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Tuesday, December 26, 2017
Jinnah in the eyes of his colleagues
Mr Jinnah was always aesthetically dressed whether he was wearing a traditional attire, a three-piece suit during his early years as a young lawyer in Bombay, even when caught unawares on camera during a contemplative moment wearing a white suit, or in an overcoat during the Simla Conference.
***
Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan
HONESTY without humbug – an honesty which even his severest critics have
never called in question; an honesty which seeks no shelter in
sanctimonious spiritual impedimenta; which abjures alike the halo and
the high place, the beard and the bargain, the mystic voice and the
money value – an unemotional shrewdness which strips facts down to their
naked reality, but makes him pace the floor till the early hours of the
morning examining and re-examining, weighing and valuing each detail of
the decision upon which the very life or death of his people might
depend – perseverance which recognises no obstacle as unsurmountable;
intellectual acumen which can see the whole in detail and the detail as
part of the whole – such is the man and statesman, the Quaid-i-Azam of
ninety million Indian Muslims, the Disraeli of Indian politics –
Mohammad Ali Jinnah.
***
Haji Abdullah Haroon
JINNAH is the uncrowned king of Muslim India. In the Islamic world as a
whole, he happens to be the greatest Muslim statesman of this age. In
the matter of service to Islam his record is great and glorious. In the
future history of Muslim India he will figure as a great benefactor of
Mussalmans. He created awakening among the Muslims of India and brought
them under one banner at a most critical time in their history when they
were about to meet with the same fate which had met the unfortunate
Dravidians some centuries ago. He is the founder of a new India in which
all nations can live happily together. May God give him long life.
***
Chaudhry Khaliquzzaman
MUSLIM India will be celebrating the birthday of the Quaid-i-Azam in a
manner befitting the occasion; his name has become known to the Muslims
of India and even beyond its borders to the Muslims of the world. His
lifelong service to the community and devotion to the cause of Islam
have rightly won him his unique position. In nationalist quarters he
once occupied a respectable place but is now considered to be a
separationist and a communalist of the worst order. Time alone will
testify whether his politics of today is not in the interest of peace
and goodwill of the communities in the future.
***
Qazi Muhammad Isa
OUR beloved and esteemed Quaid-i-Azam, Mohammad Ali Jinnah is at this
most critical time in the history of the world moulding the destinies of
ninety million Muslims, who live unitedly, as never before under the
banner of the mighty Muslim organisation – the All-India Muslim League.
Our
beloved Quaid-i-Azam at the 1940 Annual Session of the All-India Muslim
league, held at Lahore, sounded a clarion call, and exhorted us all to
gather under the banner of the League, and laid down in a clear and no
uncertain manner the line of action which the Muslim Nation must take to
ensure its honourable existence in India.
God has come
to our rescue, and gifted us with a leader, great in trials, mature in
his judgement, infinite in his affections for his fellow Muslims, and
who stands like the premonitory, who not only stands four square to all
the waves of intrigues and hatred, but against whom all these waves are
repelled.
***
Raja Sahib of Mehmoodabad
HE is our teacher, preceptor and guide – that is how we of the younger
generation regard our great Quaid. He received our allegiance and,
having received it, taught us what true and honest politics is; and has
guided us on the right political path. He has steered our mind clear of
pseudo-nationalism to a right perception of the implications of that
patriotism for the Indian Muslim which, while not forgetting the true
interests of the Motherland, holds fast to Islam; and above all he has,
by making it his own by the clarity of his exposition and the
irrefutability of his arguments, given an irresistible momentum to that
life-giving movement – the movement for the creation of sovereign Muslim
States in those parts of India where Islam pervades i.e. Eastern and
North Western India. May he live long to see the consummation of this
inspiring ideal.
***
Shah Nawaz Khan
I DEEM it a great pleasure to express my deep appreciation for the noble
services rendered by Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah in the cause of
the upliftment of the Muslim masses. He commands the confidence of 90
million Indian Musalmans, who look to him for guidance and are ready to
do anything which the Quaid-i-Azam orders them to do. His name is a
watchword in every village and town of my province and I take the
liberty to assert that no Muslim leader has, so far, commanded that much
respect or confidence of the Muslim masses like the Quaid-i-Azam.
***
Sirdar M. Aurangzeb Khan
WHEN Maulana Muhammad Ali Jauhar was being removed on a stretcher to the
boat which was to take him to England for the First Round Table
Conference, ardent disciples asked him as to who after him was to lead
Muslim politics in India in the stormy times ahead. “Mr Jinnah and none
else,” he prayerfully blurted out... “If great God puts it in Mr
Jinnah’s head to take up the job.”
I may be permitted to
at once connect Dr Iqbal’s last wish with the prayer of Muhammad Ali.
In the annual meeting of Bazm-e-Iqbal last March when Mr Jinnah was
presiding, Sir Abdul Qadir read a passage from a letter of Dr Iqbal to a
friend (that friend during Doctor Saheb’s last illness wrote to him
praying for his speedy recovery) and pray listen to the reply of the
Poet of the East:
“My message has been duly delivered. My
time is up. Instead of praying for me you should pray for the lives of
Ataturk and Mr Jinnah who have yet to fulfil their missions.”
***
Sir Sikandar Hyat Khann
I ASSOCIATE myself whole-heartedly with the celebrations of the 64th
birthday of Mr Jinnah. His unique services to the Mussalmans and to
India entitle him to the respect and admiration of all patriotic
Indians; and so far as the Muslims are concerned, his contribution, at
this psychological moment, has deservedly earned him the title of
Quaid-i-Azam. Even his worst critics cannot but recognise his great
ability, integrity and sense of public duty. May he live long to
complete the organisation of the Mussalmans, so that with the other
elements in the country they may contribute their best in the building
up of a new India wherein the best in the culture and life of each
section may be fully safeguarded and effectively guaranteed, and no
class or party tyranny may be permitted.
***
Khawaja Nazimuddin
I WISH to begin with a frank confession. Not many years ago, the
politics of Mr Jinnah did not quite appeal to me and I was inclined to
be skeptical of the ideals which Mr Jinnah was holding up before the
Muslims of India. It did not, however, take long for me, like many
others, to realise that the lead which Mr Jinnah was giving in 1936 was
the only correct lead in the circumstances rapidly developing in the
country.
If today, 90 million Muslims now stand shoulder
to shoulder in a solid phalanx under the banner of the All-India Muslim
League, if machinations to reduce Muslims to the position of a perpetual
and powerless minority depending for their very lives on the mercy of
others have failed, the credit goes primarily to one man: Mohammad Ali
Jinnah. This is no mean achievement.
***
Sir Cowasji Jahangir
IF there is one characteristic, more than another, which distinguishes
Mr Jinnah in public life, it is his sturdy independence. Nothing will
sidetrack him from what he considers is the path of truth, righteousness
and equity. No amount of opposition, no threats and no danger will
daunt him, in his determination. He is a man full of courage and
tenacity. He has never put self or his own interests before those of his
country. Such men are rarely found in public life. He stands today not
only as the acknowledged leader of the millions of his community but
also as one of the foremost men in the public life of India. May
Providence continue to give him health and strength to serve India in
general and his great community in particular.
***
Nawab M. Ismail Khan
MR Jinnah’s sagacity, penetrating intellect, rapid grasp of the most
intricate problems and luminous insight coupled with calmness of temper
and complete personal disinterestedness have enabled him to rise to that
unique and pre-eminent position among the Mussalmans of India, which no
other Muslim leader in recent years, however great his services, and
however high his personal quality, has held among his fellow Muslims.
For
the past few years by organising the Mussalmans politically under the
banner of Muslim League, he has succeeded in infusing into them a spirit
of self-reliance and self-respect, and has thus saved them from the
doom which threatens every nation split up in small factions of warring
political creeds and ideologies.
***
Sir Hormasji Pherozshah Modi
MR. Jinnah has long been one of the dominant figures of our political
life. His has been a chequered career, with many apparent
contradictions, but throughout it certain fundamental charac-teristics
have stood out. He is fearless and straightforward, seeks no popularity
and is singularly free from political intrigue. He is a lone figure;
very few have really known him or have penetrated the armour of his
aloofness. An arresting personality – one may dislike or condemn, but
cannot ignore him – his contribution to the political life of India has
been outstanding. As one who has known Mr Jinnah for many years, I can
wish him nothing better than that he may long continue to occupy the
place he has created for himself.