Muhammad
Ali Jinnah was a lawyer and a politician. He is the founder of Pakistan. Jinnah served as leader of the All India Muslim League from 1913 until Pakistan’s Independence on 14 August 1947 and as Pakistan's first Governor General from independence until his death. He is revered in Pakistan
as Quaid-i-Azam and Baba-i-Qaum.
His birthday is observed as a national holiday.
Born in Karachi and
trained as a barrister at Lincoln’s
Inn in London, Jinnah rose to
prominence in the Indian National
Congress in the first two decades
of the 20th century. In these early years of his political career, Jinnah
advocated Hindu–Muslim unity, helping to shape the 1916 Lucknow Pact between the Congress and
the All-India Muslim League, a party in which Jinnah had also become prominent.
Jinnah became a key leader in the All
India Muslim League, and proposed a fourteen
point constitutional plan to
safeguard the political rights of Muslims. In 1920, however, Jinnah resigned
from the Congress when it agreed to follow a campaign of satyagarha, or non-violent
resistance, advocated by the influential leader, Mohandas Gandhi.By 1940, Jinnah had come to believe that Indian Muslims should
have their own state. In that year, the Muslim League, led by Jinnah, passed
the Lahore Resolution, demanding
a separate nation. During the Second
World War, the League gained strength while leaders of the Congress were
imprisoned, and in the elections held shortly after the war, it won most of the
seats reserved for Muslims. Ultimately, the Congress and the Muslim League
could not reach a power-sharing formula for a united India, leading all parties
to agree to separate independence for a predominately Hindu India, and for a
Muslim-majority state, to be called Pakistan.As the first Governor-General of Pakistan, Jinnah worked to
establish the new nation's government and policies, and to aid the millions of
Muslim migrants who had emigrated from the new nation of India to Pakistan after the partition, personally supervising
the establishment of refugee camps. Jinnah died at age 71 in September 1948,
just over a year after Pakistan gained independence from the British Raj. He left a deep and
respected legacy in Pakistan, though he is less well thought of in India.
According to his biographer, Stanley
Wolpert, he remains Pakistan's greatest leader.
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