Broadcast Speech from Radio Pakistan, Dhaka on 28th March, 1948
During the past nine days that I have spent in your province, I have
been studying your local conditions and some of the problems that confront
east Bengal. Tonight, on the eve of my departure, I want to place before
you some of my impressions. Before I do this, however, let me first cordially
thank you for the great warmth and affection with which you have received
me everywhere in your midst during my stay here.
From the administrative point of view, East Bengal perhaps more than
any other province of Pakistan, has had to face the most difficult problems
as a result of Partition. Before August 14, it existed merely as a hinterland
to Calcutta, to whose prosperity it greatly contributed but which it did
not share. On August 14, Dhaka was merely a mofussil town, having none
of the complex facilities and amenities, which are essential for the capital
of a modern Government. Further, owing to partition, the province's transport
system had been thrown completely out of gear and the administrative machinery
seriously disorganised at a time when the country was threatened with a
serious food shortage. The new province of East Bengal thus came into being
in the most unfavourable circumstances, which might easily have proved
fatal to a less determined and less tenacious people. That the administration
not only survived but even emerged stronger from such setbacks as the Chittagong
cyclone, is a striking tribute both to the sterling character of the people
as well as to the unremitting zeal of the Government of the province. The
position now is that the initial difficulties have to a great extent been
overcome and, though there is no ground for complacency, there are at least
reasons for quiet confidence in the future. Though now undeveloped, East
Bengal possesses vast potentialities of raw materials and hydroelectric
power. In Chittagong you have the making of a first-class port which in
time should rank among the finest ports in the world. Given peaceful conditions
and the fullest co-operation from all sections of the people, we shall
make this province the most prosperous in Pakistan.
It is a matter for congratulation that despite the massacre and persecution
of Muslims in the Indian Domination in the months immediately following
Partition, peaceful conditions have throughout prevailed in this province,
and I have seen the minority community going about its normal day-to-day
vocations in perfect security. Some migration of Hindus to the Indian Dominion,
there unfortunately has been, though the estimates mentioned in the Indian
press are ridiculous. I am satisfied, at any rate, that whatever movement
there has been, has not in any way been due to their treatment here, which
under the circumstances has been exemplary, but rather to psychological
reasons and external pressure. Indian leaders and a section of the Indian
press have indulged freely in war-mongering talks against Pakistan. There
has been persistently insidious propaganda by parties like the Hindu Mahasabha
in favour of an exchange of population: and disturbances in the Indian
Dominion, in which Muslims have been persecuted; have not unnaturally given
rise to fears in the mind of the minority community lest unpleasant repercussions
should occur in East Bengal, even though such apprehensions have no foundation
for they have been belied by actual facts. Over and above all these factors,
the recent declaration by the Indian Dominion on Pakistan as a foreign
country for customs and other purposes has involved the Hindu business
community in serious economic difficulties and brought pressure to bear
on many Hindu businessmen to remove their business to the Indian Dominion.
I find that the Provincial Government have repeatedly given assurances
and have at all times taken whatever steps were possible for the protection
and well being of the minority community and have done their best to dissuade
them from leaving their ancestral homes in East Bengal for an unknown fate
in the Indian Union.
I would like now to offer a word of advice to the people of this-province.
I notice a regrettable tendency on the part of a certain section of the
people to regard their newly won freedom, not as liberty with the great
opportunities it opens up and the heavy responsibilities it imposes, but
as licence. It is true that, with the removal of foreign domination, the
people are now the final arbiters of their destiny. They have perfect liberty
to have by constitutional means any Government that they may chose. This
cannot, however, mean that any group may now attempt by any unlawful methods
to impose its will on the popularly elected Government of the day. The
Government and its policy may be changed by the votes of the elected representatives
of the Provincial Legislative Assembly. Not only that, but no Government
worthy of the name can for a moment tolerate such gangsterism and mob rule
from reckless and irresponsible people, but must deal with it firmly by
all the means at its disposal. I am thinking particularly of the language
controversy, which has caused quite unnecessary excitement and trouble
in certain quarters in this province; and if not checked, it might lead
to serious consequences. What should be the official language of this province
is for your representatives to decide.
But this language controversy is really only one aspect of a bigger
problem--that of provincialism. I am sure you must realize that in a newly-formed
State like Pakistan, consisting moreover as it does of two widely separated
parts, cohesion and solidarity amongst all its citizens, from whatever
part they may come, is essential for its progress, nay for its very survival.
Pakistan is the embodiment of the unity of the Muslim nation and so it
must remain. That unity we, as true Muslims, must jealously guard and preserve.
If we begin to think of ourselves as Bengalis, Punjabis, Sindhis etc. first
and Muslims and Pakistanis only incidentally, then Pakistan is bound to
disintegrate. Do not think that this is some abstruse proposition: our
enemies are fully alive to its possibilities, which I must warn you they
are already busy exploiting. I would ask you plainly, when political agencies
and organs of the Indian press, which fought tooth and nail to prevent
the creation of Pakistan, are suddenly found with a tender conscience for
what they call the 'just claims' of the Muslims of East Bengal, do you
not consider this a most sinister phenomenon? Is it not perfectly obvious
that, having failed to prevent the Muslims from achieving Pakistan, these
agencies are now trying to disrupt Pakistan from within by insidious propaganda
aimed at setting brother Muslim against brother Muslim? That is why I want
you to be on your guard against this poison of provincialism that our enemies
wish to inject into our State. There are great tasks to be accomplished
and great dangers to be overcome: overcome them we certainly shall but
we shall do so much quicker if our solidarity remains unimpaired and if
our determination to march forward as a single, united nation remains unshaken.
This is the only way in which we can raise Pakistan rapidly and surely
to its proper, worthy place in the comity of nations.
Here I would like to address a word to the women of East Pakistan. In
the great task of building the nation and maintaining its solidarity women
have a most valuable part to play, as the prime architects of the character
of the youth that constitute its backbone, not merely in their own homes
but by helping their less fortunate sisters outside in that great task.
I know that in the long struggle for the achievement of Pakistan, Muslim
women have stood solidly behind their men. In the bigger struggle for the
building up of Pakistan that now lies ahead, let it not be said that the
women of Pakistan had lagged behind or failed in their duty.
Finally, I would address a special word to Government servants, both
Central and Provincial --that great body of pioneers, many of whom have
been working under very difficult conditions in this province. Yours is
a great responsibility. You must ensure that this province is given, not
merely the ordinary routine services that you are bound to perform, but
rather the very last ounce of selfless endeavour that you are capable of
producing for your State. In the great task of building up this State,
you have a magnificent opportunity. You must continue to face the future,
handle your jobs with the same courage, confidence and determination as
you have so far displayed. Above all do not allow yourselves to
be made the pawns of mischievious propagandists and self-seeking agitators
who are out to exploit both you and the difficulties with which a new State
is inevitably faced the Government of Pakistan and the Provincial Government
have been anxiously devising ways and means whereby your housing and other
difficulties, inescapable in a period of such rapid transition, may be
relieved and I trust that these difficulties will soon disappear. You owe
it to the great State to which you belong, to the people whom you serve
and, indeed, to yourself not to be daunted by any difficulties, but to
press on and go forward and maintain sustained efforts with single-minded
devotion. Pakistan has a great future ahead of it. It is now for us to
take the fullest advantage of what nature has so abundantly provided us
with and builds up a glorious and mighty State.
Pakistan Zindabad