Speech at a public meeting attended by over three
lakhs of people at Dhaka on March 21, 1948
As-Salam-o-Alaikum!
I am grateful to the people of this province and, through you Mr. Chairman
of the Reception Committee, to the people of Dhaka, for the great welcome
that they have accorded to me. I need hardly say that it gives me the greatest
pleasure to visit East Bengal. East Bengal is the most important component
of Pakistan, inhabited as it is by the largest single bloc of Muslims in
the world. I have been anxious to pay this province an early visit, but
unfortunately, other matters of greater importance had so far prevented
me from doing so.
About some of these important matters, you doubtless know. You know,
for instance, of the cataclysm that shook the Punjab immediately after
partition, and of the millions of Muslims who in consequence were uprooted
from their homes in East Punjab, Delhi and neighboring districts and had
to be protected, sheltered and fed pending rehabilitation in Western Pakistan.
Never throughout history was a new State called upon to face such tremendous
problems. Never throughout history has a new State handled them with such
competence and courage. Our enemies had hoped to kill Pakistan at its inception.
Pakistan has, on the contrary, arisen triumphant and stronger than ever.
It has come to stay, and play its great role for which it is destined.
In your address of welcome you have stressed the importance of developing
the great agricultural and industrial resources of this province, of providing
facilities for the training of the young men and women of this province
for entering the Armed Forces of Pakistan, of the development of the port
of Chittagong and of communications between this province and other parts
of Pakistan, of development of educational facilities and finally you have
stressed the importance of ensuring that the citizens of Eastern Pakistan
get their due and legitimate share in all spheres of government activity.
Let me at once assure you that my government attaches the greatest importance
to these matters and is anxiously and constantly engaged in ensuring that
Eastern Pakistan attains it full stature with the maximum of speed. Of
the martial powers of the people of this province, history provides ample
evidence and as you are aware, Government has already taken energetic steps
to provide facilities for the training of the youth of this province both
in the regular Armed Forces and as volunteers in the Pakistan National
Guards. You may rest assured that the fullest provision shall be made for
enabling the youth of this province to play its part in the defense of
this State.
Let me now turn to some general matters concerning this province. In
doing so, let me first congratulate you, the people of this province and
your Government, over the manner in which you have conducted yourselves
during these seven months of trials and tribulations. Your Government and
loyal, hardworking officials deserve to be congratulated on the speed and
efficiency with which it succeeded in building up an ordered administration
out of the chaos and confusion which prevailed immediately after partition.
On the 15th August, the Provincial Government in Dhaka was a fugitive in
its own home. It was faced with the immediate problem of finding accommodation
for the thousands of Government personnel in what was, after all, before
partition only small mofussil town. Hardly had government got to grips
with administrative problems thus created when some seventy thousands Railway
and other personnel and their families suddenly arrived in this province,
driven out of India partly by panic owing to the disturbances immediately
following the partition. There were further, owing to the wholesale departure
of Hindu personnel, great gaps left in the administrative machinery and
the entire transport and communication system had been disorganized. The
immediate task that faced the Government, therefore, was hurriedly to re-group
its forces and reorganize its administrative machine in order to avert
an imminent administrative collapse.
This Government did with extraordinary speed and efficiency. The administration
continued to function unhampered, and the life of the community continued
undisturbed. Not only was the administration speedily reorganized but also
the great administrative shortages were quickly made good, so that an impending
famine was averted, and what is equally important, peace was maintained
throughout the province. In this latter respect, much credit is due also
to the people of this province, in particular to the members of the majority
community, who showed exemplary calm and determination to maintain peace
despite the great provocation afforded by the massacre and oppression of
the Muslims in the Indian Dominion in the months immediately after partition.
Despite those horrible happenings, some forty thousand processions were
taken out by the Hindu community during the last Puja in this province
without a single instance of the breach of peace, and without any molestation
from the Muslims of this province.
Any impartial observer will agree with me that throughout these troubles
the minorities were looked after and protected in Pakistan better than
anywhere else in India. You will agree that Pakistan was able to keep peace
and maintain law and order; and let me tell you that the minorities not
only here in Dhaka but throughout Pakistan are more secure, more safe than
anywhere else. We have made it clear that the Pakistan Government will
not allow peace to be disturbed; Pakistan will maintain law and order at
any cost; and it will not allow any kind of mob rule. It is necessary to
draw attention to these facts, namely, the building up of an orderly administration,
the averting of an imminent famine and the maintenance of the supply of
food to some forty million people in this province at a time of overall
food shortage and serious administrative difficulties, and the maintenance
of peace, because there is a tendency to ignore these achievements of the
Government and to take these things for granted.
It is always easy to criticize, it is always easy to go on fault-finding,
but people forget the things that are being done and are going to be done
for them, and generally they take those for granted without even realizing
as to what trials, tribulations, difficulties and dangers we had to face
at the birth of Pakistan. I do not think that your administration is perfect,
far from it, I do not say that there is no room for improvement; I do not
say that honest criticism from true Pakistanis is unwelcome. It is always
welcome. But when I find in some quarters nothing but complaint, fault-finding
and not a word of recognition as to the work that has been done either
by your Government or by those loyal officials and officers who have been
working for you day and night it naturally pains me. Therefore, at least
say some good word for the good that is done, and then complain and criticize.
In a large administration, it is obvious that mistakes must be made; you
cannot expect that it should be faultless; no country in the world can
be so. But our ambition and our desire are that it should be as little
defective as possible. Our desire is to make it more efficient, more beneficial,
more smooth working. For what? What has the Government got for its aim?
The Government can only have for its aim one objective --how to serve the
people, how to devise ways and means of their welfare, for their betterment.
What other object can the Government have and remember; now it is in your
hands to put the Government in power or remove the Government from power;
but you must not do it by mob methods. You have the power; you must learn
the art to use it; you must try and understand the machinery. Constitutionally,
it is in your hands to upset one Government and put another Government
in power if you are dissatisfied to such an extent.
Therefore, the whole thing is in your hands, but I advise you strongly
to have patience and to support the men who are at the help of your Government,
sympathize with them, try and understand their troubles and their difficulties
just as they should try and understand your grievances and complaints and
sufferings. It is by that co-operation and that good spirit and goodwill
that you will be able not only to preserve Pakistan, which we have achieved
but also, make it a great State in the world. Are you now, after having
achieved Pakistan, going to destroy it by your own folly? Do you want to
build it up? Well then for that purpose there is one essential condition,
and it is this complete unity and solidarity amongst ourselves.
But I want to tell you that in our midst there are people financed by
foreign agencies who are intent on creating disruption. Their object is
to disrupt and sabotage Pakistan. I want you to be on your guard; I want
you to be vigilant and not to be taken in by attractive slogans and catchwords.
They say that Pakistan Government and the East Bengal Government are out
to destroy your language. A bigger falsehood was never uttered by a man.
Quite frankly and openly I must tell you that you have got amongst you
a few communists and other agents financed by foreign help and if you are
not careful, you will be disrupted. The idea that East Bengal should be
brought back into the Indian Union is not given up, and it is their aim
yet, and I am confident --I am not afraid, but it is better to be vigilant
--that those people who still dream of getting back East Bengal into the
Indian Union are living in a dream-land.
I am told that there has been some exodus of the Hindu community from
this province. I have seen the magnitude of this exodus put at the fantastic
figure of ten lakes in the Indian Press. Official estimates would not put
the figure beyond two lakhs at the utmost. In any case, I am satisfied
that such exodus, as has taken place has been the result not of any ill
treatment of the minority communities. On the other hand, the minority
communities have enjoyed, and rightly so, greater freedom, and have been
shown greater solicitude for their welfare than the minorities in any part
of the Indian Dominion.
The cause of this exodus are to be found rather in the loose talk by
some war-mongering leaders in the Indian Dominion of the inevitability
of war between Pakistan and India; in the ill-treatment of the minorities
in some of the Indian provinces and the fear among the minorities of the
likely repercussions of that ill-treatment here, and in the open encouragement
to Hindus to leave this province being sedulously given by a section of
the Indian Press, producing imaginary accounts or what it calls the plight
of the minorities in Pakistan, and by the Hindu Mahasabha. All this propaganda
and accusations about the ill-treatment of the minorities stand belied
by the fact that over twelve million non-Muslims continue to live in this
province in peace and have refused to migrate from here.
Let me take this opportunity of repeating what I have already said:
we shall treat the minorities in Pakistan fairly and justly. Their lives
and property in Pakistan are far more secure and protected than in India
and we shall maintain peace, law and order and protect and safeguard fully
every citizen of Pakistan without distinction of caste, creed or community.
So far so good. Let me now turn to some of the less satisfactory features
of the conditions in this province. There is a certain feeling, I am told,
in some parts of this province, against non-Bengali Muslims. There has
also lately been a certain amount of excitement over the question whether
Bengali or Urdu shall be the State language of this province and of Pakistan.
In this latter connection, I hear that some discreditable attempts have
been made by political opportunities to make a tool of the student community
in Dhaka to embarrass the administration
My young friends, students who are present here, Let me tell you as
one who has always had love and affection for you, who has served you for
ten years faithfully and loyally, let me give you this word of warning:
you will be making the greatest mistake if you allow yourself to be exploited
by one political party or another. Remember, there has been a revolutionary
change. It is our own Government. We are a free, independent and sovereign
State. Let us behave and regulate our affairs as free men; we are not suppressed
and oppressed under the regime of a foreign domination; we have broken
those chains, we have thrown off those shackles. My young friends, I look
forward to you as the real makers of Pakistan, do not be exploited and
do not be misled. Create amongst yourselves complete unity and solidarity.
Set an example of what youth can do. Your main occupation should be --in
fairness to yourself, in fairness to your parents, in fairness to the State
to devote your attention to your studies. If you fritter away your energies
now, you will always regret. After you leave the portals of your universities
and colleges taken you, can play your part freely and help yourself and
the State. Let me warn you in the clearest term of the dangers that still
face Pakistan and your province in particular as I have done already. Having
failed to prevent the establishment of Pakistan, thwarted and frustrated
by their failure, the enemies of Pakistan have now turned their attention
to disrupt the State by creating a split amongst the Muslims of Pakistan.
These attempts have taken the shape principally of encouraging provincialism.
As long as you do not throw off this poison in our body politic, you
will never be able to weld yourself, mould yourself, galvanize yourself
into a real true nation. What we want is not to talk about Bengali, Punjabi
Sindhi, Baluchi, Pathan and so on. They are of course units. But I ask:
have you forgotten the lesson that was taught to us thirteen hundred years
ago? If I may point out, you are all outsiders here. Who were the original
inhabitants of Bengal not those who are now living. So what is the use
of saying "we are Bengalis, or Sindhis, or Pathans, or Punjabi". No, we
are Muslims.
Islam has taught us this, and I think you will agree with me that whatever
else you may be and whatever you are, you are a Muslim. You belong to a
Nation now; you have now carved out a territory, vast territory, it is
all yours; it does not belong to a Punjabi or a Sindhi, or a Pathan, or
a Bengali; it is yours. You have got your Central Government where several
units are represented. Therefore, if you want to build up yourself into
a Nation, for God's sake give up this provincialism. Provincialism has
been one of the curses; and so is sectionalism --Shia, Sunni, etc.
It was no concern of our predecessor Government; it was no concern of
theirs to worry about it; they were here to carry on the administration,
maintain law and order and to carry on their trade and exploit India as
much as they could. But now we are in a different position altogether.
Now I give you an example. Take America. When it threw off British rule
and declared itself independent, how many nations were there? It had many
races: Spaniards, French, Germans, Italians, English, Dutch and many more.
Well, there they were. They had many difficulties. But mind you, their
nations were actually in existence and they were great nations; whereas
you had nothing. You have got Pakistan only now. But there a Frenchman
could say 'I am a Frenchman and belong to a great nation', and so on. But
what happened? They understood and they realized their difficulties because
they had sense, and within a very short time they solved their problems
and destroyed all this sectionalism, and they were able to speak not as
a German or a Frenchman or an Englishman or a Spaniard, but as Americans.
They spoke in this spirit: 'I am an American' and we are Americans'. Andso
you should think, live and act in terms that your country is Pakistan and
you are a Pakistani.
Now I ask you to get rid of this provincialism, because as long as you
allow this poison to remain in the body politic of Pakistan, believe me,
you will never be a strong nation, and you will never be able to achieve
what I wish we could achieve. Please do not think that I do not appreciate
the position. Very often it becomes a vicious circle. When you speak to
a Bengali, he says: 'Yes you are right, but the Punjabi is so arrogant';
when you speak to the Punjabi or non-Bengali, he says, 'Yes but these people
do not want us here, they want to get us out'. Now this is a vicious circle,
and I do not think anybody can solve this Chinese puzzle. The question
is, who is going to be more sensible, more practical, and more statesmanlike
and will be rendering the greatest service to Pakistan? So make up your
mind and from today put an end to this sectionalism.
About language, as I have already said, this is in order to create disruption
amongst the Mussalmans. Your Prime Minister has rightly pointed this out
in a recent statement and I am glad that his Government has decided to
put down firmly any attempt to disturb the peace of this province by political
saboteurs, their agents. Whether Bengali shall be official language of
this province is a matter for the elected representatives of the people
of this province to decide. I have no doubt that this question shall be
decided solely in accordance with the wishes of the inhabitants 'of this
province at the appropriate time.
Let me tell you in the clearest language that there is no truth that
your normal life is going to be touched or disturbed so far as your Bengali
language is concerned. But ultimately it is for you, the people of this
province, to decide what shall be the language of your province. But let
me make it very clear to you that the State language of Pakistan is going
to be Urdu and no other language. Anyone who tries to mislead you
is really the enemy of Pakistan. Without one State language, no Nation
can remain tied up solidly together and function. Look at the history of
other countries. Therefore, so far as the State Language is concerned,
Pakistani language shall be Urdu. But, as I have said, it will come in
time.
I tell you once again, do not fall into the trap of those who are the
enemies of Pakistan. Unfortunately, you have fifth columnists --and I am
sorry to say they are Muslims --who are financed by outsiders. But they
are making a great mistake. We are not going to tolerate sabotage any more;
we are not going to tolerate the enemies of Pakistan; we are not going
to tolerate quislings and fifth-columnists in our State, and if this is
not stopped, I am confident that your Government and the Pakistan Government
will take the strongest measures and deal with them ruthlessly, because
they are a poison. I can quite understand differences of views. Very often
it is said, "why cannot we have this party or that party? Now let me tell
you, and I hope you will agree with me, that we have as a result of unceasing
effort and struggle ultimately achieved Pakistan after ten years. It is
the Muslim League, which has done it. There were of course many Massalmans
who were indifferent; some were afraid, because they had vested interests
and they thought they might lose some sold themselves to the enemy and
worked against us, but we struggled and we fought and by the grace of God
and with His help we have established Pakistan which has stunned the World.
Now this is a sacred trust in your hands, i.e., the Muslim League. Is
this sacred trust to be guarded by us as the real custodians of the welfare
of our country and our people, or not? Are mushroom parties led by men
of doubtful past to be started to destroy what we have achieved or capture
what we have secured? I ask you one question. Do you believe in Pakistan?
(Cries of yes, yes). Are you happy that you have achieved Pakistan? (Cries
of yes ,yes), Do you want East Bengal or any part of Pakistan to go into
the Indian Union? (No, no). Well, if you are going to serve Pakistan, if
you are going to build up Pakistan, if you are going to reconstruct Pakistan,
then I say that the honest course open to every Mussalman is to join the
Muslim League Party and serve Pakistan to the best of his ability. Any
other mushroom parties that are started at present will be looked upon
with suspicion because of there past, not that we have any feeling of malice,
ill will, or revenge. Honest change is welcome, but the present emergency
requires that every Mussalman should come under the banner of the Muslim
League, which is the true custodian of Pakistan, and build it up and make
it a great State before we think of parties amongst ourselves which may
be formed later on sound and healthy lines.
Just one thing more. Do not feel isolated. Many people have spoken to
me that East Bengal feels isolated from the rest of Pakistan. No doubt
there is a great distance separating the East from the West Pakistan; no
doubt there are difficulties, but I tell you that we fully know and realize
the importance of Dhaka and East Bengal. I have only come here for a week
or ten days this time, but in order to discharge my duty as the Head of
the State I may have to come here and stay for days, for weeks, and similarly
the Pakistan Ministers must establish closer contact. They should come
here and your leaders and members of your Government should go to Karachi,
which is the capital of Pakistan. But you must have patience. With your
help and with your support we will make Pakistan a mighty State.
Finally, let me appeal to you to keep together, put up with inconveniences,
sufferings and sacrifices, for the collective good of our people. No amount
of troubles, no amount of hard work or sacrifice contribution for the collective
good of your nation and your State. It is in that way, that you will build
up Pakistan as the fifth largest State in the world, not only in population
as it is but also in strength, so that it will command the respect of all
the other nations of the world. With these words I wish you God speed.
Pakistan Zindabad