- Two-Nation Theory
The Two-Nation Theory was the basis for the
Partition of India in 1947. It stated thatMuslims andHindus were two separate nations by every definition, and therefore Muslims should have an autonomous homeland in the Muslim majority areas ofBritish India for the safeguard of their political, cultural, and social rights, within or without a United India.History
The ideology of Pakistan took shape through an evolutionary process, based on historical experience. Muslim Modernist and
reformer Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817 -1898 ) began the period of South Asian Muslim self-awakening and identity; Poet Philosopher AllamaMuhammad Iqbal (1877 -1938 ), (the "poet of East"), provided the philosophical explanation; andBarrister Muhammad Ali Jinnah (1876 -1948 ) translated it into the political reality of a nation state. TheAll-India Muslim League , in attempting to represent Indian Muslims, felt that the Muslims of the subcontinent were a distinct and separate nation from the Hindus. At first they demanded separate electorates, but when they came to the conclusion that Muslims would not be safe in a Hindu-dominatedIndia , they began to demand a separate state. TheLeague demandedself-determination for Muslim-majority areas in the form of a sovereign state promising minorities equal rights and safeguards in these Muslim majority areas.The evidence cited for the differences dates to the beginning of the eleventh century, when the scholar
Al-Biruni (973-1048) observed that Hindus and Muslims differed in all matters and habits.Allama Iqbal 's presidential address to theMuslim League on29 December 1930 is seen as the first introduction of the two-nation theory in support of what would ultimately become Pakistan. Ten years later,Jinnah made a speech inLahore on22 March ,1940 which was very similar to Al-Biruni's thesis in theme and tone. Jinnah stated that Hindus and Muslims belonged to two different religious philosophies, with different social customs and literature, with no intermarriage and based on conflicting ideas and concepts. Their outlook on life and of life was different and despite 1,000 years of history, the relations between the Hindus and Muslims could not attain the level of cordiality. The only difference between the writing of Al-Biruni and the speech of Jinnah was that Al-Biruni made calculated predictions, while Jinnah had history behind him to support his argument.Support
Some right wing
Hindu leaders such asVinayak Damodar Savarkar endorsed the Two-Nation Theory. However, Savarkar, the leader of theHindu Mahasabha , believed that the new nation state of Pakistan should be formed somewhere in theMiddle East as opposed to being in the lands in which the Vedic religion was founded and in which Hinduism thrived until the Islamic invasion.In an
Op-Ed piece in thePakistan Times , Samina Mallah asserts that the Two-Nation Theory is relevant to this daycite web|title=Two-Nation Theory Exists |publisher=Pakistan Times |url=http://www.pakistantimes.net/2007/04/03/oped2.htm] , citing factors such as lower literacy and education levels amongst Indian Muslims as compared to Indian Hindus, long-standing cultural differences, and outbreaks of religious violence such as those occurring during the 2002 Gujarat Riots inIndia ; as well as the twonation-state s ofBangladesh andPakistan as the reality of the "Two Nation Theory", although no longer part of each other yet separate fromRepublic of India .Criticism
Some historians have claimed that the theory was a creation of a few Muslim intellectuals. [ [http://www.foreignaffairs.org/19821201faessay8309/amaury-de-riencourt/india-and-pakistan-in-the-shadow-of-afghanistan.html India and Pakistan in the Shadow of Afghanistan] , Amaury de Riencourt, Foreign Affairs, Winter 1982/83]
Partition
Critics of the theory point to the fact that after partition, a significant minority, almost a third of the Muslims, remained in the Hindu-majority
India , whilst almost all the Hindus and Sikhs choose to leave the Muslim-majorityPakistan and migrate toIndia during the violence that accompanied partition, [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/6926057.stm Sixty bitter years after Partition - BBC News] ] leaving Pakistan (after the separation of Bangladesh) today with a Hindu population of 1.5%., [http://www.adherents.com/largecom/com_hindu.html The Largest Hindu Communities] ]Creation of Bangladesh
Critics, some in Pakistan, also point to the
Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, as an example that a homogeneous Muslim majority may not always guarantee unity or security and that this concept was buried in the secession ofEast Pakistan nowBangladesh . [ [http://www.mqm.org/English-News/Apr-2000/TWO%20NATION%20THEORY.htm Two Nation Theory] ]Irfan Husain , in his editorial in the Dawn observes that it has now become an "impossible and exceedingly boring task of defending a defunct theory." [ [http://www.dawn.com/weekly/mazdak/20001104.htm A discourse of the deaf By Irfan Husain]4 November ,2000 Dawn] However some Pakistanis includingShaukat Qadir , a retired PakistaniBrigadier believe that the theory could only be disproved with the reunification of independentEast Bengal , andRepublic of India . [cite web |title=India and Partition |publisher=Daily Times |url=http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_10-4-2004_pg3_5]tatements and sayings
In
Muhammad Ali Jinnah All India Muslim League Presidential Address delivered at Lahore, on March 22–23, 1940, he explained:Allama Iqbal's statement explaining the attitude of Muslim delegates to the Round-Table Conference issued in December,
1933 was a rejoinder toJawahar Lal Nehru 's statement. Nehru had said that the attitude of the Muslim delegation was based on "reactionarism." Iqbal concluded his rejoinder with:References
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