[Reader-list] Re:Reader-list] When he was called Pandit Jinnah

Peeyush Bajpai peeyush.bajpai at gmail.com
Thu Jun 16 14:14:48 IST 2005


Ingonrance of his (Jinnha) own  religion or religious text do not make
him secular. But utilizing religion to fragment or create discord can
only be entitled as communalism.
 
In this context, Advani is as communal as Jinnha, or read backwards
both equally secular.

Hence Advani did not say anything wrong as he belives himself to be
secular too!.
 
peeyush


Message: 1
Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2005 19:36:59 +0530
From: "mihir25" <mihir25 at indiatimes.com>(by way of Monica Narula)
Subject: [Reader-list] When he was called Pandit Jinnah
To: reader-list at sarai.net
Message-ID: <a06210215bed5e6741fb2@[10.0.1.67]>
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When he was called Pandit Jinnah RAJNISH Sharma
Lucknow, June 5 Hindustan Times
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/5922_1389389,0015002500000000.htm
When the former Deputy PM L K Advani described
Muhammad Ali Jinnah as a secular man during his
early days, he wasn't quite off the mark as it is
now a part of recorded history. Though his
comments have raised a furore back home, few
would know that this man was even referred to as
Pandit Jinnah once. And if indifference to
religion is any indicator of secularism, the
Qaid-e-Azam was probably the biggest of all
secular fundamentalists. There are two incidents
hitherto not found in any history book which
highlight this aspect of his character in a
rather comical way which were narrated by none
other than the eminent jurist and statesman, Sir
Tej Bahadur Sapru. It was told by Sir Tej to his
granddaughter's husband Dr IM Chak, Retired Dy
Director of CDRI during a meeting with his
grandfather Pt. Prithvi Nath Chak, another legal
giant of that time under whom Motilal Nehru
learnt to practise law. A contemporary of Sir
Sapru, Jinnah along with him once visited Egypt
during the month of Ramzaan. The Muslim porters
there refused to carry their luggage saying they
would only carry the luggage of a fellow Muslim.
When Jinnah told them to go ahead, the porters
decided to test them. They were asked to recite
the kalma. While Sir Tej happily recited it with
Ăˆlan, he had Jinnah looking sheepishly at him for
the wine loving brown sahib didn't know a word of
it! Sir Tej had a hard time convincing the
porters that Jinnah, who was to later create a
separate Islamic State, was indeed a Muslim! The
other incident saw these two friends sparring in
the court of law in a case that involved elements
of religion. The case saw Sir Tej quoting
innumerable ayats from Quran in support of his
arguments. Jinnah, though a formidable lawyer
himself, drew a blank once again on this account.
The next day local newspaper headlines screamed
Pandit Jinnah vs Maulana Sapru!



-- 
Peeyush Bajpai
www.indicus.net



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