“The people of Pakistan celebrate  the 23rd of March, every year, with great zeal and enthusiasm, to  commemorate the most outstanding achievement of the Muslims of South  Asia who passed the historic Pakistan Resolution on this day at Lahore  in 1940.”
FROM March 22 to March  24, 1940, the Quaid-i-Azam is presiding over the session while Chaudhry  Khaliquzzaman is seconding the Resolution.All India Muslim League held  its annual session at Minto Park, Lahore. This session proved to be  historical.
On the first day of the session,  Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah narrated the events of the last few  months. In an extempore speech he presented his own solution of the  Muslim problem. He said that the problem of India was not of an  inter-communal nature, but manifestly an international one and must be  treated as such.
To him the differences between Hindus and  the Muslims were so great and so sharp that their union under one  central government was full of serious risks. They belonged to two  separate and distinct nations and therefore the only chance open was to  allow them to have separate states.
In the words of Quaid-i-Azam: “Hindus and  the Muslims belong to two different religions, philosophies, social  customs and literature. They neither inter-marry nor inter-dine and,  indeed, they belong to two different civilizations that are based mainly  on conflicting ideas and conceptions. Their concepts on life and of  life are different. It is quite clear that Hindus and Muslims derive  their inspiration from different sources of history. They have different  epics, different heroes and different episodes. Very often the hero of  one is a foe of the other, and likewise, their victories and defeats  overlap. To yoke together two such nations under a single state, one as a  numerical minority and the other as a majority, must lead to growing  discontent and final destruction of any fabric that may be so built up  for the government of such a state”.
He further said, “Mussalmans are a nation  according to any definition of nation. We wish our people to develop to  the fullest spiritual, cultural, economic, social and political life in  a way that we think best and in consonance with our own ideals and  according to the genius of our people”.
On the basis of the above mentioned ideas  of the QuaAt the All India Muslim League session, March 1940, Nawab Sir  Shah Nawaz Mamdot presenting address of welcomeid, A. K. Fazl-ul-Haq,  the then Chief Minister of Bengal, moved the historical resolution which  has since come to be known as Lahore Resolution or Pakistan Resolution.
The Resolution declared: “No  constitutional plan would be workable or acceptable to the Muslims  unless geographical contiguous units are demarcated into regions which  should be so constituted with such territorial readjustments as may be  necessary. That the areas in which the Muslims are numerically in  majority as in the North-Western and Eastern zones of India should be  grouped to constitute independent states in which the constituent units  shall be autonomous and sovereign”.
It further reads, “That adequate,  effective and mandatory safeguards shall be specifically provided in the  constitution for minorities in the units and in the regions for the  protection of their religious, cultural, economic, political,  administrative and other rights of the minorities, with their  consultation. Arrangements thus should be made for the security of  Muslims where they were in a minority”.
The Resolution repudiated the concept of  United India and recommended the creation of an independent Muslim state  consisting of Punjab, N. W. F. P., Sindh and Baluchistan in the  northwest, and Bengal and Assam in the northeast.
The Resolution was seconded by Maulana  Zafar Ali Khan from Punjab, Sardar Aurangzeb from the N. W. F. P., Sir  Abdullah Haroon from Sindh, and Qazi Esa from Baluchistan, along with  many others.
The Resolution was passed on March 24. It  laid down only the principles, with the details left to be worked out  at a future date. It was made a part of the All India Muslim League’s  constitution in 1941. It was on the basis of this resolution that in  1946 the Muslim League decided to go for one state for the Muslims,  instead of two.
Having passed the Pakistan Resolution,  the Muslims of India changed their ultimate goal. Instead of seeking  alliance with the Hindu community, they set out on a path whose  destination was a separate homeland for the Muslims of India–with a  great name of Pakistan.
Perspective
The background of Pakistan Resolution is  that in 1937, provQuaid-i-Azam, Liaquat Ali Khan and Nawab Muhammad  Iftikhar Hussain Khan of Mamdot at the Lahore Session, March 1940incial  autonomy was introduced in the Sub-continent under the Government of  India Act, 1935. The elections of 1937 provided the Congress with a  majority in six provinces, where Congress governments were formed. This  led to the political, social, economic and cultural suppression of the  Muslims in the Congress ruled provinces.
The Congress contemptuously rejected the  Muslim League’s offer of forming coalition ministries. The Muslims were  subjected not only to physical attacks but injustice and discriminatory  treatment as regards civil liberties, economic measures and employment  and educational opportunities. The Congress Ministries introduced the  Wardha scheme of education, the object of which was to de- Muslimise the  Muslim youth and children.
According to British historian Reginald  Coupland. “It was not only the Working Committee’s control of the  Congress Ministries that showed that a’Congress Raj’ had been  established. It was betrayed by the conduct and bearing of Congressmen.  ..Many of them behaved as if they were a ruling caste, as if they owned  the country .”
Mr. Ian Stephens, former editor of the  newspaper’ Statesman ‘ and an eyewitness to the working of the Congress  Ministries, says: “The effect of this simultaneously on many Muslim  minds was of a lightning flash. What had before been but guessed at now  leapt forth in horridly clear outline. The Congress, a Hindi-dominated  body, was bent on the eventual absorption; Westem-style majority rult?,  in an undivided sub- continent, could only mean the smaller community  being swallowed by the larger.”
The animosity shown by the Hindus to the  Muslim and their own experience of two-and-a-half year Congress rule  strengthened the Muslims belief in their separate Nationality .The  discriminatory attitude coupled with attempts by the Hindu dominated  Congress to suppress the Muslims impelled the Muslims to finally demand a  separate sovereign state for the Muslims.
However, the Muslim demand was violently  opposed both by the British and the Hindus; and the Congress attitude  towards the Muslims led to the hardening of the Muslims belief that only  a separate homeland -Pakistan -can guarantee their freedom. This demand  was put in black and white on 23rd March, 1940.
After adoption of the Pakistan  Resolution, Quaid-e-Azam had a clear objective before him and he  struggled hard to achieve it. In one of the meetings, he said: “We are a  Nation of a hundred million and what is more, we are a Nation with our  distinct culture and civilization, language and literature, art and  architecture, legal laws and moral codes, customs and calendar, history  and traditions, aptitudes and ambitions. In short, as Muslims we have  our own distinctive outlook on life”. He further said that by all  cannons of international laws, we are a nation.
In 1945, Quaid-e-Azam proclaimed that  only Muslim League represented the Muslims, and proved it to the hilt  during 1946 polls, winning 100 per cent seats at the Centre, and 80 per  cent in the provinces. Nothing could have been more conclusive to  shatter the Congress claim of being a national body. If the British had  read the writing on the wall in this verdict, Pakistan could have come  into existence two years earlier without bloodshed.
With his charismatic personal  Quaid-e-Azam turned the drAt the All India Muslim League Working  Committee, Lahore session, March 1940eam of a separate homeland into  reality on 14th of August 1947. Ins of severe opposition, establishment  of Pakistan, in such a short span of seven year surely an extra-ordinary  achievement, which has no m in history.
On the eve of his departure Karachi from  Delhi on August, 1947, Quaid-e-Azam a message to Hindustan, implored  “The past must be buried and let us start afresh as two independent  sovereign States of Hindustan and Pakistan. I wish Hindustan prosperity  and peace.”
Even in his post-partition statements,  the Quaid-e-Azam envisaged a relationship of peaceful co-existence with  India. But, the eruption of war in Kashmir in 1947 created acrimony  between India and Pakistan, which became more acute with the passage of  time. While Pakistan has throughout been supporting a peaceful  resolution of the Kashmir dispute, the Indian obstinacy led to three  wars and scores of clashes, peace initiative took him to Agra. Kashmir  problem is resolved to bedeviling the relations between Even after the  failure of Agra the satisfaction of the parties to both the neighbouring  countries.
Pakistan’s present leadership continues  to subscribe to the policy of peaceful resolution of all disputes with  India. Enumerating Pakistan’ s foreign policy parameters on 23rd June,  2000, General Pervez Musharraf stated: The war should be avoided through  a potent deterrence and diplomacy, engaging India on the issue of  Kashmir for bringing permanent peace in the region without compromising  on sovereignty.
President Pervez Musharraf’s peace  initiative took him to Agra. Even after the failure of Agra talks, he  continued to persistently pursue his policy of peaceful resolution of  all disputes with India. Reciprocating Pakistan President’s gesture, the  ex-Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, during his visit to  Srinagar in April last year, extended his hand of friendship towards  Pakistan. A meeting between the two leaders, on the sidelines of SAARC  Summit in Islamabad early this year, led to a barrage of  confidence-building measures and Secretary-level talks.
Now there is need to ensure a quick  forward movement to resolve the long simmering Kashmir dispute, which  has been the main irritant and the bone of contention between
India and Pakistan. All contentious  issues between the two countries would be automatically settled if the  Kashmir problem is resolved to the satisfaction of the parties to the  dispute.
In short, the commemoration of 23rd March  is an expression of the whole nation’s resolute determination to  preserve her independence and the Day’s celebrations are a reflection of  this.●
 
 
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