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Fatima Jinnah : What happened to her?

cricketjoshila

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Fatima Jinnah,Sister of Mohammad Ali Jinnah and popularly known as Mother of the Nation in Pakistan never had much of a political space in Pakistan.Her book on Jinnah was banned and then censored.It is believed that she wasnt even allowed to give public speeches for a longtime post M A Jinnah's death and he first public speech on Radio Pakistan was also censored.

There is also controversy regarding her death,with many people who were in the know saying she was murdered.

What is the opinion of PPers on this?
 
@kb [MENTION=135445]Strike Rate[/MENTION] [MENTION=26195]DW44[/MENTION] [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] [MENTION=138980]TalentSpotterPk[/MENTION] [MENTION=138463]Slog[/MENTION]
 
Her death is still a mystery. She never got the respect she actually deserved thanks to establishment of that time. I remember Qudratullah Shahab (a well known bureaucrat) writing on this topic. According to him govt of that time was afraid and they wanted to review her speeches every time before broadcasting thats one of the reason she didn't address the nation after Quaid death for a couple of years and remained silent and when she finally did a speech in 1951 the part where she criticized the govt was censored.

In 1965 opposition parties convinced Fatima Jinnah to contest presidential elections against Ayub Khan in and than there was a huge propaganda campaign against her in whole country during the elections and sadly the language used for her can't be used here she lost in the end.

Fatima Jinnah started this new party PMLF (Pakistan Muslim League Functional) that was later headed by Pir Pagara and the party still exist in Sindh province. They always manage to win a couple of seats every election. Currently got 5/6 national assembly seats and 10 or 12 in Sindh assembly and i think a seat in senate as well.

@KB is student of history related to pre/post partition events i think he can give us a better answer on this topic.
 
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I personally believe she was assassinated. The pupils of her eyes and other evidence suggested strangulation but to be honest noone knows or atleast there are some doubts.

Our 'democracy' since the beginning has been nothing but a sham.
 
Honesty and sincerity alone is not enough to progress in Pakistani politics, Fatimah Jinah was fine till she was mother of the nation, when she entered politics, she was humiliated. Abdus Sattar Edhi might have been the greatest Pakistani after Mr Jinnah but when he entered politics, nothing but humiliation. Imran Khan was once the most admired personality in the country but as soon as he entered politics, didn't get anywhere for about 15 years and still has limited success.
 
In 1965 opposition parties convinced Fatima Jinnah to contest presidential elections against Ayub Khan in and than there was a huge propaganda campaign against her in whole country during the elections and sadly the language used for her can't be used here she lost in the end.

There were many unsavory acts performed during that sham election, including one particularly shameful one where an Ayub lackey (the now departed Ghulam Dastgir Khan, later PMLN MNA from Gujranwala) paraded a dog through the streets asking it if it was really running for office against the general. The irony of course is that in a few years, during the anti-Ayub agitation in 1969, "Ayub kutta maray" became a popular slogan, and people were spray-painting dogs with the word "Ayub."

Ayub's son Gohar, an army captain at that time and later on Speaker of Parliament and Foreign Minister, instigated the first real ethnic riot in Karachi whilst celebrating his father's victory.
 
There were many unsavory acts performed during that sham election, including one particularly shameful one where an Ayub lackey (the now departed Ghulam Dastgir Khan, later PMLN MNA from Gujranwala) paraded a dog through the streets asking it if it was really running for office against the general. The irony of course is that in a few years, during the anti-Ayub agitation in 1969, "Ayub kutta maray" became a popular slogan, and people were spray-painting dogs with the word "Ayub."

Ayub's son Gohar, an army captain at that time and later on Speaker of Parliament and Foreign Minister, instigated the first real ethnic riot in Karachi whilst celebrating his father's victory.

I always assumed Ayub to be a better leader of Pakistan something along the lines of Gadaffi.
 
I always assumed Ayub to be a better leader of Pakistan something along the lines of Gadaffi.

He was Pakistan's first native army chief (Generals Messervy and Gracey were British). Within six years, he went from army chief to Defense Minster to participant in a coup to Chief Martial Law Administrator. Later he would style himself President, and then even Field Marshal. He set the precedent for Yahya, Zia and Musharraf to emulate. So "better" can only be used to describe him if one compares him to the unmitigated disasters that were Yahya and Zia.
 
Establishment thugs

In the election, Karachi and Bengal voted for her

Also Ayub called her an Indian agent and got personal with her in a Time article
 
So what was the Public doing when their Mother of Nation was humiliated and later murdered?Why no uprising?How come the public continues to trust the same political parties and the army.How come within a year of Independence the second most important person for that freedom was censored liked this without public outcry?

Also the book of Fatima Jinnah alleges that M A Jinnah didnot hold other leaders of the Muslim League in much respect and she also has alleged that M A Jinnah was denied medical services towards to end of his life.
 
There were many unsavory acts performed during that sham election, including one particularly shameful one where an Ayub lackey (the now departed Ghulam Dastgir Khan, later PMLN MNA from Gujranwala) paraded a dog through the streets asking it if it was really running for office against the general. The irony of course is that in a few years, during the anti-Ayub agitation in 1969, "Ayub kutta maray" became a popular slogan, and people were spray-painting dogs with the word "Ayub."

Ayub's son Gohar, an army captain at that time and later on Speaker of Parliament and Foreign Minister, instigated the first real ethnic riot in Karachi whilst celebrating his father's victory.

Yea that was really sad what these clowns did to mother of the nation many people quotes this story and he was the father of current PMLN minister Khurram Dastageer.
 
So what was the Public doing when their Mother of Nation was humiliated and later murdered?Why no uprising?How come the public continues to trust the same political parties and the army.How come within a year of Independence the second most important person for that freedom was censored liked this without public outcry?

The same questions apply to Zulfiqar Bhutto. Love him or hate him, his hanging/death was a rather quiet affair. I wonder why the Pakistani reaction to the event was so muted.
 
So what was the Public doing when their Mother of Nation was humiliated and later murdered?

We should first state quite clearly that it has not been conclusively demonstrated that she was murdered.

Secondly, we need to acknowledge that Fatima Jinnah’s campaign against Ayub’s regime generated enormous popular enthusiasm, which was crucial in the long-run in undermining Ayub Khan. Ayub’s control of the machinery government and a restricted franchise secured Ayub victory in that presidential election of 1965, but his moral legitimacy to rule was fatally undermined.

Historian Ian Talbot, in his political history of Pakistan, noted:

“Tumultuous crowds had gathered to greet her during a visit to Peshawar from Rawalpindi in October 1962 even before she had publicly manifested support for the anti-regime Council Muslim League. The crush of the crowds was so great that her motorcade took two hours to cover the 6 miles from the heart of the city to her Dean’s Hotel destination. In scenes reminiscent of her late brother’s public acclamations, crowds thronged the streets and balconies along the route in the city, while triumphal arches had been erected on the Attock highway at such places at Pirpai, Pabbi and Nasarpur…

During the [1965 election] campaign, Fatima Jinnah attracted large crowds and took full advantage of the opportunity to deride the authoritarianism of the Ayub regime in her slogan ‘Democracy versus dictatorship’. The 200-mile journey by rail from Dhaka to Chittagong during her week-long tour of East Pakistan lasted twenty-eight hours, such were the tumultuous receptions accorded to her.”

The moral foundations of Ayub’s regime had been shaken. Ayub had won the election, but had lost the Pakistani people. I have quoted Talbot at length above, to highlight the impact of Fatima Jinnah’s campaign, but also to show that 'ordinary' Pakistanis were not just bystanders.
 
I always assumed Ayub to be a better leader of Pakistan something along the lines of Gadaffi.

Ayub was a competent leader. Relatively pacifist, focused on development and good at diplomacy. He was much better for Pakistan than Gaddafi for Libya. But at the end of the day he was still a dictator who did everything possible to hold on to power.
 
Fatima Jinnah,Sister of Mohammad Ali Jinnah and popularly known as Mother of the Nation in Pakistan never had much of a political space in Pakistan.Her book on Jinnah was banned and then censored.It is believed that she wasnt even allowed to give public speeches for a longtime post M A Jinnah's death and he first public speech on Radio Pakistan was also censored.

There is also controversy regarding her death,with many people who were in the know saying she was murdered.

What is the opinion of PPers on this?

Who are these people in the know?
 
Who are these people in the know?

There have been various books published on this and one of the eyewitness accounts was given by the people who gave her ghusl.There mentions of injuries on her body.

Then there are the likes of Shrifuddin Pirzada and Begum Abida sultan
 
Fatima Jinnah,Sister of Mohammad Ali Jinnah and popularly known as Mother of the Nation in Pakistan never had much of a political space in Pakistan.Her book on Jinnah was banned and then censored.It is believed that she wasnt even allowed to give public speeches for a longtime post M A Jinnah's death and he first public speech on Radio Pakistan was also censored.

There is also controversy regarding her death,with many people who were in the know saying she was murdered.

What is the opinion of PPers on this?
She was called Indian agent by the government of Pakistan at that time.
 
Lots of conspiracy theories in this thread, lets be honest, she was just a failed political experiment and it happens all the time, look at Imran Khan, Abdul Sattar Edhi went from being the greatest human ever to a villain went he criticised Imran Khan and supported Musharraf.
 
Lots of conspiracy theories in this thread, lets be honest, she was just a failed political experiment and it happens all the time, look at Imran Khan, Abdul Sattar Edhi went from being the greatest human ever to a villain went he criticised Imran Khan and supported Musharraf.

Do you know anything about her other than her defeat in 1965 election?
 
I personally believe she was assassinated. The pupils of her eyes and other evidence suggested strangulation but to be honest noone knows or atleast there are some doubts.

Our 'democracy' since the beginning has been nothing but a sham.

Isnt it ironic that she was killed by a dictator and his cronies and you are calling democracy a sham?
 
Isnt it ironic that she was killed by a dictator and his cronies and you are calling democracy a sham?

Just because we have had dictators does not mean our democracy ISN'T a sham.

Corruption, nepotism, alleged election riggings, target killings by political parties, no justice system to speak off, positions handed to family members....yeah, what a democratic country.
 
In Pakistan anybody challenging the status quo or raising a voice for the downtrodden is sidelined. Happened with Fatima Jinnah, happened with Commander Asghar Khan in the 80-90s and now happening with Imran Khan.

The thugs, looters and corrupt always rise to the occasion and suppress the rising of the good. No wonder we are in this state at the moment, and will continue to do so for a while until the next saviour comes along only to see himself shunned.
 
Yea that was really sad what these clowns did to mother of the nation many people quotes this story and he was the father of current PMLN minister Khurram Dastageer.

I remember when Ghulam Dastgir Khan was MNA during 1997-1999, he started promoting Khurram to eventually take over the family gaddi a.k.a National Assembly seat. Khurram started writing articles (or had them written by someone) in The News, mainly focused on technological or economic issues, and appearing on TV in suits, very carefully putting on an educated air.

I guess it worked. He can use his father's paindoo legacy in Gujranwala, and his foreign degree to land a ministerial post.
 
This thread has been educational about the similarities between Fatima Jinnah, Edhi and great Imran Khan.
 
Pakistan was created for the poor but hijacked by the elite waderas with the help from the military and they suppressed any voice which was raised against them. Sad part is, average Pakistanis don't read or care much about history.
 
Fatima Jinnah and Bacha Khan two great leaders who didnt lead Pakistan,instead Ayub Khan,Yahya Khan,Zia Ul Haq led Pakistan.

Infact the only democrartic leader of any repute that Pakistan had was ZAB and he was not that great either.

Its sad that such leaders didnt get a chance to shape Pakistan and contribute to the subcontinent's development.
 
Fatima Jinnah and Bacha Khan two great leaders who didnt lead Pakistan,instead Ayub Khan,Yahya Khan,Zia Ul Haq led Pakistan.

Infact the only democrartic leader of any repute that Pakistan had was ZAB and he was not that great either.

Its sad that such leaders didnt get a chance to shape Pakistan and contribute to the subcontinent's development.

Such has unfortunate history of Pakistan. Full of dictatorships and corrupt politicians.

Insha'Allah Imran Khan will open a new chapter in this country's abysmal political history, when Sharifs/Bhuttos runaway.
 
Such has unfortunate history of Pakistan. Full of dictatorships and corrupt politicians.

Insha'Allah Imran Khan will open a new chapter in this country's abysmal political history, when Sharifs/Bhuttos runaway.

Unfortunately Imran don't have age on side (64 already) and even with all the corruption i can still see PMLN winning in 2018 elections so i don't have much hope. I just hope after Imran people like Asad Omar will lead PTI and continue his movement.
 
Unfortunately Imran don't have age on side (64 already) and even with all the corruption i can still see PMLN winning in 2018 elections so i don't have much hope. I just hope after Imran people like Asad Omar will lead PTI and continue his movement.

How is the party of Bacha Khan doing?Are they popular?Are they any close to the ideology of Bacha Khan?
 
How is the party of Bacha Khan doing?Are they popular?Are they any close to the ideology of Bacha Khan?

Not really they are more into pakhtoon nationalism than democracy and were heavily involve in corruption. They are limited to KP province only. They were the ruling party in KP from 2008-2013 when PPP was in Fed Govt and both parties broke all the records of corruption. In 2013 Imran's party won KP province and ANP (Bacha Khan) party had to face a heavy defeat thanks to their performance in last 5 years. KP have seen historical improvement in last 3 years of PTI govt so i think they will become the first party after a long time to win KP province twice in a row and i can't seen ANP winning KP again anytime soon.

The best thing about KP people is that majority of them don't vote blindly like Sindhis for PPP, Punjabis for PMLN and Muhajirs for MQM. To give you an idea of how KP people vote:

2013-Now (PTI)
2008-2013 (ANP, Bacha Khan Party)
2002-2007 (MMA, Molvis)
1997-1999 (PMLN, Nawaz Shareef Party)
1994-1996 (PPP, Benazir Party)

We do criticize and make jokes of Pathans all the time but they are more smart than us when it comes to voting :yk

FATA is going to be integrated in KP soon so it will be interesting to see how things change politically because FATA was always the stronghold of Independent candidates.
 
2013-Now (PTI)
2008-2013 (ANP, Bacha Khan Party)
2002-2007 (MMA, Molvis)
1997-1999 (PMLN, Nawaz Shareef Party)
1994-1996 (PPP, Benazir Party)

How were there so many elections in that province considering that Pakistan went through several periods of military rule during the time?
 
How were there so many elections in that province considering that Pakistan went through several periods of military rule during the time?

Mush Military rule was from 1999-2007 you can't call it pure democratic but there were elections under him and (so only MMA victory in KP as party came during Mush era) and Zia rule was back in 80s.

From 1989 to 1999 we saw 4 fed govts not because of military rule but because of PMLN vs PPP dramas and establishment. You can't even imagine the dirty and cheap politics we have seen back in 90s specially from PMLN. There were even fake pics of benazir without dress published in newspapers to destroy her image. After Zia died and military rule ended the party that won the first election in Fed was PPP and Benazir becomes the PM of Pakistan in 1988.

Nawaz Sharif and other opposition leaders made IJI (an alliance of opp parties backed by establishment) against Benazir Govt and DG ISI of that time said in Supreme Court that Nawaz and IJI received funding from ISI which resulted in an end to Benazir govt within 2 years and Nawaz become PM in 1990. Now Nawaz had other plans and tried to control Military and during his time an Amry Chief who wasn't in good books Nawaz died and his death was mystery although claimed to be a heart attack.

Next Army Chief Kakar sent both PM Nawaz and President Ishaq home and announced new elections when President of that time dissolves National Assembly and dismisses Nawaz Sharif government.

Benazir party again won federal and she become second time PM in 1993 and in 1996 it become really hard for Benazir to continue because of the situation and all those corruption scandals specially after her own brother assassination by Police under his own govt. President of that time Laghari and Benazir become enemies because of the issues between them and Benazir and her govt was sent home by President and new elections called so Nawaz become PM once again in 1997 and in 1999 Mush took over thanks to PM Nawaz habit of panga with Army.

Our politics specially in 90s and 70s is full of dramas and dirty and cheap politics of parties also resulted in derailing democracy so Army/Establishment alone wasn't responsible as many people claim.

A point note is that President of Pakistan had the power to dissolve the National Assembly because of the 58 2b but in last govt of PPP (2008-2013) this power was taken away from President so now President can't dissolve the National Assembly anymore.
 
[MENTION=135445]Strike Rate[/MENTION] - cheers for the lengthy reply!
 
Not really they are more into pakhtoon nationalism than democracy and were heavily involve in corruption. They are limited to KP province only. They were the ruling party in KP from 2008-2013 when PPP was in Fed Govt and both parties broke all the records of corruption. In 2013 Imran's party won KP province and ANP (Bacha Khan) party had to face a heavy defeat thanks to their performance in last 5 years. KP have seen historical improvement in last 3 years of PTI govt so i think they will become the first party after a long time to win KP province twice in a row and i can't seen ANP winning KP again anytime soon.

The best thing about KP people is that majority of them don't vote blindly like Sindhis for PPP, Punjabis for PMLN and Muhajirs for MQM. To give you an idea of how KP people vote:

2013-Now (PTI)
2008-2013 (ANP, Bacha Khan Party)
2002-2007 (MMA, Molvis)
1997-1999 (PMLN, Nawaz Shareef Party)
1994-1996 (PPP, Benazir Party)

We do criticize and make jokes of Pathans all the time but they are more smart than us when it comes to voting :yk

FATA is going to be integrated in KP soon so it will be interesting to see how things change politically because FATA was always the stronghold of Independent candidates.

That is impressive from KPK people indeed, now if Imran Khan hasn't delievered in KPK (as PMLN media would like you to believe) then they would most likely be rejected by people of KPK and i would be fine with that as they don't blindly vote for any party, they even rejected ANP who claimed to official representatives of Pashtuns but failed to deliver (I wish people of Khi could do same with MQM). But if KPK votes for PTI again then what excuse would people in other provinces have?
 
The people who made Pakistan, sacrificed and loved this country, were thrown out, defamed, deprived of their rights, murdered, some labelled Indian agent(a classical label used as tool to defame people)

The thieves, gangsters, corrupts, low class, uneducated, moral-less, dignity-less, dishonest people with no fear of God, who think the land in which Pakistan was created was and is their birth-right, while all others are supposed to be their slaves, have in the past and are still ruling this country.

Fatimah Jinnah a victim of oppression by power hungry, disloyal fools.
 
That is impressive from KPK people indeed, now if Imran Khan hasn't delievered in KPK (as PMLN media would like you to believe) then they would most likely be rejected by people of KPK and i would be fine with that as they don't blindly vote for any party, they even rejected ANP who claimed to official representatives of Pashtuns but failed to deliver (I wish people of Khi could do same with MQM). But if KPK votes for PTI again then what excuse would people in other provinces have?

Deliver or go home is their policy when it comes to voting so we will get a better idea in 2018 elections. So far most people i met from from KP only had good things to say about PTI govt there.
 
Whats your opinion of Bacha Khan?

Although Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (Bacha Khan) and many other leaders who later participated in politics of Pakistan were against the partition but i still respect their views as democratic leaders. For example Maududi a religious and political leader and the founder of Jamaat-e-Islami had many things to say against Jinnah and creation of Pakistan but today his party is doing politics on the name of Jinnah and Iqbal and you will see their picture everywhere during their conferences and meetings.
 
Although Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (Bacha Khan) and many other leaders who later participated in politics of Pakistan were against the partition but i still respect their views as democratic leaders. For example Maududi a religious and political leader and the founder of Jamaat-e-Islami had many things to say against Jinnah and creation of Pakistan but today his party is doing politics on the name of Jinnah and Iqbal and you will see their picture everywhere during their conferences and meetings.

Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan predicted a lot of things that may go wrong for Pakistan and most of them have.Religious extremism being one of them.He also predicted that KPK will become a buffer kind of land for rest of Pakistan againist violence from Afghanistan.Again proven right. Bacha Khan isnt a Jamaati never was,he was a humanist.If he wanted power he was offered a very high ranking post in India and could have one day become India's PM.

Fatima Jinnah,Bacha Khan etc are often viled as being opposed to two nation theory,when the divide was actually on principles of division.

All this was done so that actual popular,selfless,visionary leaders never get to run the country.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hailed as Mother of Nation, Fatima Jinnah was quickly termed an Indian Agent after she challenged Ayub regime in the 1965 elections. In this pamphlet, she is accused of supporting conspiracy to form Pashtunistan. Dark legacy of false accusation haunts us even today. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/FatimaJinnah?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#FatimaJinnah</a> <a href="https://t.co/nzXQUZtEiG">pic.twitter.com/nzXQUZtEiG</a></p>— Ammar Ali Jan (@ammaralijan) <a href="https://twitter.com/ammaralijan/status/1148540952019197952?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 9, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Lorlalai is on my ignore list but I'd hazard a guess he's blaming the establishment (correctly) but then again that was the same establishment which had Bhutto as its minister and then later on which gave birth to Nawaz. Our friend ofcourse has selective amnesia.
 
Army has never allowed a popular leader in Pakistan. They believe a leader with public support is a threat to their powers. They always play same dirty games to them. Label them traitors, Indian agents, corrupt, incompetent, enemy of Pakistan & eventually close their chapter. Past victims: Fatima, AG Khan, Bacha Khan, ZAB, Benazir, Present victims: Altaf, Nawaz, Wali, PTM, Future victims: Imran Khan, Maryam, Bilawal.

All leaders had their own flaws but honestly never allowed any space. Also, Pak Army had been extremely efficient in propaganda campaigns to neutralize public support for them.
 
She was most likely killed by those who did not want her to carry the Quaid's legacy and political idea's.
 
Army has never allowed a popular leader in Pakistan. They believe a leader with public support is a threat to their powers. They always play same dirty games to them. Label them traitors, Indian agents, corrupt, incompetent, enemy of Pakistan & eventually close their chapter. Past victims: Fatima, AG Khan, Bacha Khan, ZAB, Benazir, Present victims: Altaf, Nawaz, Wali, PTM, Future victims: Imran Khan, Maryam, Bilawal.

All leaders had their own flaws but honestly never allowed any space. Also, Pak Army had been extremely efficient in propaganda campaigns to neutralize public support for them.

I believe it the opposite. We never got strong dynamic and strong leaders after Quaid and to some extent Liaquat Ali Khan. From 1947 through 1956 we couldn't get anything done. No constitution, no land reforms. Went through 11 prime ministers. That uncertainty emboldened the likes of Iskander Mirza (Descendent of Mir Jafar) to usurp power. Even then, the courts legalized the take over! They could have taken the stand? And then did the people take to the streets in mass protests?

Military has played its part, but civilians have never been upto the task. Bacha Khan, Wali Khan et al were more anti Pakistanis and not victims.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hailed as Mother of Nation, Fatima Jinnah was quickly termed an Indian Agent after she challenged Ayub regime in the 1965 elections. In this pamphlet, she is accused of supporting conspiracy to form Pashtunistan. Dark legacy of false accusation haunts us even today. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/FatimaJinnah?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#FatimaJinnah</a> <a href="https://t.co/nzXQUZtEiG">pic.twitter.com/nzXQUZtEiG</a></p>— Ammar Ali Jan (@ammaralijan) <a href="https://twitter.com/ammaralijan/status/1148540952019197952?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 9, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Army has never allowed a popular leader in Pakistan. They believe a leader with public support is a threat to their powers. They always play same dirty games to them. Label them traitors, Indian agents, corrupt, incompetent, enemy of Pakistan & eventually close their chapter.



Tried to close their chapters and failed and will fail in future aswell.




<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Remembering Fatima Jinnah, Mother of the Nation on her 52nd Anniversary. May Allah bless her soul. Aamen. <a href="https://t.co/GhuCgMXdhZ">pic.twitter.com/GhuCgMXdhZ</a></p>— Asif Ghafoor (@peaceforchange) <a href="https://twitter.com/peaceforchange/status/1148564712222797829?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 9, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>




<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="ur" dir="rtl">محترمہ فاطمہ جناح کے انتقال کو آج 52 برس ہوگئے ۔ غدار بنانے کی فیکٹری چلانے والوں نے انہیں بھی غدار اور بھارتی ایجنٹ قرار دیا۔ آج تاریخ انہیں اچھے اور غداری کا فتویٰ بانٹنے والے کو برے الفاظ میں یاد کرتی ہے۔ <br><br>مگر غدار بنانے کی فیکٹری آج بھی چل رہی ہے۔ <a href="https://t.co/kX6XfojZlY">pic.twitter.com/kX6XfojZlY</a></p>— Shahzeb Khanzada (@shazbkhanzdaGEO) <a href="https://twitter.com/shazbkhanzdaGEO/status/1148685449545867264?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 9, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
[B]What Fatima Jinnah told those who tampered with her speech[/B]

Those who read my previous blog on the late Miss Fatima Jinnah’s censored speech in 1951 on Radio Pakistan and her burial, came forth with countless interesting comments. Some of them even claimed that I had misinterpreted history.

I would like to take this opportunity to state, quite candidly, that the facts I brought to light were facts indeed.

To prove the point that Miss Jinnah’s speech was indeed censored, I had referenced Qudratullah Shahab’s book. Some friends were still dissatisfied, claiming it was impossible, though they did not say the book was full of lies. In fact, most of them they had not read the books. I had to repeat the entire presentation of evidence to satisfy those in a state of denial.

I would like to put forth the evidence for the readers as well.

After Miss Jinnah’s censored radio broadcast, the correspondence between Mr Z.A. Bukhari and her is a vital historical record of the time. One of the most interesting facts is that Ms Jinnah had actually welcomed Ayub Khan’s coup and the dismissal of Iskandar Mirza’s government. She had expressed ‘contentment’ over the matter.

In Mohtarma Fatima Jinnah: Speeches, Messages and Statements (1947-67), compiled by Jamil Ahmed, readers will find the content of the letters exchanged between Z.A. Bukhari and Ms Jinnah on pages 59 and 60:

Letter of apology to Miss Jinnah by the controller of broadcasting, Mr Z.A. Bukhari

"I once again heartily apologise over the technical problem during your speech broadcast last night. We had encountered a technical fault in our generators the previous Saturday. We had tried our best to provide full power to our transmitters yesterday during the national broadcast. Sadly, we could not do so, resulting in some faults during the transmission, which were noticed by our listeners and our transmitter monitors. However, I ensure you that even after the technical problem, the flow of your speech was not disturbed. This can be verified in the reports by our regional stations."

Ms Jinnah’s reply

“This is in response to your letter on behalf of the PUJ (Reference No. 51/1(61)), received on 12 September, 1951. On the 11th of September, you had requested the copy of the broadcast which was duly sent to you at 7:00pm. At 8:00pm you had called on me at my residence in a stressful condition. With sad expressions, you had requested that I omit certain parts of my speech. To which I had replied, sans any emotional aspiration, that if one does not enjoy the freedom of expression in a democratic country, I would like to withdraw my speech instead of changing it, as it was on your request that I had agreed for the speech in the first place.

“As usual, you asked me to listen to the recorded speech after the broadcast, which sounded perfect. It is astonishing that neither you, nor anyone from your staff even mentioned the technical problem in the transmitters at that time. I came to know about the technical problems while I was on my way to my residence. It is also a matter of wonderment for me that the very sentences that you requested to omit from the speech were the ones which could not be broadcast due to the technical problem.

“It seems your transmitters are very obedient and submissive as they are always ready to create technical problems in order to facilitate you.

“The people who tried to create problems in my original speech, and stopped my voice from reaching the people, and tried to omit certain sentences of my speech, have in fact highlighted the importance (of these sentences) to the people. You mentioned in your letter that your regional stations reported about the flow of my speech. Had it been so, you would not have taken the trouble to apologise.

“As far as complaints by the people are concerned, it is your duty to satisfy them. Your explanation is neither satisfying, nor assuring. In such a case, an apology is merely a soft version of pleading guilty and admitting to one’s crime.”


Z.A. Bukhari was not only a praiseworthy broadcaster, but a disciplined administrator, too. One can only wonder if it was a personal dislike he had satisfied, or the pressure of the government that he bent his rules for, but he was responsible for censoring Miss Jinnah’s speech.

Burhanuddin Hassan writes about Bukhari in his book Pus-e-Purdah, pages 35-36:

“During the first decade of Pakistan’s independence, the political leaders and the respective parties were so occupied in the political conspiracies that they seldom used the radio as a means for publicity of the personalities or the policies of the government. The Information Minister was a junior bureaucrat who neither had the influence nor the professional ability to control senior personnel like Z.A. Bukhari or Ghani Arabi.

“One particular incident had turned into a famous joke with almost all the intellectual and journalist circles in those times:

"Once, the journalist who had been chosen by the government to be the Information Minister had come to visit Radio Pakistan’s broadcasting house. During the minister’s meeting with Z.A. Bukhari, the office peon brought in tea. Bukhari sahib stood up, took the tray from the peon and respectfully placed it in front of the minister, to which the minister said, 'We are old friends. You do not have to flatter me only because I’ve become a government minister.'

"Bukhari sahib replied, 'I’m not trying to flatter you. Instead, I’m making sure my peon does not hold any grudge against me. You see, I’m afraid one day even he might become a minister.'"

In 1958, Ms Fatima Jinnah had expressed satisfaction over the dismissal of the Iskandar Mirza government by the military dictator Ayub Khan. A few major reasons were political instability, authoritarianism and corruption. Those were times of social and economic troubles.

Jamil Ahmed, in his book mentioned earlier, writes on pages 280-81 that in 1958, when the Iskandar Mirza government was dismissed by Ayub Khan, Ms Fatima Jinnah issued this statement:

“In the political context, as Major General Iskandar Mirza’s government is dismissed, the people breathe a sigh of relief. In the past three years, during which he was the premier of the country, he [Mirza] had solved not a single problem. Instead, discrimination and differences were catalysed, bringing Pakistan to the verge of political and economic destruction. The people had been cornered as mere spectators, while they faced all sorts of problems and social ills.

“General Ayub Khan’s government is the beginning of a new era. The armed forces have taken up the responsibility of eradicating social ills and electoral rigging and other misdemeanours, so that the situation in the country can be normalised and the people can have trust, security and stability.

“I hope and pray that God will bestow upon them the power and the wisdom to help them succeed in their mission. For the past three weeks, the people have been spending their days in comfort and contentment, which is proof enough that they are satisfied and that they understand the situation. We have a mission in front of us that we eliminate all those powers that have imposed themselves upon us, and that we bring the country back to stabilisation so that we can carry on treading the path of true democracy. We should make it our motto to rise from personal gains and self-centredness in order to serve the country. It all depends on you and your patriotism.

God willing, these dark days will soon end, and Pakistan shall soon acquire that status among the nations of the world which the Quaid-i-Azam had dreamed of. Move forward in the status of a nation with your faith, unity and discipline.

Surely, Fatima Jinnah had no idea at the time that she would have to lead the movement to rid Pakistan of Ayub Khan’s dictatorship.

Ayub Khan, too, did not have the idea that Fatima Jinnah would create problems for him. He was sure of his success. And so it happened. He had won the presidential elections, but the results had given him a shock.

Burhanuddin Hassan writes in his book (mentioned earlier) on pages 55-56:

Presidential Elections of 1965

“Ayub Khan’s information secretary and his biographer Altaf Gohar have painted a good sketch of the time when, after winning the presidential election, President-elect Ayub Khan was preparing for his speech broadcast:

“'Ayub Khan’s speech was to be broadcast at 10:00pm that night, but after 7:00pm, flatterers had gathered around Ayub Khan in order to present to him with recommendations as to what should he be speaking of in his ‘victory’ speech. The Information Secretary had already prepared his speech. Ayub Khan read that very speech without any touch of emotion in his tone of voice. For hours, he carried an expression of stress on his face. It was because of the realisation that he had almost lost the election and that a large number of people had rejected the constitutional reforms that he had implemented. Out of the 80,000 basic democracy members, 49,951 had voted in his favour, while a substantially large number of 38,691 members had voted against him. It was West Pakistan that had actually won him the election with 21,012 votes in his favour, and 18,434 votes against him. Except Karachi, all the divisions and districts were Ayub’s strongholds.'"


All the above information is based on facts. It is a merciless endeavor to be a historian.

The information staring you in the face can be shocking, sometimes. It can force you to rethink long-held truths that you always took for granted. History writers, prone to be biased against their times, rulers or certain people, always restrict the readers' perspectives.

Such historians may succeed, but only for a little while.

After the lies have lived their short lives out, people start asking the inevitable questions. And, when do not get the answers to their questions from others, they start the search themselves.

And that is the right thing to do.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1162928
 
The fact that people still support the army and their agenda after what they did to F. Jinnah sums up how strong their propaganda is. One of the darkest chapters of our history and something that is not allowed to discuss in public forums.
 
The ppl who whine the loudest about not holding the failsons and daughters of political leaders responsible for the sins of their fathers are avid conspiracy theorists who don’t see the irony in blaming the military today for the sins of its past
 
The ppl who whine the loudest about not holding the failsons and daughters of political leaders responsible for the sins of their fathers are avid conspiracy theorists who don’t see the irony in blaming the military today for the sins of its past


O Come On. Don’t try hard my friend. Give up.



Abi tou aik Judge aor aik Chairman NAB benaqaab huay hein... wait wait wait



Former Chief Justice Saqib Nisar & one other member of the SC bench disqualifying a three times Prime a Minister of Pakistan for not taking pay from his Son and declaring it are also going to be exposed.



One day the thugs who either kidnap, kill, make false drugs cases, honey trap judges will be in court of law and than all paid trolls of Establishment and the beneficiaries of thug brigade will bow down infront of Rule of Law.



Meray Aziz ye siyasatdaan he hein jo k sheeshay k gharoun mein rehtay hein aor awaam k liye Jaali Accountability drive aor personal videos se yarghamaal munsiffoun se dictated sazaein kaatne aa jaatay hein. Werna in videos aor iss jaali Ehtesaab ko Australia, Canada, UK mein pesh ker k wahan asylum le letay.



Mulki Diffah wa Salaamti k idaaray 72 saal se ye Ganda khel khel rahay hein. Major Arshad Sharif of Ary se puch lou.



<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/HoneyTrap?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#HoneyTrap</a> is an old tool...<br>The Times ...”intelligence agency was sending the girls and the judges were enjoying it without knowing they were being filmed. Now they have videos of several judges” ...<a href="https://t.co/RThJXoSQe7">https://t.co/RThJXoSQe7</a></p>— Arshad Sharif (@arsched) <a href="https://twitter.com/arsched/status/1147763255261237248?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 7, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Murdered, slandered posthumously, and her religious beliefs whitewashed. Her brother, left on the side of the road, breathing his last passing into the abyss as numerous went by with not a care or thought. His religious beliefs too whitewashed and his community marginalized. Grand sacrifices for the sake of an ungrateful nation.
 
O Come On. Don’t try hard my friend. Give up.



Abi tou aik Judge aor aik Chairman NAB benaqaab huay hein... wait wait wait



Former Chief Justice Saqib Nisar & one other member of the SC bench disqualifying a three times Prime a Minister of Pakistan for not taking pay from his Son and declaring it are also going to be exposed.



One day the thugs who either kidnap, kill, make false drugs cases, honey trap judges will be in court of law and than all paid trolls of Establishment and the beneficiaries of thug brigade will bow down infront of Rule of Law.



Meray Aziz ye siyasatdaan he hein jo k sheeshay k gharoun mein rehtay hein aor awaam k liye Jaali Accountability drive aor personal videos se yarghamaal munsiffoun se dictated sazaein kaatne aa jaatay hein. Werna in videos aor iss jaali Ehtesaab ko Australia, Canada, UK mein pesh ker k wahan asylum le letay.



Mulki Diffah wa Salaamti k idaaray 72 saal se ye Ganda khel khel rahay hein. Major Arshad Sharif of Ary se puch lou.



<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/HoneyTrap?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#HoneyTrap</a> is an old tool...<br>The Times ...”intelligence agency was sending the girls and the judges were enjoying it without knowing they were being filmed. Now they have videos of several judges” ...<a href="https://t.co/RThJXoSQe7">https://t.co/RThJXoSQe7</a></p>— Arshad Sharif (@arsched) <a href="https://twitter.com/arsched/status/1147763255261237248?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 7, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Videotaping sitting justices (yet to be established if genuine or otherwise) to undermine the judiciary. Disrespect for judges is a sharif family tradition.
Father lead the ransacking of the Supreme Court in the 90’s
Now daughter scoring own goals on judges that actually acquitted her father.
Stupid and Corrupt is a deadly combo.
 
Murdered, slandered posthumously, and her religious beliefs whitewashed. Her brother, left on the side of the road, breathing his last passing into the abyss as numerous went by with not a care or thought. His religious beliefs too whitewashed and his community marginalized. Grand sacrifices for the sake of an ungrateful nation.


How do you know it’s ungrateful nation or did you get carried away with rhetorical flourish
 
The fact that people still support the army and their agenda after what they did to F. Jinnah sums up how strong their propaganda is. One of the darkest chapters of our history and something that is not allowed to discuss in public forums.

That's very different from what I heard. I thought it was heart failure? But I'm ignorant on this matter, so if you could shed some light, I would be grateful.
 
That's very different from what I heard. I thought it was heart failure? But I'm ignorant on this matter, so if you could shed some light, I would be grateful.

This is a very detailed topic so to make it clear, I would provide a very brief summary.

Fatima Jinnah was against military dictatorship. She lived by the words of her brother who stated the following:

“Do not forget that the armed forces are the servants of the people. You do not make national policy; it is we, the civilians, who decide these issues and it is your duty to carry out these tasks with which you are entrusted."

The people of Pakistan who support military interference in politics and also celebrate the legacy of Quaid-e-Azam should not forget his words.

7 years after taking over the country in 1958, Gen. Ayub arranged an election in 1965, hoping that he would sweep it which would have strengthened his rule. However, the opposition nominated Fatima Jinnah to contest him in a Presidential election, which she agreed to after some hesitation.

As a result, he came up with all sorts of allegations against her and called her pro-American (the irony) and pro-Indian, and the 1965 election turned out to be the most rigged election in history of Pakistan. Fatima Jinnah won the popular vote but Gen. Ayub used everything within his powers to keep her at bay.

Two years after the farcical election, she was found dead. The official statement was that she died because of heart failure, but it is commonly believed that she was murdered by the military establishment. The following article is quite interesting:

Ghulam Sarwar Malik had written in his application that he was a respectable citizen of Pakistan and had utmost respect for Ms Fatima Jinnah. She was a great leader and an asset for the nation. She dedicated her life to democracy and upholding the law. In 1964, when she contested elections against Ayub Khan, she became a beacon of hope for the people of the country. She was a hurdle in the way of the group that wanted to remain in power. This particular group wanted to get rid of her by all means.

On July 7, 1967, Miss Fatima Jinnah had attended a wedding ceremony and everyone witnessed that she was in sound health.

On July 9, 1967, it was suddenly announced that she had passed away. During her funeral, no common man was allowed to go near her dead body. No one was allowed to see her face for the last time before she was buried. Those who tried to do so, were baton-charged and dealt with tear gas.


There were rumors that the mother of the nation had visible marks of wounds on her body.

Malik Ghulam Sarwar said further that he had concerns that Mohtarma Fatima Jinnah was murdered. Later, Hassan A. Shaikh and other respected individuals, too, expressed similar concerns. The matter has The matter has also been highlighted in newspapers. Some even wrote editorials on it.

On August 2, 1971, a local Urdu newspaper published a news report which claimed that Miss Fatima Jinnah had been murdered. The report included interviews of the people who had given her the ghusl – ritualistic bath given to the dead before burial, as per Islamic tradition. In case of state personalities, people are hired to do the job.

The news item quotes one of these hired men – Hidayat Ali aka Kallu Ghusl – as saying that the corpse of Miss Fatima Jinnah had visible wounds on it, and there was an opening in her stomach which oozed blood and other fluids. Her bloodstained clothes were also with him as evidence. However, he said, no one from the administration paid any attention to his requests of inquiry, nor was the matter ever made public.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1159181

The treatment of Fatima Jinnah is one of the many, many examples of how the military establishment has always acted to serve their own interests, even if these interests have come at the expense of the welfare of the country.
 
This is a very detailed topic so to make it clear, I would provide a very brief summary.

Fatima Jinnah was against military dictatorship. She lived by the words of her brother who stated the following:

“Do not forget that the armed forces are the servants of the people. You do not make national policy; it is we, the civilians, who decide these issues and it is your duty to carry out these tasks with which you are entrusted."

The people of Pakistan who support military interference in politics and also celebrate the legacy of Quaid-e-Azam should not forget his words.

7 years after taking over the country in 1958, Gen. Ayub arranged an election in 1965, hoping that he would sweep it which would have strengthened his rule. However, the opposition nominated Fatima Jinnah to contest him in a Presidential election, which she agreed to after some hesitation.

As a result, he came up with all sorts of allegations against her and called her pro-American (the irony) and pro-Indian, and the 1965 election turned out to be the most rigged election in history of Pakistan. Fatima Jinnah won the popular vote but Gen. Ayub used everything within his powers to keep her at bay.

Two years after the farcical election, she was found dead. The official statement was that she died because of heart failure, but it is commonly believed that she was murdered by the military establishment. The following article is quite interesting:



https://www.dawn.com/news/1159181

The treatment of Fatima Jinnah is one of the many, many examples of how the military establishment has always acted to serve their own interests, even if these interests have come at the expense of the welfare of the country.

Much appreciated Mamoon.

From your concluding I can understand why you detest the military so much why you feel they are hampering the progress of this country. It's time government stop funding and empowering the military so much.
 
This is a very detailed topic so to make it clear, I would provide a very brief summary.

Fatima Jinnah was against military dictatorship. She lived by the words of her brother who stated the following:

“Do not forget that the armed forces are the servants of the people. You do not make national policy; it is we, the civilians, who decide these issues and it is your duty to carry out these tasks with which you are entrusted."

The people of Pakistan who support military interference in politics and also celebrate the legacy of Quaid-e-Azam should not forget his words.

7 years after taking over the country in 1958, Gen. Ayub arranged an election in 1965, hoping that he would sweep it which would have strengthened his rule. However, the opposition nominated Fatima Jinnah to contest him in a Presidential election, which she agreed to after some hesitation.

As a result, he came up with all sorts of allegations against her and called her pro-American (the irony) and pro-Indian, and the 1965 election turned out to be the most rigged election in history of Pakistan. Fatima Jinnah won the popular vote but Gen. Ayub used everything within his powers to keep her at bay.

Two years after the farcical election, she was found dead. The official statement was that she died because of heart failure, but it is commonly believed that she was murdered by the military establishment. The following article is quite interesting:



https://www.dawn.com/news/1159181

The treatment of Fatima Jinnah is one of the many, many examples of how the military establishment has always acted to serve their own interests, even if these interests have come at the expense of the welfare of the country.
Very informative post.

Mamoon now I get why you dislike the Army so much.

Everything has a reason.

We often tend to criticize a person before knowing and analyzing the issue.
 
Very informative post.

Mamoon now I get why you dislike the Army so much.

Everything has a reason.

We often tend to criticize a person before knowing and analyzing the issue.

They crippled our nation and made us into a laughing stock. Unfortunately we still can't realise the damage they have inflicted.
 
I have just completed reading Reza Pirbhai’s book, Fatima Jinnah: Mother of the Nation. In writing his book, Pirbhai is clearly hampered by the lack of public pronouncements by his subject until the 1940s and by source material. It would appear that the Fatima Jinnah papers are made up of largely correspondence addressed to her and less of anything she wrote. This results in three things: despite his professed intentions of disentangling Fatima from her brother, until the death of the Quaid she often remains in his shadows in this account. It also means the narrative on her life often gets sidetracked by discussion of the views of other prominent elite women, notably Jahanara Shah Nawaz and Shaista Ikramullah. It means, finally, the author is often left to speculate on Fatima’s opinions on political developments, especially before 1940.

Nevertheless interesting points emerge.

Firstly, we are reminded that the Jinnah family was not a great aristocratic family. They were not from the regions of India that once formed the heartlands of Muslim power. Nor did they emerge from landed gentry families. They belonged to a minority sect in Islam. The names of their parents were “indistinguishable from those of the Hindus they lived amongst.” It appears a cosmopolitan upbringing, with Fatima spending time in the cities of Karachi, Bombay and Calcutta. They also attained financial independence. This is all relevant for understanding how the Quaid and Fatima did not need to rely on patronage from benefactors and could therefore transcend petty politics. Their upbringing must also have shaped their inclusive and non-sectarian understandings of Islam. Both Fatima and her brother would from the 1940s come to advocate an “ecumenical and supra-ethnic Muslim nationalism.”

Secondly, Fatima was certainly a figure in some ways ahead of her time. In an era when people generally disapproved of women seeking professional independence, she trained as a dental surgeon and with the help of her brother set-up a dental clinic in Bombay in 1923, the first Muslim women to do so in British India. Striking too was how she shared the public stage with her brother in the last decade. They even toured Baluchistan despite the long-standing tradition of purdah in the region. But Pirbhai stressed that she was not a mere symbol in this decade, she also worked behind the scenes as “guide, facilitator and liaison for women.” He quotes Shaista Ikramullah, “so many women now [1950s] doing important work for Pakistan were given their first job to do by Miss Jinnah.”

Thirdly, Fatima’s role in the freedom campaign and in the aftermath of partition more broadly reminds us of the role women played in the civil disobedience campaigns in the 194os and in providing relief and rehabilitation to refugees after 1947. In the mass mobilisation in the 1940s, women picketed, trespassed, sat-in. Even in the Frontier province, women took to the streets in large numbers. It is a history too often neglected as most accounts on the period continue to focus on discussions by middle aged men in smoke filled rooms. Elite Women were also at forefront when it came to relief and rehabilitation activities following the awful violence of partition. Fatima herself was involved in raising money, managing bank accounts, dealing with donations and establishing institutions for destitute refugees.

Fourthly, we understand a little more clearly the basis of her moral authority. This rested, like her brother, on her reputation for probity and strong sense of propriety. This comes through when she declines politely Ayub Khan’s request to act as Patron of the Quaid-i Azam Memorial Fund. It also rested on her aloofness from the day to day political wrangling. This moral authority was one reason why opposition parties that had constructed a united front to confront Ayub Khan persuaded her to run as their presidential candidate. Even the Jamaat-i Islami - a party hardly known for its enlightened view on the participation of women in public life - supported her candidacy, citing the unique circumstances which necessitated backing a “candidate who is selfless, determined, incorruptible, upright and fearless.”

Fifthly, flowing from her status and moral authority, after her brother’s death she became recipient of a number of letters of complaints from disenchanted Pakistanis. The idealism and sense of wonder that Pakistan generated inevitably led to disappointments when hopes were not fulfilled. There were letters to her from refugees complaining about housing. Letters complaining about corruption of lower level state functionaries and mid level bureaucrats. Minorities and women also addressed grievances to her.

Sixthly, in her pronouncements she espoused the ideals of Islamic modernism, or what Pirbhai prefers to call “nonclerical New Islam.” There was an emphasis on the ethical and social, as opposed to legal, aspects of Islam. In a speech at Sir Syed Girls’ college she spoke of education and that in this context “Islam was first to recognize the existence of an individual as a social being. In all forms of manifestation of Islam, an individual is not allowed to flourish apart from his community … In the present age of individualism, it is most essential to clearly understand this conception.” Pirbhai makes the interesting point that compared with elite Muslim women elsewhere in the Muslim world at the time, “South Asian Muslim women were more firmly bound to Islamic sources of legitimation than their Egyptian, Turkish or Iranian counterparts.”

Fatima Jinnah was clearly remarkable figure. Like her brother she did not suffer fools gladly. When Ayub mildly raised some concerns over Fatima’s public statements, her rebuke to him was stern. This was someone of independent mind, strong sense of self-worth and fearlessness. The spirit of Fatima Jinnah, despite the travails of Pakistan and the narrowing of space for tolerant visions, has not been entirely lost.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Remembering Madr-e Millat Fatima Jinnah: A woman of strength & iron Will, she was a source of strength for her brother Quaid e Azam, till he breathed his last. She valiantly fought for Jinnah's vision of Pak even when she was old & at a time when dictatorship had taken over.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1413483019583860738?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 9, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
He is the only Pakistani who remembers her. I wonder how many people in Pakistan even knew when she died if whether she was the sister of Jinnah. Imran Khan should not be on Twitter for every little thing.
Have some mental rest. And, fix major issues in the country that's how her soul will be satisfied.
 
He was Pakistan's first native army chief (Generals Messervy and Gracey were British). Within six years, he went from army chief to Defense Minster to participant in a coup to Chief Martial Law Administrator. Later he would style himself President, and then even Field Marshal. He set the precedent for Yahya, Zia and Musharraf to emulate. So "better" can only be used to describe him if one compares him to the unmitigated disasters that were Yahya and Zia.

Yes, during Ayyub time couple of dams were built but he was the instrumental ( along with ZAB ) behind cessation of the East Pakistan and started the culture of Army rule in Pakistan . He also forcefully prevent Fatima Jinnah from winning the elections and basically killed any democratic culture in Pakistan at its infancy.
 
I have just completed reading Reza Pirbhai’s book, Fatima Jinnah: Mother of the Nation. In writing his book, Pirbhai is clearly hampered by the lack of public pronouncements by his subject until the 1940s and by source material. It would appear that the Fatima Jinnah papers are made up of largely correspondence addressed to her and less of anything she wrote. This results in three things: despite his professed intentions of disentangling Fatima from her brother, until the death of the Quaid she often remains in his shadows in this account. It also means the narrative on her life often gets sidetracked by discussion of the views of other prominent elite women, notably Jahanara Shah Nawaz and Shaista Ikramullah. It means, finally, the author is often left to speculate on Fatima’s opinions on political developments, especially before 1940.

Nevertheless interesting points emerge.

Firstly, we are reminded that the Jinnah family was not a great aristocratic family. They were not from the regions of India that once formed the heartlands of Muslim power. Nor did they emerge from landed gentry families. They belonged to a minority sect in Islam. The names of their parents were “indistinguishable from those of the Hindus they lived amongst.” It appears a cosmopolitan upbringing, with Fatima spending time in the cities of Karachi, Bombay and Calcutta. They also attained financial independence. This is all relevant for understanding how the Quaid and Fatima did not need to rely on patronage from benefactors and could therefore transcend petty politics. Their upbringing must also have shaped their inclusive and non-sectarian understandings of Islam. Both Fatima and her brother would from the 1940s come to advocate an “ecumenical and supra-ethnic Muslim nationalism.”

Secondly, Fatima was certainly a figure in some ways ahead of her time. In an era when people generally disapproved of women seeking professional independence, she trained as a dental surgeon and with the help of her brother set-up a dental clinic in Bombay in 1923, the first Muslim women to do so in British India. Striking too was how she shared the public stage with her brother in the last decade. They even toured Baluchistan despite the long-standing tradition of purdah in the region. But Pirbhai stressed that she was not a mere symbol in this decade, she also worked behind the scenes as “guide, facilitator and liaison for women.” He quotes Shaista Ikramullah, “so many women now [1950s] doing important work for Pakistan were given their first job to do by Miss Jinnah.”

Thirdly, Fatima’s role in the freedom campaign and in the aftermath of partition more broadly reminds us of the role women played in the civil disobedience campaigns in the 194os and in providing relief and rehabilitation to refugees after 1947. In the mass mobilisation in the 1940s, women picketed, trespassed, sat-in. Even in the Frontier province, women took to the streets in large numbers. It is a history too often neglected as most accounts on the period continue to focus on discussions by middle aged men in smoke filled rooms. Elite Women were also at forefront when it came to relief and rehabilitation activities following the awful violence of partition. Fatima herself was involved in raising money, managing bank accounts, dealing with donations and establishing institutions for destitute refugees.

Fourthly, we understand a little more clearly the basis of her moral authority. This rested, like her brother, on her reputation for probity and strong sense of propriety. This comes through when she declines politely Ayub Khan’s request to act as Patron of the Quaid-i Azam Memorial Fund. It also rested on her aloofness from the day to day political wrangling. This moral authority was one reason why opposition parties that had constructed a united front to confront Ayub Khan persuaded her to run as their presidential candidate. Even the Jamaat-i Islami - a party hardly known for its enlightened view on the participation of women in public life - supported her candidacy, citing the unique circumstances which necessitated backing a “candidate who is selfless, determined, incorruptible, upright and fearless.”

Fifthly, flowing from her status and moral authority, after her brother’s death she became recipient of a number of letters of complaints from disenchanted Pakistanis. The idealism and sense of wonder that Pakistan generated inevitably led to disappointments when hopes were not fulfilled. There were letters to her from refugees complaining about housing. Letters complaining about corruption of lower level state functionaries and mid level bureaucrats. Minorities and women also addressed grievances to her.

Sixthly, in her pronouncements she espoused the ideals of Islamic modernism, or what Pirbhai prefers to call “nonclerical New Islam.” There was an emphasis on the ethical and social, as opposed to legal, aspects of Islam. In a speech at Sir Syed Girls’ college she spoke of education and that in this context “Islam was first to recognize the existence of an individual as a social being. In all forms of manifestation of Islam, an individual is not allowed to flourish apart from his community … In the present age of individualism, it is most essential to clearly understand this conception.” Pirbhai makes the interesting point that compared with elite Muslim women elsewhere in the Muslim world at the time, “South Asian Muslim women were more firmly bound to Islamic sources of legitimation than their Egyptian, Turkish or Iranian counterparts.”

Fatima Jinnah was clearly remarkable figure. Like her brother she did not suffer fools gladly. When Ayub mildly raised some concerns over Fatima’s public statements, her rebuke to him was stern. This was someone of independent mind, strong sense of self-worth and fearlessness. The spirit of Fatima Jinnah, despite the travails of Pakistan and the narrowing of space for tolerant visions, has not been entirely lost.

Excellent and detailed post. It is a pity our current generation has no knowledge what so ever about Fatima Jinnah.
 
My grandfather was one of the earliest batch of diplomats of independent Pakistan & a huge Jinnah supporter since his college days in Bombay. His prized possession even after he immigrated to America in the 60s was a photograph of him with Fatima Jinnah at a diplomatic event. He often spoke about her astute nature & sharp mind. A pity that her story has been largely erased from the minds of the people by the religious dictators who usurped power.
 
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