot be coaxed into a religious war based on some religious head calling for Dharmayuddha.
Pakistan has been destroyed by the immigrants invading this land both from east and west.
@Ejaaz "The reason you do not understand is because you do not understand Islam.
That is why you cannot comprehend that India is destined to be an Islamic country".
Has rational thinking become unislamic now?
@Tch tch:
My response to your ignorance is TCH TCH. You have no knowledge of democratic and secular India of 21st century.
Ever heard name of Azim Premji or WIPRO, India?
His net-worth (more than $20 billion - convert the figures in Pakistani rupees) could be as large as the net-worth of bottom-half of the Population of Pakistan combined. He is a proud SECULAR INDIAN MUSLIM.
@Ali tanoli: The way to find peace is to find why we lost the peace in the first place. Even the intention of the author here is to bring Pakistanis to light so that they can appreciate the difference in their thought as compared to the rest of the world. India lost as many lives as Pakistan at independence, germany was broken into two during world war II and Japan suffered a nuclear assault. But they don't continue perpetuate their 'I am the only victim' attitude. People move on. But unfortunately the 'establishment' in Pakistan is not allowing the Pakistani citizens to move on and therefore get to peace...
Only thing I know about partitian is people who were living for 5000 years were thrown out from sindh and punjab. Is there any justification for this?
honest article.
@Tch tch: The fact is that in any community an hierarchy quickly sets in if it's absent if the settlement is new. So even in the tribes of Africa you would find someone more affluent or powerful tahn others. The Muslims in Pakistan who prospered did so at the cost of their own community and not someone outside. On a relative scale, the Hindus and Sikhs would have beaten them down easily due to sheer competence and education, Which they did for centuries. You talk about condition of Muslims in India. For those with abilities and skills in demand, there is no problem. The muslims of India(and Pakistan) seem to be more interested in Jihad and population growth. So they get what they sow.
Dear Tch Tch You say that moslems in Pakistan and Bangladesh( Bangladesh was not there at the time of partition) have prospered while Indian Muslims are laggards or whatever you mean. Please prove it by example. I will give you 100s of them if you give me truthful answer.
I won't hazard any guess as to who started the massacre. However, the massacre resulting from the partition is still continuing and will continue for 100s of more years. Don't you think the millions killed during 1971 Bangla war, Mumbai attacks, Karachi killings, Kashmir killings etc all can be attributed to Partition? Partition might have solved few problems. However, it brought many more problems which are far more difficult to solve.
@Tch tch: You say "History has essentially proven Jinnahs and ML right" ?? Surely you jest, for their thesis has been blown apart in the last 65 years -- specially in 1971, when being "Muslim" could not hold the country together! And even if India is accused of somehow "engineering" this, surely in the last 40 years the two countries (Bangladesh and remaining Pakistan) would have reunited. But that has not happened. Why? Chiefly because Jinnah and the ML were wrong about pretty much everything viz-a-viz the Two-Nation-Theory, and that is borne out even today with Pakistan pretty much ripping itself apart where even sectarian conflict is boring mundane news. The Pakistan we see today is NOT the creation of Jinnah or the ML but the seeming contradiction that is inherent in the minds of its citizens. Foreseeing all this, the INC under Nehru, Patel etc decided that they did want to be a part of the mess. All thank all the Gods for that!
@Babloo: "One thing I never understood. Why would the overwhleming majority of Muslims of India, that lived in territories outside East and West Pakistan, ever support partition, when the partition was going to make them a smaller minority and they had no intent of migrating to the country whose creation they were supporting ?"
And because you and yours do not understand the answer to that question, it is inevitable that you will end up repeating the mistakes again. It is important to understand why the two nation idea had such allure for the Muslims in the minority regions of British India. The reason you do not understand is because you do not understand Islam. That is why your Gandhi was never able to get a single Muslim to join him in singing his blasphemous "Allah Ishwar tero naam". That is why you still cannot get any Muslim to agree to sing Vande Maatrem in your country. That is why you cannot comprehend that India is destined to be an Islamic country.
@tchtch, Sorry for the word multipled. Wrong choice , did not mean in any negative sense. Just that Indian Muslims, have not fled India to the land of the pure . They have in overwhelming numbers continued to live in secular , democratic India and participate in every sphere of national life. The richest Muslim in India, Mr Azim Premji, is richer than top 10 richest Muslims in Pakistan put together ! Not just more than 150 million muslims , Mr Jinnah's daughter and grandkids too have refused to go to Pakistan. In contrast hindus in Pakistan have virtually disappeared as compared to 1947. Nothing differentiates India and Pakistan more than that startling fact which cannot be fudged.
@Babloo: "Those that wanted partition and those who did not want parttion."
Babloo, there is a third category. People who just want to be left alone either way and didn't really have any strong opinions either way. My pure guess is that this category formed a sizable section of the population but they were powerless because they did not take a stand either way and act n their stance. Societies as a whole are generally passive like that. They just want to be left alone.
@Ejaaz: Ejaaz Saheb,simply because,darkness,ignorance and falsehood pervades,it is not time to fold like a cheap umbrella and fold in the rain,we need more people of courage and conviction.If you think his point has merit than stand up, ,but be counted. Be a stand up man.Remember,Jesus,Lincoln and Budha and Mohamud were alone when they stood up for what they Believed.
@Babloo: You are right,it was mind boggling that people who were in million years,would never, ever wind up in new country,supported the concept.Only logical answer,I hate to say it,Islam.They were not swayed as you say,that is a cop out and unintensional dishonest observation,sorry if I'm too brutally honest,I can not say any other way.But it is water under the bridge.India and Hindus for strange reason gained but Muslims of both side lost..For me,what happened,all that ends well,let us wish Pakistan and those who left for whatever reason,a happy and good tiding,that is all we can now do.No hard felling,fellows.Good Luck.
@Max: Simply wonderful and very honest ,the last observation. You have a sense ,when to talk and when to hold your tongue.It is people like you which makes T/E the place to be.Why ,on earth a guy from align world both religious wise,culturally ,and from distant far away USA,finds a place as a good as any.As long as the great people you mentioned,live in Pakistan,she shall always flourish.You bet your house .Keep your hopes up.good day.
Ajmal Sahib,
I hope your columns have some historical value. Perhaps the descendants of the present Pakistanis and Indians will be able to look at your words and those Ishtiaq with dispassion. At present the Pakistan's population is overwhelmingly young who has been raised on the hate for not only hindus but the other, including Ahmedis, Shias, yahoodis, and now we are adding amreekis to that list as well. We have been telling lies so much and so often that we no longer know what is true or even the value of truth. Nearly all young Pakistanis have no clue why all civilizations have valued speaking truthfully. In the culture we have built in the last 70 years or so, only a suicidal fool speaks truthfully. We are well beyond the tipping point, and now we will inexorably follow the logic of what we have built in this Land of the Pure.
@Babloo: multiplied Odd choice of words. Like rats is perhaps what you had in mind. The facts are Muslims in Pakistan and Bangladesh have prospered in terms of wealth education and GDP etc. While the ones left in India are routinely vilified, discriminated against and have with each generation fell further and further. They are now worse of then the untouchable according to your Lok Saba reports .(Sachar Commitee Report 2005). The few exception you will now cite (SRK, Aamir Khan,Abdul Kalam etc) do not prove the rule e.g Obama became president, does not mean Blacks community is thriving in America. History has essentially proven Jinnahs and ML right.
Sorry my friend you cannot change the history and the historical accounts. It is always very easy to write and evaluate the situations of the past. Pakistan was built on two nation theory and the theory was based upon religious differences, even though, muslims of India wanted to live with hindus but the changing attitudes of hindus under the patronage of british could not let them endure any more and that was the reason many muslim leaders like Jinnah Sahab parted their ways with Congress who were earlier advocates of hindu muslim co-existance in the sub continent.
Having capability to write does not authorise you to write any thing and reading biased literature can only make you more bias yet this stance is selling at high price these days and that seems the reason of you consistant writing of your fictionalised fact stories.
One thing I never understood. Why would the overwhleming majority of Muslims of India, that lived in territories outside East and West Pakistan, ever support partition, when the partition was going to make them a smaller minority and they had no intent of migrating to the country whose creation they were supporting ? Why would a Muslim of Bihar or UP or Madhya Pardesh or Gujrat, who had no intention of migrating to East or W Pakistan, would support the idea of Pakisdta, when that would reduce them to a smaller minority in India ?
Is this anathor exaple of an electorate voting against its own social, political and economic interests , swayed by incendiary and irrational religious rhetoric ?
@Babloo: Very correct.
Quoting the Author, the popular national narrative states "Put briefly, it states (i) that Partition was the result of a mass struggle (although in fact it wasn’t), (ii) that ‘lakhs’ of Muslims sacrificed their lives, honour (‘sacrificing honour’ being a euphemism for the incidents of rape) and property in the struggle"
The same narrative can be re-stated in a more truthful way
"Partition was a result of 1. taking the lives of millions of people 2: Sacrificing the honor of millons of women."
I am happy to note that you took time to read Dr. Ishtiaq Ahmed's book on partition. I know the gentleman for more than forty years and can easily say that he is a person who will never compromise his academic integrity under any circumstances. I had the opportunity to read Dr Imran Ali's doctorate dissertation on the Punjab Canal colonies/settlements. It was certainly a work of very high quality and I was equally quite impressed by his hard-work and academic quest. I have seen a few articles in professional journal from Dr. Waseem Ahmad but never had the chance to read the book that you mention. But thank you for mentioning all these excellent academic works, and let me put it this way. The people in academic world are honest, hardworking, and original in their thought and research. It is only the people around us who in their effort to make a quick buck are ready to do anything. Regrettably some of them happen to be journalist, lawyers, and people of letters. You know what I am talking about. Yes! you are correct to say that we have tailored the partition events and the partition itself to serve our self-styled vested interests (whatever these may be). It is a matter of shame for all of us. I have a different take on the concept of "Jehad" and here is my two cents carefully crafted answer. Islam emerged at the fringes of the Arab world and in the deserts of Rub-al-Khali (empty lands). The ignorant pagans could have only been successful through the might of the sowrd as rest of the Arab world (particularly Levant was highly cultured, well established, and had accumulated the knowledge over centuries). Enter the barbarians and it was all a different ball game. I better stop.
@Babloo
Muslim league was just a political hack which could not handle the events it unintentionally unleashed. The violence was not directed or controlled through some elaborate plans. It was barbarity, the most base animal instinct of man displayed for all.
@Babloo, Why it happend its hard to answer but making peace is even getting harder that we need to worried about right now...
I will wait for these articles. It is simplistic to label Partition riots as the virus of Punjab alone (as is done many times). If the line had been drawn in Andhra or TamilNadu (between Hindus and Muslims), I dont think the result would have been any different. But I wait for your take on these events.
Only one aspect , guided the conduct. Those that wanted partition and those who did not want parttion.
Those who did not want partition where overwhelmingly Hindus and also included millions muslims. Thats how 85% of Muslims of India , continued to stay in India and multiplied. There were even a few Muslims who migrated to India from W Pakistan at partition. Indian actors Shah Rukh Khans family is one of them.
Thos who wanted partition, where overwhelmingly Muslims who had being swayed by the political and religious arguments put forward by Muslim League.