Illustration by Ahmed Amin
No one can deny the importance of a day that has the name of a country attached to it. Pakistan Day (or Pakistan Resolution Day or Republic Day as it is alternatively called), celebrated on 23rd March every year, is the day on which the concept for the creation of Pakistan was formally endorsed and approved by All India Muslim League, in 1940.
In the years that followed, the agenda became progressively the guiding light for each and every struggle of the Muslims for a separate homeland. It eventually led to the independence of our country in 1947.
There are many concepts that you may have come across in your textbooks, such as “Two-Nation Theory” or “British rule” or “Independence struggle”.
While they all are inter-linked, the fact is that it never was a simple matter of independence from British rule. Our Muslim leaders had to convince the British that there were Hindus, Muslims and minorities in British India. The two nations of Hindus and Muslims could not be merged into a single country, particularly when there were provinces like Punjab, Sindh, NWFP, Balochistan, Kashmir and East Bengal where there were an overwhelming Muslim majority.
In case both the Muslims and Hindus were left to live in a single country, then the Muslims would be oppressed, killed and denied their basic rights by the Hindu majority.
The situation that has been later witnessed in India held Kashmir, over the years, bears evidence to the political foresight of our great leaders being correct. For this reason, our leaders like Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, Allama Muhammad Iqbal, Chaudhry Rehmat Ali and Muhammad Ali Jinnah are considered great visionaries as they foresaw that Muslims would be an oppressed class under Hindu rule in any scheme of undivided India. And, for the same reason, the date of the formal adoption of their concept of the Two-Nations Theory is celebrated as a monumental day of our national history.
The first person to put forward the idea of a separate homeland for Muslims was Allama Iqbal (in his Allahabad address in 1930 during a session of Muslim League). However, he did not include East Bengal and Kashmir in his concept of the separate homeland. It was Chaudhary Rehmat Ali who first coined the term Pakistan in a pamphlet written by him in 1933.
In his coined term of Pakistan, translated as ‘land of the pure’, P stood for Punjab, A for Afghania (North Western Province), K for Kashmir, S for Sindh and TAN for Balochistan.
Subsequent to Chaudhry Rehmat Ali’s idea of Pakistan, there was still work to be done regarding the widespread adoption of this idea by all the Muslims of the subcontinent. There were quite a few political parties in the subcontinent enjoying Muslim support in each of the provinces of India.