Muhammad Ali Jinnah [a] (Audio (Help · Information), born in Mahomedali Jinnahbhai, 25 December 1876 - 11 September 1948), he is a founder known as Pakistan. From 1913 until August 14, 1947, Pakistan became independent, and Jinna served as the leader of the All-India Muslim League and became the first independent in Pakistan until the governor died. He is known in Japan as Quaid-i-Azam [b] (great leader) and Baba-i-Qaum [c] (father of the people), whose birthday is considered a national holiday .
Jinna, born in Karachi and serving as a lawyer at the Lincoln Hotel in London, appeared at the Indian Congress in the first twentieth century. In the early days of his political career, Jinna supported the Hindu - Muslim unity - formation of the Lucknow Treaty between the General Assembly in 1916 and the All-India Muslim League, a party that made Shine a prominent figure I helped. Jinnah became the major leader of the All India Autonomous Alliance and proposed a 14-point Constitutional Reform Plan to protect the Muslims' political rights when the united British India is independent. But in 1920, when Jinna agreed to accept the satyagraha or nonviolent resistance movement advocated by leading leader Modana Gandhi, he resigned from Congress.
By 1940 Jinna began to believe that Muslims in India should have their own country. In that year, the Muslim League led by Jinna passed a resolution of Lahore and asked for a single country. During the Second World War, when Congressional leaders were imprisoned, the coalition government won the administration and in the election held shortly after the war most of the seats reserved for Muslims were acquired. In the end Congress and the Muslim League could not reach a unified power sharing plan in India. It led all parties to agree to separate major Hindu Indian and Muslim majority national independence.
As Pakistan's first governor, Jinna will build policies with the new national government and will help millions of Muslim refugees separated from the new Indian country to personally supervise the establishment of refugee camps I promise. Jinna died in September 1948 at the age of 71. This is only a year after Pakistan became independent from British Raj. His idea in India was unsatisfactory, but he left a deeply respected heritage in Pakistan. According to biography writer Stanley Walter, he continues to be Pakistan's largest leader.
Among the people who met Jena to pursue his return was Ria Cut Ali Khan. And it will be Jinnai's major political partner in the coming years and will be Pakistan's first prime minister. At the request of Jinnah, Liakat discussed issues of returning with many Muslim politicians and confirmed his advice to Jinnah. In the beginning of 1934, Jinna traveled between London and India in the next few years, sold her house at Hampstead and closed legal affairs in the UK, but moved to the subcontinent.
12 Muhammad Ali Jinner "Quaid - Electronic Azam" Muhammad Ali · Jinnah (December 25, 1876 - September 11, 1948) was in the UK - Indian lawyers and politicians, in later Pakistan in 1947 It was founder and became its first governor. Typically. In the only year he died of tuberculosis, but still influence and importance ... After reading ... continue reading. Everyone, he is also one of the highest leaders in history, he knows, of course, with the largest and largest empire. He is one of the three emperors who will not lose any war or battle of the world with Alexander the Great or Genghis Khan. He first described the rules and justice to the people of the world Cyrus cylinder show - shahinakbari
Ali · Jinna (1876 - 1948) Jinna was the leader of all India Muslim League from 1913 to 1947, later became Pakistan's first governor. Initially Jinnah advocated solidarity of Hindu - Muslims and support for the All India Autonomous Alliance. But since 1940 he refused the idea of unifying India and insisted on the establishment of an independent Muslim country, Pakistan. Sir Muhammad Iqbal (1877 - 21 April 1938) Iqbal is an Islamic poet, a philosopher, a politician. As chairman of all Islamic allies, Iqbal has influence in promoting Muslim states' ideas and ultimately has an influence on encouraging Jinna to accept the idea of independent Pakistani state I will.