Speech at the Dhaka University Convocation
on
24th March, 1948 (Recorded by Radio Pakistan,
Dhaka)
Mr. Chancellor, Ladies and Gentlemen,
When I was approached by the vice-chancellor with a request to deliver
the Convocation Address, I made it clear to him that there were so many
calls on me that I could not possible prepare a formal convocation address
on an academic level with regard to the great subjects with which University
deals, such as arts, history, philosophy, science, law and so on. I did,
however, promise to say a few words to the students on this occasion, and
it is in fulfillment of that promise that I will address you now.
First of all, let me thank the vice-chancellor for the flattering terms
in which he referred to me. Mr. vice-chancellor, whatever I am, and whatever
I have been able to do, I have done it merely as a measure of duty which
is incumbent upon every Mussalman to serve his people honestly and selflessly.
In addressing you I am not here speaking to you as Head of the State,
but as a friend, and as one who has always held you in affection. Many
of you have today got your diplomas and degrees and I congratulate you.
Just as you have won the laurels in your University and qualified yourselves,
so I wish you all success in the wider and larger world that you will enter.
Many of you have come to the end of your scholastic career and stand at
the threshold of life. Unlike your predecessors, you fortunately leave
this University to enter life under a sovereign, Independent State of your
own. It is necessary that you and your other fellow students fully understand
the implications of the revolutionary change that took place on the birth
of Pakistan. We have broken the shackles of slavery; we are now a free
people. Our State is our own State. Our Government is our own Government,
of the people, responsible to the people of the State and working for the
good of the State. Freedom, however, does not mean license. It does not
mean that you can now behave just as you please and do what you like, irrespective
of the interests of other people or of the State. A great responsibility
rests on you and, on the contrary, now more than ever, it is necessary
for us to work as a united and disciplined nation. What are now required
of us all is constructive spirit and not the militant spirit of the days
when we were fighting for our freedom. It is far more difficult to construct
than to have a militant spirit for the attainment of freedom. It is easier
to go to jail or fight for freedom than to run a Government. Let me tell
you something of the difficulties that we have overcome and of the dangers
that still lie ahead. Thwarted in their desire to prevent the establishment
of Pakistan, our enemies turned their attention to finding ways and means
to weaken and destroy us. Thus, hardly had the new State come into being
when came the Punjab and Delhi holocaust. Thousand of men, women and children
were mercilessly butchered and millions were uprooted from their homes.
Over fifty lakhs of these arrived in the Punjab within a matter of weeks.
The care and rehabilitation of these unfortunate refugees, stricken in
body and in soul, presented problems, which might well have destroyed many
a well-established State. But those of our enemies who had hoped to kill
Pakistan at its very inception by these means were disappointed. Not only
has Pakistan survived the shock of that upheaval, but also it has emerged
stronger, more chastened and better equipped than ever.
There followed in rapid succession other difficulties, such as withholding
by India of our cash balances, of our share of military equipment and lately,
the institution of an almost complete economic blockade of your Province.
I have no doubt that all right-thinking men in the Indian Dominion deplore
these happenings and I am sure the attitude of the mind that has been responsible
for them will change, but it is essential that you should take note of
these developments. They stress the importance of continued vigilance on
our part. Of late, they attack on your province, particularly, has taken
a subtler form. Our enemies, among whom I regret to say, there are some
Muslims, have set about actively encouraging provincialism in the hope
of weakening Pakistan and thereby facilitating the re-absorption of this
province into the Indian Dominion. Those who are playing this game are
living in a Fool's Paradise, but this does not prevent them from trying.
A flood of a false propaganda is being daily put forth with the object
of undermining the solidarity of the Musslamans of this State and inciting
the people to commit acts of lawlessness. The recent language controversy,
in which I am sorry to make note, some of you allowed yourselves to get
involved even after your Prime Minister had clarified the position, is
only one of the many subtle ways whereby the poison of provincialism is
being sedulously injected into this province. Does it not strike you rather
odd that certain sections of the Indian press to whom the very name of
Pakistan is anathema, should in the matter of language controversy set
themselves up as the champion of what they call your just rights? Is it
not significant that the very persons who in the past have betrayed the
Mussalmans or fought against Pakistan, which is after all merely the embodiment
of your fundamental right of self-determination, should now suddenly pose
as the saviors of your just right and incite you to defy the Government
on the question of language? I must warn you to beware of these fifth columnists.
Let me restate my views on the question of a State language for Pakistan.
For official use in this province, the people of the province can choose
any language they wish. This question will be decided solely in accordance
with the wishes of the people of this province alone, as freely expressed
through their accredited representatives at the appropriate time and after
full and dispassionate consideration. There can, however, be only one lingua
franca, that is, the language for intercommunication between the various
provinces of the State, and that language, should be Urdu and cannot be
any other. The State language therefore, must obviously be Urdu, a language
that has been nurtured by a hundred million Muslims of this sub-continent,
a language understood throughout the length and breadth of Pakistan and
above all a language which, more than any other provincial language, embodies
the best that is in Islamic culture and Muslim tradition and is nearest
to the language used in other Islamic countries. It is not without significance
that Urdu has been driven out of the Indian Union and that even the official
use of the Urdu script has been disallowed. These facts are fully known
to the people who are trying to exploit the language controversy in order
to stir up trouble. There was no justification for agitation but it did
not suit their purpose to admit this. Their sole object in exploiting this
controversy is to create a split among the Muslims of this State, as indeed
they have made no secret of their efforts to incite hatred against non-Bengali
Mussalmans. Realizing, however, that the statement that your Prime Minister
made on the language controversy, on return from Karachi, left no room
for agitation, in so far as it conceded the right of the people of this
province to choose Bengali as their official language if they so wished,
these persons changed their tactics. They started demanding that Bengali
should be the State language of the Pakistan Center and since they could
not overlook the obvious claims of Urdu as the official language of a Muslim
State, they proceeded to demand that both Bengali and Urdu should be State
languages of Pakistan. Make no mistake about it. There can be only one
State language, if the component parts of this State are to march forward
in unison, and that language in my opinion can only be Urdu. I have spoken
at some length on this subject so as to warn you of the kind of tactics
adopted by the enemies of Pakistan and certain opportunist politicians
to try to disrupt this State or to discredit the Government. Those of you,
who are about to enter life, be on your guard against these people. Those
of you who have still to continue your studies for sometime, do not allow
yourselves to be exploited by any political party or self-seeking politician.
As I said the other day, your main occupation should be in fairness to
yourselves, in fairness to your parents and indeed in fairness to the State,
to devote your attention solely to your studies. It is only thus that you
can equip yourselves for the battle of life that lies ahead of you. Only
thus will you be an asset and a source of strength and of pride to your
State. Only thus, can you assist it in solving the great social and economic
problems that confront it and enable it to reach its destined goal among
the most progressive and strongest nations of the world.
My young friends, I would, therefore, like to tell you a few points
about which you should be vigilant and beware. Firstly, beware of the fifth
columnists among ourselves. Secondly, guard against and weed out selfish
people who only wish to exploit you so that they may swim. Thirdly, learn
to judge who are really true and really honest and UN-selfish servants
of the State who wish to serve the people with heart and soul and support
them. Fourthly, consolidate the Muslim League Party, which will serve and
build up a really and truly great and glorious Pakistan. Fifthly, the Muslim
League has won and established Pakistan and it is the Muslim League whose
duty it is now, as custodian of the sacred trust, to construct Pakistan.
Sixthly, there may be many who did not lift their fingers to help us in
our struggle, nay even opposed us and put obstacle in our great struggle
openly and not a few worked in our enemy's camp against us, who may now
come forward and put their own attractive slogans, catch-words, ideals
and programs before you. But they have yet to prove their bonafides or
that there has really been an honest change of heart in them, by supporting
and joining the League and working and pressing their views within the
League Party organization and not by starting mushroom parties, at this
juncture of very great and grave emergency when you know that we are facing
external dangers and are called upon to deal with internal complex problems
of a far-reaching character affecting the future of seventy millions of
people. All this demands complete solidarity, unity and discipline. I assure
you, "Divided you fall. United you stand".
There is another matter that I would like to refer to. My young friends,
hitherto, you have been following the rut. You get your degrees and when
you are thrown out of this University in thousands, all that you think
and hanker for is Government service. As your vice-chancellor has rightly
stated the main object of the old system of education and the system of
Government existing, hitherto, was really to have well-trained, well-equipped
clerks. Of course, some of them went higher and found their level, but
the whole idea was to get well-qualified clerks. Civil Service was mainly
staffed by the Britons and the Indian element was introduced later on and
it went up progressively. Well, the whole principle was to create a mentality,
a psychology, and a state of mind that an average man, when he passed his
B.A. or M.A. was to look for some job in Government. If he had it he thought
he had reached his height. I know and you all know what has been really
the result of this. Our experience has shown that an M.A. earns less than
a taxi driver, and most of the so-called Government servants are living
in a more miserable manner than many menial servants who are employed by
well to do people. Now I want you to get out of that rut and that mentality
and specially now that we are in free Pakistan. Government cannot absorb
thousand impossible. But in the competition to get Government service most
of you demoralized. Government can take only a certain number and the rest
cannot settle down to anything else and being disgruntled are always ready
to be exploited by persons who have their own axes to grind. Now I want
that you must divert your mind, your attention, your aims and ambition
to other channels and other avenues and fields that are open to
you and will increasingly become so. There is no shame in doing manual
work and labor. There is an immense scope in technical education for we
want technically qualified people very badly. You can learn banking, commerce,
trade, law, etc., which provide so many opportunities now. Already you
find that new industries are being started, new banks, new insurance companies,
new commercial firms are opening and they will grow as you go on. Now these
are avenues and fields open to you. Think of them and divert your attention
to them, and believe me, you will there benefit yourselves more than by
merely going in for Government service and remaining there, in what I should
say, a circle of clerkship, working there from morning till evening, in
most dingy and uncomfortable conditions. You will be far more happy and
far more prosperous with far more opportunities to rise if you take to
commerce and industry and will thus be helping not only yourselves but
also your State. I can give you one instance. I know a young man who was
in Government service. Four years ago he went into a banking corporation
on two hundred rupees, because he had studied the subject of banking and
today he is Manager in one of their firms and drawing fifteen hundred rupees
a month --in just four years. These are the opportunities to have and I
do impress upon you now to think in these terms.
Finally, I thank you again Mr. Chancellor and particularly you Mr. vice-chancellor
for the warm welcome you have given me and the very flattering personal
references made by you. I hope, nay I am confident that the East Bengal
youth will not fail us.
Pakistan Zindabad