Though his controversial autobiography remained banned for years and his references carefully weeded out of history textbooks, Azad’s legacy remains timeless. A devout Muslim leader, who served as president of the Indian National Congress during the turbulent times of World War II, Azad predicted the failure of the Pakistani state narrative to serve as a binding force and the consequent rise of disparate identities, just when the zeal of independence was running wild in the veins of the All India Muslim League. Fearful of the Partition’s aftermath, he knew that the diverse people of northwest India were much more than just ‘Muslim’, whose sub-nationalities could not be fused under a whole new, artificially-constructed national identity — specially an identity whose foundations rested on nothing but a common faith. Dreading the chaos, bloodshed and suppression that he foresaw as Pakistan’s future, Azad opposed the partition of India.
In 1940, a belligerent segment of population decided to detach from India and carve out a whole new identity to define itself. The story of Tehrik-e-Pakistan (Pakistan Movement), told as the glorifying beginnings of freedom, was perhaps the portent of lifelong turmoil for millions of Indian Muslims. Quite unsurprisingly, the movement failed to produce a durable identity for Indian Muslims to unite under. Its religious slogan failed to overpower people’s cultural distinctiveness.
It can’t be denied that several Muslims nursed political grievances against the Congress and the British, however, a territorial separation was perhaps unnatural, unneeded and also unjust. Furthermore, quite unlike what history textbooks tell, such a separation won qualified support. In his autobiography titled India Wins Freedom, Azad writes, “I have said that the Muslim League enjoyed the support of many Indian Muslims but there was a large section in the community which had always opposed the League.”
While Hindus dreaded losing a part of India, many Muslims dreaded the daunting task of chalking up a national identity from scratch. For Azad, the solution to communal hostilities was simple: Hindu-Muslim unity within a stringently secular India. He believed that the decision of a territorial divide was in itself un-Islamic, which challenged the Islamic merits of Pakistan’s nationhood most glaringly. Furthermore, military rule, an incompetent democracy and the rise of ethnic groups were some of the vices he said would plague the new country.
Is Azad’s legacy any relevant to the current demand for new provinces? Yes, it is. It must be understood that the demand for Hazara and South Punjab provinces is being made by two distinct ethnic groups. Though the purely ‘administrative’ purpose of these future provinces has been regularly underscored, one must question their very ethnic nature. As intolerance runs amok and alienation of minorities reaches whole new heights every day, appropriation of authoritative powers from the centre becomes necessary for a people to salvage security, public utilities and basic rights. History stands embarrassed as the demand for new provinces proves that, today, sub-nationalities take precedence over Pakistani nationhood. As Azad predicted, the many ethnic identities of northwest India have not fused into Pakistan’s wavering and dubitable nationhood.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 12th, 2012.
COMMENTS (50)
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Maulana Azad was a great man. Paradoxically, some of his family members shifted to Pakistan. History is irreversible. Pakistan is here and is likely to be here for the foreseeable future. Whethere they have 4 provinces or 50 it does not matter. With an increase in population, such things happen. India divided Panajb, UP, Bihar etc. to name a few. AS long as people are first the nationals (Pakistanis, Americans, Canadians, British etc.) then something else (Christians, Muslims Etc.) it is file. The trouble starts when they say I am a Pathan, muslim and a Pakistani in that order.
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http://2ndlook.wordpress.com/tag/british-indian-army/
In 1940, Jinnah, who for most part of his career was anti-colonial, suddenly changed.
The man who defended Bal Gangadhar Tilak wanted a Pakistan.
Pakistanis will evidently and strongly deny it..and that is cause of what Pakistan is ..a denail..!!
Well, After reading the article, the fore most conclusion I can come up with is this, Jinnah by asking for a separate state for Muslims actually did the final rites for the Muslims of India by formally evacuating the last of the mogul empire to the corners of the British India so what Babur, Akbar till Aurangzeb shed blood and bulit and what remained in paper till Bahadur shah zafar was finally cleaned up and all of them left packing , Thanks to Jinnah.
so technically Jinnah was the last of the Moguls who withdrew from India never to return.
@aaaaa: .
You stated on Dec 11, 2012 - 11:37PM as follows
That interview is fake, a fabrication, which it says on your very link. . I quote the full statement from on the reffered Link : . It has come to light that this interview was a faked one. Maulana Azad was never interviewed by Shorish Kashmiri. Even a journalist like M J Akbar was misled by this fake interview and included it in his Covert magazine. Maulana Azad or anyone else for that matter could not have made such accurate predictions about Pakistan. By ahmad - 10/25/2012 10:40:11 AM . This is a statement is a "Personal Statement" by Mr.-Miss-Mrs- Ms *ahmed. It has no vlidity as it has no supporting "Links". . Cheers
Looks like ET is very popular in India....
History has proved it that the sole ingredient of the faith has utterly failed to arouse a Pakistani nationhood out of diverse nationalities, representing rich and historically entrenched cultures. Therefore, the ruling elite should come out of the province-phobia and acknowledge the ground realities which suggest that Pakistani nation has constituents which are Baloch, Pushtun, Punjabi, Seriaki, Hazara and all other sub-nationalities residing in Pakistan and should recognize their culture, history, and declare their languages and official languages of the land. This is what happens in the true federations worldwide, be it USA, Canada or Switzerland. Unity under such diverse cultures can only be acquired through recognition of diversity and not crushing it at gunpoint.
To: Most Respected Sub-Editor Sahiba Subject: As a humble person I wont say truest, although that is what I mean. sub_subject: I JUST FOUND THE TRUTH FOR YOU!
As salaam alyakum.
Hope this little missive finds you in abundant good health and most pleasing of uplifting moods . With the greatest humility I submit to your obviously kind and precious attention the true (as a humble person, I won't say truest, although that is what I mean) fact - Azad said no such thing. It is all fake. Our dedicated researchers have discovered many glaring errors in the Arabic roots of the language used in whatever interview/speech/book/audio/video you refered to. I need not tell you that their true (as a humble person I won't say truest, although that is what I mean) meaning has been misunderstood by true Muslims and misrepresented by all others.
(You can never trust these people, you know).
Our hardworking and productive researchers and desighners are available to your August Magazine ready to produce true (as a humble person I won't say truest, although that is what I mean) meanings and Arabic roots of anything you might need (but may dread wanting) at a very fair price (as a token of appreciation, leaves and fruits are given away free with every purchase of arabic roots). Please contact me at thereisnoendtohumandelusion.org
Yours Most Humbly
KC the Truth Merchant
@Shiv:
Seriously Sir, will it solve any problems? Killing of Muslims by Muslims cannot be stopped this way. There will be more Kashmiris getting killed than those that are dying at present. Just look at Shias and Hazaras; even targeting in Karachi. It is best if Kashmir is left alone.
@Shiv:
That is a thought worth considering, but do you have any idea of the end result of such an exercise? An Indian friend, in a humorous mood, had a terrifying idea.
He thought that if all Muslims from all over the world are given a new world of their own, like sending them all to the Moon or some other habitable planet, they will have all Ummah in one place, and peace will prevail in their world, and also ours. There is just one condition. Make sure no one carries any guns along.
Whatever be history, the fact is that Muslims and all the rest cannot live together. If all the muslims could move to Pakistan even with Kashmir going to Pakistan, it would be worth it.
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad , after partition , was asked , that as a devout practising Muslim and a greatest Islamic scholar of his times , why did he not migrate to Pakistan? .
His reported reply was , "India is a country , Pakistan is an experiment ".
Let's pray and hope that the 'Experiment' succeeds . If the experiment fails , it may create bigger problems for all , including India .
To the author I would say that smaller states are good for better administration. There is no cause for worry - the Pakistani identity is not threatened. And while Azad was right about the peril that hindus and especially muslims will face with the partition - that is clearly water under the bridge - perhaps younger pakistanis should now work towards proving him wrong.
@Pinky - "so i gather the secular India of Azad has no such troubles, eh?? no sub-nationalismic tendencies,no demands of new provinces/states??"
We do have these troubles or sub-nationalistic tendencies, but these are mostly under control. You won't find people blowing up each other (or places of worship/graveyards) due to these reasons. Even the violent Naxalites in remote villages selectively target the Govt. machinery/ officers and spare the ordinary man / tourists there. These tendencies will continue to be there in every corner of the world (in varying proportions) as long as man exists. Foundations need to be intact.
@Bajwa - "in minority were obsessed with Hindu domination". Well that's a tendency in Muslims around the world. Being fearful of the other... seeing conspiracies / evil where it no longer exists..looking out for causes to be offended. As the Western powers call it - outrage industry... Manufacture outrage whenever needed...
@BruteForce:
If British India wasn't partitioned, the Indian muslim population wouldn't have been 40%. The combined population today would've been 159cr (1.59billion people), out of which muslims would've been 46crore. That is about 28% muslims in a nation of 159cr.
They would've had substantial electoral muscle in many regions. And I agree there may have been some tensions. But, I think the crucible of India in which many religions have melted and became part of the syncretic structure of India, would've played its part and we'd have found a way to live harmoniously.
can't say the same thing if the Muslim Population was indeed 40+% as Muslims and seularism don't go hand in hand. :(
Comparing Pakistan's provinces with US states is invalid. The history of both countries is different and circumstances are different too. And in America federations are strong. In Pakistan provinces are dependent on the central government. Which is why new provinces becomes a reactionary thing in Pakistan unlike in US. Agree with article...
@Falcon: I think the article underscores that islamic notion of separate nationhood a failure overall as Azad predicted.Try reading his book.Available free on internet as well.
@Falcon:
I believe you could not understand the crux and message of an eye-opening and truly written article.
@A.Bajwa: " ... Those in minority were obsessed with Hindu domination. ... "
There is a reason behind that. Muslims knew that Muslim rule was not the best of time for Hindus/Sikhs and obviously there was a fear that under the one-person-one-vote dispensation, some form of revenge will be exacted.
so i gather the secular India of Azad has no such troubles, eh?? no sub-nationalismic tendencies,no demands of new provinces/states??
@Arijit Sharma:
" I would have felt more at ease with the likes of Maulana Madni of Jamiat-Ulema-Hind and Abul Kalam Azad if they had opposed partition on the grounds that partion would be the partition of the Indian people. But they did not – for them it was never about country – it was always about religion."
Quite correct.
While Azad outwardly espoused secularism and was a good human being, deep down he was an Islamist. He opposed the partition because he viewed that it was bad for the propagation of Islam.
What the Maulana said was true in 1947 , now 65 yrs later Pakistan is a reality and it can not look for solutions to its problems in his thoughts. It is a new situation and a new solution is required my solution would be to think of oneself as a Pakistani first and not attaching too much importance to religion , sect and regional considerations .I am an Indian first always and every time .
Thank you very much Mr Jinnah. India does not talk about 2 nation theory anymore as those erstwhile Indians who talked and practiced that concept are not Indians any more. The rest of the Indians are peaceful among ourselves. Those who talked about 2 nation theory and their descendents are still talking about it and trying to divide the "moth eaten" pakistan again and again. When will this stop ?
The openness and clear thinking of the writer is one more rare omen of a better future for Pakistan. Only when we know and accept that we made mistakes, there is any hope of correcting them.
The lively debate that this article has generated in the form of learned comments is educative and very heartening. The views of our regular friends like "Lala Gee" and "Kalachakra" are eagerly awaited.
Perhaps we don't have heroes in the current scenario. Nations need heroes to refer to and people get the inspiration to stay united. Unfortunately we have regional and controversial heroes or imposed heroes. As a nation we all are confused as every day a new hero is being imposed and at the same time opposition to the same. Nationhood is not a mere theory but a practical idea that is practised and shown practising by real humans. But we don't see a human who would represent the real idea of being Pakistani and inspire others.
@BruteForce
In hindsight, exactly like the linguistic reorganization of states, Partition seems to have been the right thing to do. Interesting how things work out over time.
@kanchi: Maulana Azad was one of the many great thinkers and leaders that Indian freedom struggle produced . He was a great scholar , a devout and proud muslim and an ardent Indian nationalist . Jinnah and the Muslim League tried , and at that time successfully , to portray Maulana Azad as the Muslim show boy of Indian National Congress . 65 years of history today vindicates the vision of Maulana Azad .
On a different note Bollywood superstar Amir Khan is a descendent of Maulana Azad .
@gp65: " ... that the partition was not partition of India but partition of the Indian Muslims. ... "
Given the fact that the Indian people were the same people before Islam came to the continent, I would have felt more at ease with the likes of Maulana Madni of Jamiat-Ulema-Hind and Abul Kalam Azad if they had opposed partition on the grounds that partion would be the partition of the Indian people.
But they did not - for them it was never about country - it was always about religion.
Why are you all sounding sour that Pakistan was created?
It is the best thing to have happened to India.
http://peddarowdy.wordpress.com/2012/03/28/how-pakistan-is-good-for-india/
For instance Muslims would have formed 40% of the population of today's India. Do you think there wouldn't be Sharia now, like in Malaysia, which houses a significant number of non-Muslim but has Sharia in place?
Don't you think there would be a even more bloodier movement than Muslim Leagues one and shaken the very roots of India, which would have devastated it, possibly forever? Riots everywhere, 80% poor, a budding Democracy under Nehru would have surely wilted.
I am not mocking Pakistanis, but an acceptance that Jinnah was right. Two Nation Theory exists. I am just glad that the Hindus weren't affected by its poisonous ideology, based on division of man which was further based on Religion. India is and should be secular in nature. Secularism is a romantic idea as well as a realistic one. But, sometimes not both at the same time.
I am eternally grateful to Jinnah.
Time and facts on the ground proved that M. Azad was 100% prophetic about Pakistan. In fact when Pakistan was celebrating its golden jubilee with great fanfare my father said "why we did not celebrate silver jubilee?" Did we become 50 years old without first becoming 25 years? We were sorry (after huge sacrifices for Pakistan) that the two nation theory did not last even for 25 years! My father told me that when he as a young-man along with my grandfather leaving India for Pakistan went to say goodbye to an elder neighbor M. Hasrat Mohani he told them "don't go to Pakistan you cannot remain happy there". We are not worried about that our homeland is poor but it is continuously sliding downhill.
It has been discussed counless time that this Maulana Azad chapter is a huge eyewash and especially his interview to Shorish Kashmiri is largely engineered. I don't know why people are so fascinated with an anti-Pakistan character.
We should be more understanding of Muslims living in provinces where they could never be a majority. Even Lahore Resolution did not include them in Pakistan concept.So why curse Azad.
Muslims in India were in a tragic situation.Those in minority were obsessed with Hindu domination. Those in majority did't care much about Hindus.We did't have single Hindu in our village.
@aaaaa: India is a single country with a nationalistic populace because it has many provinces based on ethnicity. The problem with Pakistan is that some ethnic groups are large enough to dominate the rest. If we continue to break down the country into provinces based on ethnic lines it will not help as ethnicity has proven to be stronger than nationality. Take for example the Mohajirs; for them their ethnicity is based on linguistic grounds and is tied to their Indian (current India) roots. They still identify themselves as Delhiwalla, Bihari, Hyderabadi, etc. even thought the vast majority of Mohajirs were born in Pakistan and have probably never even visited their ancestral hometowns.
@Falcon: The creation of provinces is not for the purpose of administrative ease, but it is for political gain. PML controls Punjab. With the division of the Punjab into three provinces, the two new provinces would probably fall into the lap of the PPP. This would help not only in increasing the ruling party's hold over a large portion of Punjab, but would also give it two more Chief Ministers, two Speakers and several cabinet members; which positions would be used to appease and oblige several party stalwarts from the Punjab.
When local populations demand separate provinces on the basis of ethnicity, they are simply saying that their ethnic identity is stronger than the national identity.
The US comparison is not relevant as the US is not divided into ethnicity by state.
I dont care what maulana predicted the future of Pakistan.The truth is Pakistan an ill-logical creation of Two nation theory , which is a flawed theory based on religious difference that never existed for thousand years ,and suddenly some muslims realized it when they are out of power.They used religion as a tool and it did prove to be effective.
He was India's first education minister. founded the Jamia milia, University Grants commission, the first IIT at khargpur and laid the foundation for a secular thiking in the country. A grateful country honored itself by confering the Bharata Ratna to him. Would probably have become the president of the country but for his untimely death. A great person.
(on a lighter note. If you have any Azads giving 'fake' interviews, just send them over)
Maulana sahab was played as a playboy of muslims and a muslim card during the partition days...Quaid e Azam replied to his letter in the very same words!
Maulana Azad . It would be interesting to mention here Maulana’s views on Pakistan. Maulana writes in India Wins Freedom:
@Falcon
India tried the joke of "one unit" under Nehru (he probably got too greedy for his own good) for some years post independence. Reorganization on linguistic lines happened over the dead body of an over-enthusiastic activist (who went on an indefinite hunger strike) and ensuing violent riots. This must have seemed like the biggest disaster when it happened, and if I had lived in that era I would have also thought likewise. I would have been wrong. The national identity only came through when the center recognized, respected and gave its proper place to the regional identity. This disastrous accident of our recent history proved to be a boon. It is probably the single biggest factor for India becoming a true country, and its citizens recognizing themselves as Indians first. Well, add films and cricket to that.
What the author seems to be saying is that - if ethnicity has to be recognized now, how to reconcile it with the original message of creation of Pakistan? Its very simple, accept that it was a mistake and move on. Like Nehru did.
I will give the author full marks for having the courage to talk about the prescient Maulana. . Some of the commenters here are right too. While the Maulana felt that a country based on a single religious identity would flounder, he accepted the diversity of the new nation. Reorganization of states in India in 1956 happened during his time when he was a Lok Sabha MP.
There are significant parts of this article that refer to an interview that never actually happened.
"A devout Muslim leader, who served as president of the Indian National Congress during the turbulent times of World War II, Azad predicted the failure of the Pakistani state narrative to serve as a binding force and the consequent rise of disparate identities, just when the zeal of independence was running wild in the veins of the All India Muslim League. Fearful of the Partition’s aftermath, he knew that the diverse people of northwest India were much more than just ‘Muslim’, whose sub-nationalities could not be fused under a whole new, artificially-constructed national identity — specially an identity whose foundations rested on nothing but a common faith."
And again:
"Furthermore, military rule, an incompetent democracy and the rise of ethnic groups were some of the vices he said would plague the new country."
Compare this line with the fake interview:
"1. The incompetent political leadership will pave the way for military dictatorship as it has happened in many Muslim countries."
These bits do seem to refer to that forged interview and undermine the whole article, especially since this piece ends with the logical conclusion based on precisely this information.
Even if this wasn't true and the interview was actually real, the author seems to be grasping at straws, trying to make a connection that is tenuous at best. India started with 11 provinces in 1947 (excluding princely states et al.) and today it has 28 states (plus 6 or 7 union territories), yet it is a single country.
@thor:
That interview is fake, a fabrication, which it says on your very link.
"Though the purely ‘administrative’ purpose of these future provinces has been regularly underscored, one must question their very ethnic nature."
Pathetic!
You have understood Maulana's words.
You have understood the meaning of it, not!
If you are carving provinces on ethnicity, so be it. celebrate it. Don't denounce it. Let there be more provinces on ethnicity, language or what not. Welcome it. Celebrate the diversity. Don't try to destroy it.
Kudos to you. Very well written & researched. Maulana Azad was very well right at that time & time prove it.
So is the whole point of the article that creation of separate provinces for administrative purposes and resource equalization a symptom of Pakistani state's failure? Then, didn't we fail the day we created 4 provinces? Or worse yet, hasn't India failed already by having so many states? Isn't U.S. a loser for having around 50 states? What do ET editors smoke?
Author is guilty of looking the Pakistan nationhood from the Islamic glassess and bias is very clear. Selective amnesia of contribution of non muslim pre 1947 history in creating Pakistan is ignored. e.g. Baghat Singh chowk in Lahore controversy, Contribution of Lala Ganga Ram ignoed. The bitter truth is that concept of independence from british came first and than the division of the nation called India. BTW it used to be called British India and it included Kashmir too. Preindependence history is not visible from the 20/20 Islamic vision. It is common for post catract surgery patient to report that world is lot more different (very clear colors, shapes and sizes) after surgery. At age 65 or very soon, Pakistan needs a catract surgery to see a clear picture of history. I agree that sometime people can not handle the truth and prefer not to go through the painful procedure. Choice is yours.
'Sub-nationalism' cannot be eradicated either by gunpoint (as the GHQ has been trying to do in Balochistan for the past six decades) nor can it be replaced by some strange type of hyped religious fake-Arabism. India has managed to move along these past 65 years without experiencing the kind of extreme disharmony we witness in Pakistan. Why? They have not forced a concocted 'national ideology' down the throats of its citizens. Only when we Pakistanis learn to respect and acknowledge our cultural diversity can we began to move forward peacefully as a nation.
This is prophetic utterance.
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad: The Man Who Knew The Future Of Pakistan Before Its Creation.
http://www.newageislam.com/books-and-documents/maulana-abul-kalam-azad--the-man-who-knew-the-future-of-pakistan-before-its-creation/d/2139