An article in Dawn of Pakistan
Evolution of Jinnah’s politics
By Sharif al Mujahid
Friday, 11 Sep, 2009

 However, the most basic concept remained unalloyed and constant: that of
ensuring equitable power for Muslims in the subcontinent. And when he failed
to secure that in a multi-nation country, he devised a viable, permanent
Muslim platform in ‘Pakistan’. -AP (file photo)

*MOST historians and biographers of Jinnah divide the latter’s political
career into three main phases. Remarkably though, each one of them,
considered distinct in terms of his political orientation and public policy,
merged into the next.*

The first phase (1904-20) of Jinnah’s political career was coterminous with
the period of his deep involvement with the Congress. Then began the second
phase which retained the major thrust of his earlier phase in terms of
policy concerns and ultimate goals, but in which his erstwhile involvement
with the Congress transformed into collaboration at critical junctures on
certain issues on which the Congress’s stance was compatible with his own.

This middle phase during which he seemingly sailed in two boats finally
ended in 1937, marking the beginning of his mounting decade-long
confrontation with the Congress. This third phase spanned the momentous
decade of 1937-47. There was, of course, yet another phase — as founder of
the new nation — but it was all too brief and troubled.

Nurtured in the cosmopolitan and mercantile atmosphere of Bombay, Jinnah,
during the first phase, was not, much different from Badruddin Tyabji
(1844-1906), past president of the Congress, with whom he was also closely
associated in the Bombay Presidency Association, the province’s foremost
political body. Like Tyabji, Jinnah, if only because of his background and
of the milieu of the centre of his activity, was largely oblivious of the
objective realities of the Muslim situation and of the problems and
thought-currents of Muslim India’s mainstream.

Later, however, his membership of the Imperial Legislative Council since
1910 gradually brought about a profound change. It brought him closer to
Muslim problems and to the main centres of Muslim opinion in northern India
— to Nadwa, to Aligarh, and, above all, to the Muslim League.

The gradual change in his perception of Muslim problems finally led him to
recognise that the Muslims had special interests and particular needs which
had to be catered to, if they were not to be left far behind in the national
struggle.

Thus, began his tilt in favour of separate electorates, conceded earlier in
the Morley-Minto Reforms of 1909, and led him to counsel his Hindu brethren
in October 1916 that “the question is no more open to further discussion or
argument as it has been a mandate of the community”, and that “the demand
for separate electorates is not a matter of policy but a matter of necessity
to the Mahomedans”.

>From 1910 onwards, Jinnah had also begun attending the Muslim League Council
meetings and sessions as a special invitee, and participating fully in its
deliberations.

The three dominant strands in the first phase of Jinnah’s political career
were: (i) a firm belief in a united Indian nation, with Hindus and Muslims
being co-sharers in the future Indian dispensation; (ii) working for Indian
freedom through Hindu-Muslim unity; and (iii) working for unity in Muslim
ranks through strengthening the Muslim League.

These strands continued in the second phase as well. But with the years
their position came to be reversed in his scale of priorities, as the
Congress’s ultimate objectives underwent a radical change under the
influence of Hindu extremists, as exemplified at the All Parties National
Convention deliberations on the Nehru Report in December 1928. Here the
Muslim demand for federalism, designed to ensure the substance of power to
them in their majority provinces, was countered by Hindu insistence on a
unitary form of a highly centralised government, with majoritarianism as the
basic premise and principle which, for that precise reason, envisaged all
power to the Hindu-dominated centre and only marginal powers to the
provinces.

Jinnah’s quest for Hindu-Muslim unity, through a national pact, however,
continued all through the second phase, and even in the initial years of the
third one, ending finally about 1937-38.

In the meantime, Jinnah’s efforts for Muslim unity became increasingly
pronounced with the years, becoming a passion with him towards the closing
of the second phase. And even as the third phase crystallised, this passion
turned into his most magnificent obsession, with himself becoming the
supreme symbol of Muslim unity.

National freedom for both Hindus and Muslims continued to be the supreme
goal, but the means adopted to achieve it underwent a dramatic change. If it
could not be achieved through Hindu-Muslim unity, it must be achieved
through Hindu-Muslim separation; if not secured through a composite
Hindu-Muslim nationalism, it must be done through separate Hindu and Muslim
nationalisms; if not through a united India, then through partition.

In either case, the ultimate objective was to ensure equitable political
power for Muslims. If Muslims, to use Penderel Moon’s telling phrase, could
not share 'the throne' with the Hindus as equals in Delhi, then they must
have a 'throne' to themselves in their majority areas. Thus, a study of
Jinnah’s political career shows that 'distinct as they are … each of … [the]
main phases merged into the next, and the transitions between them are as
important as contents of each in assessing Jinnah’s life-span. Indeed it is
imperative for an understanding of him to recognise the continuity of his
political progression.'

The clue to his transformation from the 'ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity'
to the fiercest protagonist of Hindu-Muslim separation, therefore, lay to
quote Hodson, the author of the most authoritative British account of the
Great Divide, 'not in any sudden illumination or volte face, but in a long
process of reinterpretation of basic concepts in the light of changing
circumstances and revelations of facts.'

However, the most basic concept remained unalloyed and constant: that of
ensuring equitable power for Muslims in the subcontinent. And when he failed
to secure that in a multi-nation country, he devised a viable, permanent
Muslim platform in ‘Pakistan’.

Viewed thus, the Pakistan demand represented an extension of Jinnah’s
post-1937 posture, and its concretisation into a viable political platform.
No wonder, he increasingly became identified in the Muslim mind with the
concept of a charismatic community, one which answered their need for
endowing and sanctifying their sense of community with a sense of power.
This explains why he became their Quaid-i-Azam even before the launching of
the Pakistan demand in March 1940.

*The writer, HEC Distinguished National Professor, has recently edited
Unesco’s History of Humanity, vol. VI, and co-edited 'In quest of Jinnah',
the only oral history on Pakistan’s founding father.*

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