
 I. Ideology Drama was a farce rather hoodwinking the whole  Muslim Population
 The strength of the Muslim League in the Muslim-majority provinces  was going to be put to the test during the 1945-46 election campaign.  Consequently in the public meetings and mass contact campaigns the  Muslim League openly employed Islamic sentiments, slogans and heroic  themes to rouse the masses. This is clearly stated in the fortnightly  confidential report of 22 February 1946 sent to Viceroy Wavell by the  Punjab Governor Sir Bertrand Glancy:
 The ML (Muslim League) orators are becoming increasingly  fanatical in their speeches. Maulvis (clerics) and Pirs (spiritual  masters) and students travel all round the Province and preach that  those who fail to vote for the League candidates will cease to be  Muslims; their marriages will no longer be valid and they will be  entirely excommunicated… It is not easy to foresee what the results of  the elections will be. But there seems little doubt the Muslim League,  thanks to the ruthless methods by which they have pursued their campaign  of *Islam in danger* will considerably increase the number of their  seats and unionist representatives will correspondingly decline. (L/P  & J/5/249, p. 155).
 
 “Two years ago at Simla I said that the democratic  parliamentary system of government was unsuited to India. I was  condemned everywhere in the Congress press. I was told that I was guilty  of disservice to Islam because Islam believes in democracy. So far as I  have understood Islam, it does not advocate a democracy which would  allow the majority of non-Muslims to decide the fate of the Muslims. We  cannot accept a system of government in which the non-Muslims merely by  numerical majority would rule and dominate us.”
 [speech by Mr Jinnah delivered at the Aligarh Muslim University Union  on March 6, 1940]
 “Then, generally speaking, democracy has different  patterns even in different countries of the West. Therefore, naturally I  have reached the conclusion that in India where conditions are entirely  different from those of the Western countries, the British party system  of government and the so-called democracy are absolutely unsuitable.”
 [speech by Mr Jinnah delivered at the Aligarh Muslim University Union  on March 6, 1940]
 “Democratic systems based on the concept of a homogeneous  nation such as England are very definitely not applicable to  heterogeneous countries such as India and this simple fact is the root  cause of all of India’s constitutional ills.”
 [speech by Mr Jinnah delivered at the Aligarh Muslim University Union  on March 6, 1940]
 Raja Sahib Mahmudabad, a Shia, wrote in 1939 to the historian Mohibul  Hassan:
 When we speak of democracy in Islam it is not democracy  in the government but in the cultural and social aspects of life. Islam  is totalitarian—there is no denying about it. It is the Koran that we  should turn to. It is the dictatorship of the Koranic laws that we  want—and that we will have—but not through non-violence and Gandhian  truth. (quoted in Hasan, 1997: 57-8)
 Raja Sahib was severely reprimanded by Jinnah, but the point is that  such ideas were not altogether alien to Muslim League stalwarts. I think  an additional reason why the Muslim League could not have allowed such  ideas to be associated with its ideology and objective, at least at the  highest formal level, was that they would have undermined its position  as the moderate voice of Muslims vis-à-vis the Indian National Congress  and the British government. The great skill of Jinnah was that until the  last moment he did not explain what his idea of Pakistan was. It is not  surprising that his 11 August 1947 speech to the Pakistan Constituent  Assembly in which he spelt out the vision of a secular and democratic  Pakistan surprised many of his followers. His sympathetic biographer  Stanley Wolpert has recorded this point succinctly (Wolpert, 1993: 340).
 The strategy not to discuss the ideology of Pakistan provided Jinnah  with considerable flexibility and room to manoeuvre his campaign for  Pakistan as and when the situation required. The task was formidable and  the adversaries strong and well organised. Thus in late January 1947  when the Muslim League launched its direct action campaign in the Punjab  against the government of Khizr Tiwana, the Punjab governor, Sir Evan  Jenkins, met the visiting all-India Muslim League leader Khawaja  Nazimuddin on 18 February and later wrote in his fortnightly report to  the viceroy:
 In our first meeting Khawaja Nazim-ud-Din admitted  candidly that he did not know what Pakistan means, and that nobody in  the ML knew, so it was difficult for the League to carry on long term  negotiations with the minorities. (March 1947: L/P & J/5/250, p.  3/79).
 Similar practices were prevalent in the campaigns in NWFP and Sindh.  In his doctoral dissertation, ”India, Pakistan or Pakhtunistan?” Erland  Jansson writes:
 The Pir of Manki Sharif…founded an organisation of his  own, the Anjuman-us-asfia. The organisation promised to support the  Muslim League on condition that Shariat would be enforced in Pakistan.  To this Jinnah agreed. As a result the Pir of Manki Sharif declared  jehad to achieve Pakistan and ordered the members of his anjuman to  support the League in the 1946 elections (p. 166).
 Jinnah’s letter to to Pir Manki Sharif in which he promised that the  Shariah will be applied to the affairs of the Muslim community is quoted  in the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan Debates, Volume 5, 1949, p. 46.  Thus from 1940 onwards, the distinction between a Muslim national state  and an Islamic state became increasingly blurred, and in the popular  mind such distinctions did not matter much. In any case, while the  non-Muslims viewed with great apprehension the possibility of a Muslim  state that would reduce them to a minority, the minority Shia and  Ahmadiyya communities were fearful that it would result in Sunni  domination. This is obvious from the correspondence between the Shia  leader, Syed Zaheer Ali and Jinnah in July1944. Moreover, it is to be  noted that the Council of Action of the All-Parties Shia Conference  passed a resolution on 25 December 1945 rejecting the idea of Pakistan.  Similarly the Ahmadiyya were also wary and reluctant to support the  demand for a separate Muslim state (Report of the Court of Inquiry,  1954: 196). It is only when Sir Zafrulla was won over by Jinnah that the  Ahmadis started supporting the demand for Pakistan. To all doubters,  Jinnah gave assurances that Pakistan will be a modern Muslim state,  neutral on sectarian matters.
 References:
Mushirul Hasan, Legacy of a Divided Nation, London: Hurst & Company,  London, (1997).
David Gilmartin, Empire and Islam: Punjab and the Making of Pakistan,  Delhi: Oxford University Press, (1989).
Erland Jansson, India, Pakistan or Pakhtunistan?, Uppsala: Acta  UniversitatisUpsaliensis, (1981).
Political and Judicial Records L/P & J/5/249, p. 155, London:  British Library, (March 1946).
Political and Judicial Records L/P & J/5/250, p. 3/79, London:  British Library, (March 1947).
Report of the Court of Inquiry constituted under Punjab Act II of 1954  to enquire into the Punjab Disturbances of 1953 (also known as Munir  Report), Lahore: Government Printing Press, 1954.
‘Resolution adopted by Council of Action of the All-Parties Shaia  Conference’, held at Poona, 25 December 1945, in S.R. Bakshi, The Making  of India and Pakistan: Ideology of the Hindu Mahasabha and other  Political Parties, Vol. 3, New Delhi, Deep & Deep Publications,  1997.
Stanley Wopert, Jinnah of Pakistan, Oxford University Press London,  (1993).
The Constituent Assembly of Pakistan Debates,Vol. 5, 1949, Karachi:  Government of Pakistan Press, (1949).
Syed Zaheer Ali , ‘Letter to Quaid-e-Azam by Syed Ali Zaheer, July1944  and the Quaid’s reply’ in G. Allana, Pakistan Movement: Historic  Documents, Lahore: Islamic Book Service, (1977).
  II. Prof Asghar Sodai’s verse “Pakistan Ka Matlab Kia – La  Ilaha Illallah” was nothing but a cheap slogan and had nothing to do  with Pakistan except a Slogan.
 The fact is that this oft quoted statement is an election slogan  coined by a Sialkot poet – Asghar Saudai. But it was never raised by the  platform of the Muslim League. First and the last meeting of All  Pakistan Muslim League was held under the chairmanship of the  Quaid-i-Azam at Karachi’s Khaliqdina Hall. During the meeting a man, who  called himself Bihari, put to the Quaid that “we have been telling the  people Pakistan ka matlab kia, La Ilaha Illallah.” “Sit down, sit down,”  the Quaid shouted back. “Neither I nor my working committee, nor the  council of the All India Muslim League has ever passed such a resolution  wherein I was committed to the people of Pakistan, Pakistan ka  matlab….., you might have done so to catch a few votes.” This incident  is quoted from Daghon ki Barat written by Malik Ghulam Nabi, who was a  member of the Muslim League Council. The same incident is also quoted by  the Raja of Mehmoudabad. [Ahmad Bashir, Islam, Shariat and the Holy  Ghost, Frontier Post, Peshawar, 9.5.1991]
 III. Jinnah’s Pakistan died with him.
 In the last fifty-three years this country has changed its name and  status three times. It started life as a Dominion, which it remained  until 1956, when under the constitution promulgated that year, it became  the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. In 1962, Field Marshal Ayub Khan, who  had abrogated the 1956 constitution when he took over the country in  1958, promulgated his constitution and declared it to be simply the  Republic of Pakistan. Then he became a politician, expediency came to  the fore and by his First Constitutional Amendment Order of 1963 we  again became the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
 In the preamble to the Constitution of 1973, now suspended by General  Pervez Musharraf, certain paragraphs of the Objectives Resolution of  1949 are reproduced and one sentence reads: “Wherein adequate provision  shall be made for the minorities freely to profess and practise their  religions and develop their cultures;”
 Under Article 2-A of the 1973 Constitution the Objectives Resolution  has been made a substantive part of the Constitution and reproduced in  the Annex. In this reproduction the sentence quoted above reads :  “Wherein adequate provision shall be made for the minorities to profess  and practise their religions and develop their cultures;” The word  ‘freely’ has been deliberately omitted. Mischief?
 Now to a press conference held by Mohammad Ali Jinnah on July 14,  1947, in New Delhi. The text of this conference is to be found in the  book recently published by Oxford University Press “Jinnah – Speeches  and Statements 1947-1949″ (ISBN 0 19 579021 9) and from it I quote  relevant portions :
 Q. Could you as governor-general make a brief statement  on the minorities problem?
A. At present I am only governor-general designate. We will assume for a  moment that on August 15 I shall be really the governor-general of  Pakistan. On that assumption, let me tell you that I shall not depart  from what I said repeatedly with regard to the minorities. Every time I  spoke about the minorities I meant what I said and what I said I meant.  Minorities to whichever community they may belong will be safeguarded.  Their religion or faith or belief will be secure. There will be no  interference of any kind with their freedom of worship. They will have  their protection with regard to their religion, faith, their life, their  culture. They will be, in all respects, the citizens of Pakistan  without any distinction of caste or creed. The will have their rights  and privileges and no doubt along with this goes the obligations of  citizenship. Therefore, the minorities have their responsibilities also,  and they will play their part in the affairs of this
state. As long as the minorities are loyal to the state and owe true  allegiance, and as long as I have any power, they need have no  apprehension of any kind.
Q. Would your interest in the Muslims of Hindustan continue as it is  today?
A. My interest will continue in Hindustan in every citizen and  particularly the Muslims.
Q. As president of the All India Muslim League what measures do you  propose to adopt to assure the safety of Muslims in Hindu provinces?
A. All that I hope for is that the Muslims in the Hindustan states will  be treated as justly as I have indicated we propose to treat non-Muslim  minorities. I have stated the broad principles of policy, but the actual  question of safeguards and protection for minorities in the respective  states can only be dealt with by the Constituent Assembly.
Q. What are your comments on recent statements and speeches of certain  Congress leaders to the effect that if Hindus in Pakistan are treated  badly they will treat Muslims in Hindustan worse?
A. I hope they will get over this madness and follow the line I am  suggesting. It is no use picking up the statements of this man here or  that man there. You must remember that in every country there are  crooks, cranks, and what I call mad people.
Q. Would you like minorities to stay in Pakistan or would you like an  exchange of population?
A. As far as I can speak for Pakistan, I say that there is no reason for  any apprehension on the part of the minorities in Pakistan. It is for  them to decide what they should do. All I can say is that there is no  reason for any apprehension so far as I can speak about Pakistan. It is  for them to decide. I cannot order them.
Q. Will Pakistan be a secular or theocratic state?A. You are asking me a  question that is absurd. I do not know what a theocratic state means.
A correspondent suggested that a theocratic state meant a state where  only people of a particular religion, for example Muslims, could be full  citizens and non-Muslims would not be full citizens.
A. Then it seems to me that what I have already said is like throwing  water on a ducks’s back. When you talk of democracy I am afraid you have  not studied Islam. We learned democracy thirteen centuries ago.
 Just under one month later, on August 11, Jinnah addressed his  Constituent Assembly at Karachi. He told the future legislators :
 “. . . . . . . you will find that in course of time  Hindus would cease to be Hindus and Muslims would cease to be Muslims,  not in the religious sense because that is the personal faith of each  individual, but in the political sense as citizens of the state.
 Religious ‘scholars’ who could not even agree on the definition of a  Muslim when they were questioned by Justice M. Munir and Justice M. R.  Kayani in the court of inquiry into the Punjab disturbances of 1953. The  inquiry was launched after the campaign against the Ahmadis was  initiated by the then Jamaat-e-Islami chief Maulana Maudoodi.
 The Munir Commission Report (Lahore, 1954) states:
 “Keeping in view the several definitions given by the  ulema, need we make any comment except that no two learned divines are  agreed on this fundamental? If we attempt our own definition, as each  learned divine has, and that definition differs from all others, we all  leave Islam’s fold. If we adopt the definition given by any one of the  ulema, we remain Muslims according to the view of that alim, but kafirs  according to everyone else’s definition.”
 The report elaborated on the point by explaining that the Deobandis  would label the Barelvis as kafirs if they are empowered and vice versa,  and the same would happen among the other sects. The point of the  report was that if left to such religious ‘scholars’, the country would  become an open battlefield. Therefore, it was suggested that Pakistan  remain a democratic, secular state and steer clear of the theological  path.
 Unfortunately, this suggestion was not heeded and, consequently, the  exact opposite happened. Pakistan became hostage to the mullahs and is  now paying a heavy price. Our politicians played into the hands of these  fanatics for expedient political reasons and overlooked the diminishing  returns from such an unwise overture.
 The journey of politicising Islam began with the Objectives  Resolution. Jinnah envisioned a secular Pakistan, but Liaquat Ali Khan  made the mistake of adopting the Objectives Resolution in 1949 that  stated, “Sovereignty belongs to Allah alone but He has delegated it to  the State of Pakistan through its people for being exercised within the  limits prescribed by Him as a sacred trust.” This stipulation gave the  mullahs the chance they were looking for, a chance to flash their  religious card and put fear in the heart of the ignorant masses. After  moving the Objectives Resolution in the Constituent Assembly, Liaquat  Ali Khan said, “As I have just said, the people are the real recipients  of power. This naturally eliminates any danger of the establishment of a  theocracy.” Although he believed in the power of the people and aimed  for a secular, democratic rule, yet by bringing the name of religion  into the Objectives Resolution, he gave an edge to the mullahs who later  claimed it as their licence to impose the Shariah. And so began the  rise of the fanatics.
 Ulema did not wait long to demand their share of power in running the  new state. Soon after independence, Jamat-i-Islami made the achievement  of an Islamic constitution its central goal. Maulana Maududi, after the  creation of Pakistan, revised the conception of his mission and that of  the rationale of the Pakistan movement, arguing that its sole object  had been the establishment of an Islamic state and that his party alone  possessed the understanding and commitment needed to bring that about.  Jamat-i-Islami soon evolved into a political party, demanding the  establishment of an Islamic state in Pakistan.
 It declared that Pakistan was a Muslim state and not an Islamic state  since a Muslim State is any state which is ruled by Muslims while an  Islamic State is one which opts to conduct its affairs in accordance  with the revealed guidance of Islam and accepts the sovereignty of Allah  and the supremacy of His Law, and which devotes its resources to  achieve this end. According to this definition, Pakistan was a Muslim  state ruled by secular minded Muslims. Hence the Jamat-i-Islami and  other religious leaders channeled their efforts to make Pakistan an  “Islamic State.”
 Maulana Maududi argued that from the beginning of the struggle for  Pakistan, Moslems had an understanding that the center of their  aspirations, Pakistan, would be an Islamic state, in which Islamic law  would be enforced and Islamic culture would be revived. Muslim League  leaders, in their speeches, were giving this impression. Above all,  Quaid-i-Azam himself assured the Muslims that the constitution of  Pakistan would be based on the Quran.
 This contrasts to his views about the Muslim League leaders before  independence: Not a single leader of the Muslim League, from  Quad-i-Azam, downwards, has Islamic mentality and Islamic thinking or  they see the things from Islamic point of view. To declare such people  legible for Muslim leadership, because they are expert in western  politics or western organization system and have concern for the nation,  is definitely ignorance from Islam and amounts to an un-Islamic  mentality. On another occasion, Maulana Maududi said it was not clear  either from any resolution of the Muslim League or from the speeches of  any responsible League leaders, that the ultimate aim of Pakistan is the  establishment of an Islamic government…..Those people are wrong who  think that if the Muslim majority regions are emancipated from the Hindu  domination and a democratic system is established, it would be a  government of God. As a matter of fact, in this way, whatever would be  achieved, it would be only a non-believers government of the Muslims or  may be more deplorable than that.
 When the question of constitution-making came to the forefront, the  Ulema, inside and outside the Constitutional Assembly and outside  demanded that the Islamic Shariah shall form the only source for all  legislature in Pakistan.
 In February 1948, Maulana Maududi, while addressing the Law College,  Lahore, demanded that the Constitutional Assembly should unequivocally  declare:
1. That the sovereignty of the state of Pakistan vests in God Almighty  and that the government of Pakistan shall be only an agent to execute  the Sovereign’s Will.
2. That the Islamic Shariah shall form the inviolable basic code for all  legislation in Pakistan.
3. That all existing or future legislation which may contravene, whether  in letter or in spirit, the
Islamic Shariah shall be null and void and be considered ultra vires of  the constitution; and
4. That the powers of the government of Pakistan shall be derived from,  circumscribed by and exercised within the limits of the Islamic Shariah  alone. On January 13, 1948, Jamiat-al-Ulema-i-Islam, led by Maulana  Shabbir Ahmad Usmani, passed a resolution in Karachi demanding that the  government appoint a leading Alim to the office of Shaikh al Islam, with  appropriate ministerial and executive powers over the qadis throughout  the country. The Jamiat submitted a complete table of a ministry of  religious affairs with names suggested for each post. It was proposed  that this ministry be immune to ordinary changes of government. It is  well known that Quaid-i-Azam was the head of state at this time and that  no action was taken on Ulema’s demand. On February 9, 1948, Maulana  Shabbir Ahmad Usmani, addressing the Ulema-i-Islam conference in Dacca,  demanded that the Constituent Assembly “should set up a committee  consisting of eminent ulema and thinkers… to prepare a draft … and  present it to the Assembly.
 It was in this background that Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan, on  March 7, 1949, moved the Objectives Resolution in the Constituent  Assembly, according to which the future constitution of Pakistan was to  be based on ” the principles of democracy, freedom, equality, tolerance  and social justice as enunciated by Islam.”
 While moving the Resolution, he said:
 “Sir, I consider this to be a most important occasion in  the life of this country, next in importance only to the achievement of  independence, because by achieving independence we only won an  opportunity of building up a country and its polity in accordance with  our ideals. I would like to remind the house that the Father of the  Nation, Quaid-i-Azam, gave expression of his feelings on this matter on  many an occasion, and his views were endorsed by the nation in  unmistakable terms, Pakistan was founded because the Muslims of this  sub-continent wanted to build up their lives in accordance with the  teachings and traditions of Islam, because they wanted to demonstrate to  the world that Islam provides a panacea to the many diseases which have  crept into the life of humanity today.”
 The resolution was debated for five days. The leading members of the  government and a large number of non-Muslim members, especially from  East Bengal, took a prominent part. Non-Muslim members expressed grave  apprehensions about their position and role in the new policy.
 Hindu members of the Constitutional Assembly argued that the  Objectives Resolution differed with Jinnah’s view in all the basic  points. Sris Chandra Chattopadhyaya said:
 “What I hear in this (Objectives) Resolution is not the  voice of the great creator of Pakistan – the Quaid-i-Azam, nor even that  of the Prime Minister of Pakistan the Honorable Mr. Liaquat Ali Khan,  but of the Ulema of the land.” Birat Chandra Mandal declared that Jinnah  had “unequivocally said that Pakistan will be a secular state.”  Bhupendra Kumar Datta went a step further: …were this resolution to come  before this house within the life-time of the Great Creator of  Pakistan, the Quaid-i-Azam, it would not have come in its present  shape….”
 The leading members of the government in their speeches not only  reassured the non-Muslims that their position was quite safe and their  rights were not being impaired but also gave clarifications with regard  to the import of the Resolution. Sardar Abdur Rab Nishtar, the Deputy  Leader of the House, while defending the Resolution said:
 “It was remarked by some honorable members that the  interpretation which the mover of this Resolution has given is  satisfactory and quite good, but Mr. B.C. Mandal says: “Well tomorrow  you may die, I may die, and the posterity may misinterpret it.” First of  all, I may tell him and those who have got some wrong notions about the  interpretation of this resolution that this resolution itself is not a  constitution. It is a direction to the committee that will have to  prepare the draft keeping in view these main features. The matter will  again come to the House in a concrete form, and all of us will get an  opportunity to discuss it.”
 In his elucidation of the implications of the Objectives Resolution  in terms of the distribution of power between God and the people, Omar  Hayat Malik argued:
 “The principles of Islam and the laws of Islam as laid  down in the Quran are binding on the State. The people or the state  cannot change these principles or these laws…but there is a vast field  besides these principles and laws in which people will have free play…it  might be called by the name of ‘theo-cracy’, that is democracy limited  by word of God, but as the word ‘theo’ is not in vogue so we call it by  the name of Islamic democracy.
 Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi further elaborated the concept of Islamic  democracy: Since Islam admits of no priest craft, and since the  dictionary meaning of the term “secular” is non-monastic — that is,  “anything which is not dependent upon the sweet will of the priests,”  Islamic democracy, far from being theocracy, could in a sense be  characterized as being “secular.” However, he believed that if the word  “secular” means that the ideals of Islam, that the fundamental  principles of religion, that the ethical outlook which religion  inculcates in our people should not be observed, then, I am afraid,…that  kind of secular democracy can never be acceptable to us in Pakistan.
 During the heated debate, Liaquat Ali Khan stressed:
 the Muslim League has only fulfilled half of its mission (and that)  the other half of its mission is to convert Pakistan into a laboratory  where we could experiment upon the principles of Islam to enable us to  make a contribution to the peace and progress of mankind. He was hopeful  that even if the body of the constitution had to be mounted in the  chassis of Islam, the vehicle would go in the direction he had already  chosen. Thus he seemed quite sure that Islam was on the side of  democracy. “As a matter of fact it has been recognized by non-Muslims  throughout the world that Islam is the only society where there is real  democracy.” In this approach he was supported by Maulana Shabbir Ahmad  Usmani: ” The Islamic state is the first political institution in the  world which stood against imperialism, enunciated the principle of  referendum and installed a Caliph (head of State) elected by the people  in place of the king.”
 The opposite conclusion, however, was reached by the authors of the  Munir Report (1954) who said that the form of government in Pakistan  cannot be described as democratic, if that clause of the Objectives  Resolution reads as follows: ” Whereas sovereignty over the entire  Universe belongs to Allah Almighty alone, and the authority which He has  delegated to the state of Pakistan through its people for being  exercised within the limits prescribed by Him is a sacred trust.”  Popular sovereignty, in the sense that the majority of the people has  the right to shape the nation’s institutions and policy in accordance  with their personal views without regard to any higher law, cannot exist  in an Islamic state, they added.
 The learned authors of the Munir Report felt that the Objectives  Resolution was against the concept of a sovereign nation state.  Corroboration of this viewpoint came from the Ulema themselves, (whom  the Munir Committee interviewed) “including the Ahrar” and erstwhile  Congressites with whom before the partition this conception of a modern  national state as against an Islamic state was almost a part of their  faith. The Ulema claimed that the Quaid-i-Azam’s conception of a modern  national state….became obsolete with the passing of the Objectives  Resolution on 12th March 1949.
 Justice Mohammad Munir, who chaired the committee, says that “if  during Quaid-i-Azam’s life, Liaquat Ali Khan, Prime Minister had even  attempted to introduce the Objectives resolution of the kind that he got  through the Assembly, the Quaid-i-Azam would never have given his  assent to it.
 In an obvious attempt to correct the erroneous notion that the  Objectives Resolution envisaged a theocratic state in Pakistan, Liaquat  Ali Khan repeatedly returned to the subject during his tour of the  United States (May-June 1950). In a series of persuasive and eloquent  speeches, he argued that “We have pledged that the State shall exercise  its power and authority through the chosen representatives of the  people. In this we have kept steadily before us the principles of  democracy, freedom equality, tolerance and social justice as enunciated  by Islam. There is no room here for theocracy, for Islam stands for  freedom of conscience, condemns coercion, has no priesthood and abhors  the caste system. It believes in equality of all men and in the right of  each individual to enjoy the fruit of his or her efforts, enterprise,  capacity and skill — provided these be honestly employed.”
 The Objectives Resolution was approved on March 12, 1949. Its only  Muslim critic was Mian Iftikhar-ud-din, leader of the Azad Pakistan  Party, although he believed that “the Islamic conception of a state is,  perhaps as progressive, as revolutionary, as democratic and as dynamic  as that of any other state or ideology.”
 According to Munir, the terms of the Objectives Resolution differ in  all the basic points of the Quaid-i-Azam’s views e.g:
 1. The Quaid-i-Azam has said that in the new state sovereignty would  rest with the people. The Resolution starts with the statement that  sovereignty rests with Allah. This concept negates the basic idea of  modern democracy that there are no limits on the legislative power of a  representative assembly.
 2. There is a reference to the protection of the minorities of their  right to worship and practice
their religion, whereas the Quaid-i-Azam had stated that there would be  no minorities on the basis of religion.
 3. The distinction between religious majorities and minorities takes  away from the minority, the right of equality, which again is a basic  idea of modern democracy.
 4. The provision relating to Muslims being enabled to lead their life  according to Islam is opposed to the conception of a secular state.
It was natural that with the terms of the Resolution, the Ulema should  acquire considerable influence in the state. On the strength of the  Objectives Resolution they made the Ahmadis as their first target and  demanded them to be declared a minority.
After the adoption of Objectives Resolution, Liaquat Ali Khan moved a  motion for the appointment of a Basic Principles Committee consisting of  24 members, including himself and two non-Muslim members, to report the  house on the main principles on which the constitution of Pakistan is  to be framed. A Board of Islamic Teaching was set up to advise the  Committee on
the Islamic aspects of the constitution.
 In the course of constitutional debates, a number of very crucial  issues were raised that caused much controversy, both inside and outside  the Constituent Assembly over specific questions such as the following:
 1) The nature of the Islamic state: the manner in which the basic  principles of Islam concerning state, economy, and society were to be  incorporated into the constitution.
2) The nature of federalism: questions of provincial autonomy vis-a-vis  federal authority with emphasis on the problems of representation on the  basis of population and the equality of the federating units; the  structure of the federal legislature — unicameral or bicameral.
3) The form of government: whether it was to be modeled on the British  or the U.S. pattern –
parliamentary or presidential.
4) The problem of the electorate: serious questions of joint (all  confessional groups vote in one election) versus separate (each  confessional group votes separately for its own candidates) electorate.
5) The question of languageboth national and regional. These very  fundamental issues divided the political elites of Pakistan into warring  factions that impeded the process of constitution-making.
 IV Late Mr. Jinnah’s Religion:
 On 24 September 1948, after the demise of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, his  sister Fatimah Jinnah and the then Prime Minister of Pakistan, Liaquat  Ali Khan, submitted a jointly signed petition at the Karachi High Court,  describing Jinnah as ‘Shia Khoja Mohamedan’ and praying that his will  may be disposed of under Shia inheritance law. On 6 February, 1968 after  Mohtarma Fatima Jinnah’’ demise the previous year, her sister Shirin  Bai, moved an application at the High Court claiming Fatimah Jinnah’s  property under the Shia inheritance law on grounds that the deceased was  a Shia. As per Mr. I. H. Ispahani who was a family friend of Jinnah,  revealed that Jinnah had himself told him in 1936 that he and his family  had converted to Shiism after his return from England in 1894. He said  that Jinnah had married Ruttie Bai according to the Shia ritual during  which she was represented by a Shia scholar of Bombay, and Jinnah was  represented by his Shia friend, Raja Sahib of Mehmoodabad. He however  conceded that Jinnah was opposed in Bombay elections by a Shia  Conference canditate. Ispahani was present when Miss Fatima Jinnah died  in 1967. He himself arranged the Ghusl and Janaza {Funeral Bath and  Funeral} for her at Mohatta Palace according to the Shia Ritual before  handing over the body to the state. Her Sunni Namaz-e-Janaza was held  later at Polo Ground, Karachi after which she was buried next to her  brother at a spot chosen by Ispahani inside the mausoleum. Ritualistic  Shia talqin (last advice to the deceased) was done after her dead body  was lowered into the grave. (Jinnah had arranged for talqin for Ruttie  Bai too when she died in 1929). Allama Syed Anisul Husnain, a Shia  scholar, deposed that he had arranged the gusl of the Quaid on the  instructions of Miss Fatimah Jinah. He led his Namaz-e-Janaza in a room  of the Governor General’s House at which such luminaries as Yousuf  Haroon, Hashim Raza, and Aftab Hatim Alvi were present, while Liaquat  Ali Khan waited outside the room. After the Shia ritual, the body was  handed over to the state and Maulana Shabbir Ahmed Usmani, an alim  belonging to Deoband school of thought known for its anti-Shia belief,  read his Janaza according the Sunni ritual at the ground where the  mausoleum was later constructed. Other witnesses confirmed that after  the demise of Miss Fatimah Jinnah, alam and panja (two Shia symbols)  were discovered from her residence, Mohatta Palace. Despite all this  Jinnah kept himself away from Shia politics. He was not a Shia; he was  also not a Sunni; he was simply a Muslim.
 [PAKISTAN: Behind the Ideological Mask (Facts About Great Men We  Don’t Want to Know) by Khaled Ahmed, published by VANGUARD Lahore,  Karachi and Islamabad. The Murder of History: A critique of history  textbooks used in Pakistan by K.K. Aziz, published by VANGUARD Lahore,  Karachi and Islamabad].
  V. Ulema and Pakistan Movement
 Muslim religious organisations of the sub-continent –Jamiat  Ulema-i-Hind, Majlis-i- Ahrar- i-Islam and Jamat-i-Islami [1]– were  politically very active during the struggle for Pakistan but all of them  opposed tooth and nail the creation of a separate homeland for the  Muslims. The opposition of Jamiat and Ahrar was on the plea that  Pakistan was essentially a territorial concept and thus alien to the  philosophy of Islamic brotherhood, which was universal in character.  Nationalism was an un-Islamic concept for them but at the same time they  supported the Congress Party’ s idea of Indian nationalism which the  Muslim political leadership considered as accepting perpetual domination  of Hindu majority. Jamat-i-Islami reacted to the idea of Pakistan in a  complex manner. It rejected both the nationalist Ulema’s concept of  nationalism as well as the Muslim League’s demand for a separate  homeland for the Muslims.
 The most noteworthy feature of the struggle for Pakistan is that its  leadership came almost entirely from the Western-educated Muslim  professionals. The Ulema remained, by and large, hostile to the idea of a  Muslim national state. But during the mass contact campaign, which  began around 1943, the Muslim League abandoned its quaint  constitutionalist and legalist image in favor of Muslim populism which  drew heavily on Islamic values. Wild promises were made of restoring the  glory of Islam in the future Muslim state. As a consequence, many  religious divines and some respected Ulema were won over.[2]
 The Muslim political leadership believed that the Ulema were not  capable of giving a correct lead in politics to the Muslims because of  their exclusively traditional education and complete ignorance of the  complexities of modern life. It, therefore, pleaded that the Ulema  should confine their sphere of activity to religion since they did not  understand the nature of politics of the twentieth century.
 It was really unfortunate that the Ulema, in general and the Darul  Ulum Deoband in particular, understood Islam primarily in a legal form.  Their medieval conception of the Shariah remained unchanged, orthodox  and traditional in toto and they accepted it as finished goods  manufactured centuries ago by men like (Imam) Abu Hanifa and Abu Yusuf.  Their scholasticism, couched in the old categories of thought, barred  them from creative thinking and properly understanding the problems,  social or philosophical, confronting the Muslim society in a post-feudal  era. They were intellectually ill-equipped to comprehend the crisis  Islam had to face in the twentieth century. [3]
 The struggle for Pakistan — to establish a distinct identity of  Muslims — was virtually a secular campaign led by men of politics rather  than religion and Mohammad Ali Jinnah and his lieutenants such as  Liaquat Ali Khan who won Pakistan despite opposition by most of the  Ulema.
Jinnah was continuously harassed by the Ulema, particularly by those  with Congress orientation. They stood for status quo as far as Islam and  Muslims were concerned, and regarded new ideas such as the two nation  theory, the concept of Muslim nationhood and the territorial  specification of Islam through the establishment of Pakistan as  innovations which they were not prepared to accept under any  circumstance.
 It was in this background that Jinnah pointed out to the students of  the Muslim University Union:
 “What the League has done is to set you free from the  reactionary elements of Muslims and to create the opinion that those who  play their selfish game are traitors. It has certainly freed you from  that undesirable element of Molvis and Maulanas. I am not speaking of  Molvis as a whole class. There are some of them who are as patriotic and  sincere as any other, but there is a section of them which is  undesirable. Having freed ourselves from the clutches of the British  Government, the Congress, the reactionaries and so-called Molvis, may I  appeal to the youth to emancipate our women. This is essential. I do not  mean that we are to ape the evils of the West. What I mean is that they  must share our life not only social but also political.” [4]
 The history of the Ulema in the sub-continent has been one of their  perpetual conflict with intelligentsia. The Ulema opposed Sir Syed Ahmad  Khan when he tried to rally the Muslims in 1857. Nearly a hundred of  them, including Maulana Rashid Ahmad Gangohi, the leading light of  Deoband, ruled that it was unlawful to join the Patriotic Association  founded by him. However, the Muslim community proved wiser than the  religious elite and decided to follow the political lead given by Sir  Syed Ahmad.
 The conflict between conservative Ulema and political Muslim  leadership came to a head during the struggle for Pakistan when a number  of Ulema openly opposed the Quaid-i-Azam and denounced the concept of  Pakistan. It is an irony of history that Jinnah in his own days, like  Sir Syed Ahmad before him, faced the opposition of the Ulema.
 The Ahrar Ulema — Ataullah Shah Bukhari, Habibur Rahman Ludhianawi  and Mazhar Ali Azhar – seldom mentioned the Quaid-i-Azam by his correct  name which was always distorted. Mazhar Ali Azhar used the insulting  sobriquet Kafir-i-Azam (the great unbeliever) for Quaid-i-Azam. One of  the resolutions passed by the Working Committee of the Majlis-i-Ahrar  which met in Delhi on 3rd March 1940, disapproved of Pakistan plan, and  in some subsequent speeches of the Ahrar leaders Pakistan was dubbed as  “palidistan” . The authorship of the following couplet is attributed to  Maulana Mazhar Ali Azhar, a leading personality of the Ahrar:
 Ik Kafira Ke Waste Islam ko Chhora
Yeh Quaid-i-Azam hai Ke hai Kafir-i-Azam. [6]
 (He abandoned Islam for the sake of a non-believer woman [7], he is a  great leader or a great
non-believer)
 During the struggle for Pakistan, the Ahrar were flinging foul abuse  on all the leading personalities of the Muslim League and accusing them  of leading un-Islamic lives. Islam was with them a weapon which they  could drop and pick up at pleasure to discomfit a political adversary.  Religion was a private affair in their dealings with the Congress and  nationalism their ideology. But when they were pitted against the Muslim  League, their sole consideration was Islam. They said that the Muslim  League was not only indifferent to Islam but an enemy of it.
After independence, the Ahrar leaders came to Pakistan. But before  coming, the All India Majlis-i-Ahrar passed a resolution dissolving  their organization and advising the Muslims to accept Maulana Azad as  their leader and join the Congress Party.[8]
 The Jamat-i-Islami was also opposed to the idea of Pakistan which it  described as Na Pakistan (not pure). In none of the writings of the  Jama’at is to be found the remotest reference in support of the demand  for Pakistan. The pre-independence views of Maulana Abul Ala Maududi,  the founder of the Jamat-i-Islami were quite definite:
 “Among Indian Muslims today we find two kinds of  nationalists: the Nationalists Muslims, namely those who in spite of  their being Muslims believe in Indian Nationalism and worship it; and  the Muslims Nationalist: namely those who are little concerned with  Islam and its principles and aims, but are concerned with the  individuality and the political and economic interests of that nation  which has come to exist by the name of Muslim, and they are so concerned  only because of their accidence of birth in that nation. From the  Islamic viewpoint both these types of nationalists were equally misled,  for Islam enjoins faith in truth only; it does not permit any kind of  nation-worshipping at all.[9]
Maulana Maududi was of the view that the form of government in the new  Muslim state, if it ever came into existence, could only be secular. In a  speech shortly before partition he said: “Why should we foolishly waste  our time in expediting the so-called Muslim-nation state and fritter  away our energies in setting it up, when we know that it will not only  be useless for our purposes, but will rather prove an obstacle in our  path.” [10]
 Paradoxically, Maulana Maududi’s writings played an important role in  convincing the Muslim intelligentsia that the concept of united  nationalism was suicidal for the Muslims but his reaction to the  Pakistan movement was complex and contradictory. When asked to cooperate  with the Muslim League he replied: “Please do not think that I do not  want to participate in this work because of any differences, my  difficulty is that I do not see how I can participate because partial  remedies do not appeal to my mind and I have never been interested in  patch work.”[11]
 He had opposed the idea of united nationhood because he was convinced  that the Muslims would be drawn away from Islam if they agreed to merge  themselves in the Indian milieu. He was interested more in Islam than  in Muslims: because Muslims were Muslims not because they belonged to a  communal or a national entity but because they believed in Islam. The  first priority, therefore, in his mind was that Muslim loyalty to Islam  should be strengthened. This could be done only by a body of Muslims who  did sincerely believe in Islam and did not pay only lip service to it.  Hence he founded the Jamat-i-Islami (in August 1941).[12]
 However, Maulana Maududi’s stand failed to take cognizance of the  circumstances in which the Muslims were placed [13] at that critical  moment.
 The Jamiat-i-Ulema- i-Hind, the most prestigious organization of the  Ulema, saw nothing Islamic in the idea of Pakistan. Its president,  Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, who was also Mohtamim or principal of Darul  Ulum Deoband opposed the idea of two-nation theory, pleading that all  Indians, Muslims or Hindus were one nation. He argued that faith was  universal and could not be contained within national boundaries but that  nationality was a matter of geography, and Muslims were obliged to be  loyal to the nation of their birth along with their non-Muslim fellow  citizens. Maulana Madani said: “all should endeavor jointly for such a  democratic government in which Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians and  Parsis are included. Such a freedom is in accordance with Islam.” [14]  He was of the view that in the present times, nations are formed on the  basis of homeland and not on ethnicity and religion.[15] He issued a  fatwa forbidding Muslims from joining the Muslim League.
 Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani accepted the doctrine of Indian  nationalism with all enthusiasm and started preaching it in mosques.  This brought a sharp rebuke from Dr. Mohammad Iqbal. His poem on Hussain  Ahmad [16] in 1938 started a heated controversy between the so-called  nationalist Ulema and the adherents of pan-Islamism (Umma).
 Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, a member of Indian National Congress regrets  that he did not accept Congress president ship in 1946, which led Nehru  to assume that office and give the statements that could be exploited  by the Muslim League for creation of Pakistan and withdrawal of its  acceptance of the Cabinet Plan that envisaged an Indian Union of all the  provinces and states of the sub-continent with safeguards for  minorities. [17] He had persuaded the pro-Congress Ulema that their  interests would be better safeguarded under a united India, and that  they should repose full confidence in Indian nationalism. However, they  should make efforts to secure for themselves the control of Muslim  personal law, by getting a guarantee from the Indian National Congress,  that the Muslim personal law would be administered by qadis (judges) who  were appointed from amongst the Ulema.[18]
 In a bid to weaken the Muslim League’s claim to represent all Muslims  of the subcontinent, the Congress strengthened its links with the  Jamiat-i-Ulema- i-Hind, the Ahrars and such minor and insignificant  non-League Muslim groups as the Momins and the Shia Conference.[ 19]
Along with its refusal to share power with the Muslim League, the  Congress pursued an anti-Muslim League policy in another direction with  the help of Jamiat-i-Ulema- i-Hind . It was not enough to keep the  Muslim League out of power. Its power among the people should be  weakened and finally broken. Therefore, it decided to bypass Muslim  political leadership and launch a clever movement of contacting the  Muslim masses directly to wean them away from the leadership that sought  to protect them from the fate of becoming totally dependent on the  sweet will of the Hindu majority for their rights, even for their  continued existence. This strategy — called Muslim Mass Contact Movement  — was organized in 1937 with great finesse by Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru.  [20]
 Congress leaders …. employed Molvis to convert the Muslim masses to  the Congress creed. The Molvis, having no voice in the molding of the  Congress policy and program, naturally could not promise to solve the  real difficulties of the masses, a promise which would have drawn the  masses towards the Congress. The Molvis and others employed for the work  tried to create a division among the Muslim masses by carrying on a  most unworthy propaganda against the leaders of the Muslim League. [21]  However, this Muslim mass contact movement failed.
 It is pertinent to note here that a small section of the Deoband  School was against joining the Congress. Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanwi  (1863-1943) was the chief spokesman of this group. Later Maulana Shabbir  Ahmad Othmani (1887-1949), a well-known disciple of Maulana Hussain  Ahmad Madani and a scholar of good repute, who had been for years in the  forefront of the Jamiat leadership quit it with a few other Deoband  Ulema, and became the first president of the Jamiat-i-Ulema- i-Islam  established in 1946 to counteract the activities of the Jamiat-i-Ulema-  i-Hind. However, the bulk of the Deoband Ulema kept on following the  lead of Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani and the Jamiat in opposing the  demand for Pakistan.
 Contrary to the plea of the nationalist Ulema, the Muslim  intelligentsia was worried that the end of British domination should not  become for the Muslims the beginning of Hindu domination. They  perceived through the past experience that the Hindus could not be  expected to live with them on equal terms within the same political  framework. Therefore they did not seek to change masters. A homeland is  an identity and surely the Muslims of the sub-continent could not have  served the cause of universal brotherhood by losing their identity,  which is what would have inevitably happened if they had been compelled  to accept the political domination of the Hindus. The Ulema thought in  terms of a glorious past and linked it unrealistically to a nebulous  future of Muslim brotherhood. This more than anything else damaged the  growth of Muslim nationalism and retarded the progress of Muslims in the  sub-continent. [22]
 The nationalist Ulema failed to realize this simple truth and  eventually found themselves completely isolated from the mainstream of  the Muslim struggle for emancipation. Their opposition to Pakistan on  grounds of territorial nationalism was the result of their failure to  grasp contemporary realities. [23] They did not realize that majorities  can be much more devastating, specifically when it is an ethnic,  linguistic or religious majority which cannot be converted into a  minority through any election.[24]
 The Ulema, as a class, concentrated on jurisprudence and traditional  sciences. They developed a penchant for argument and hair splitting.  This resulted in their progressive alienation from the people, who while  paying them the respect due to religious scholars, rejected their lead  in national affairs. While their influence on the religious minded  masses remained considerable, their impact on public affairs shrank  simply because the Ulema concentrated on the traditional studies and  lost touch with the realities of contemporary life.[25]
 Notes:
1. After independence “some of the Ulema decided to stay in India,  others hastened to Pakistan to lend a helping hand. If they had not been  able to save the Muslims from Pakistan they must now save Pakistan from  the Muslims. Among them was Maulana Abul Aala Maududi, head of the  Jamat-i-Islami, who had been bitterly opposed to Pakistan.” Mohammad  Ayub Khan, Friends not
Masters, P-202
2 Ishtiaq Ahmed, The Concept of an Islamic State in Pakistan, p-66
3. Ziya-ul-Hasan Faruqi, The Deoband School and the Demand for Pakistan,  p79-80
4. Speech on Feb. 5, 1938
5 Afzal Iqbal, Islamization of Pakistan, p-28
6. Ibid. p-54
7. Alluding to Quadi-i-Azam’ s marriage to a Parsi girl.
8. Munir Report, p-256
9. Maulana Maududi, Nationalism and India, Pathankot, 1947, p-25
10. The Process of Islamic Revolution, 2nd edition, Lahore 1955, p-37
11. Syed Abul Ala Maududi, Tehrik-i-Adazi- e-Hind aur Mussalman (Indian  Freedom Movement and Muslims), pp 22-23
12. Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi, Ulema in Politics, p-368
13. Ibid., p-368
14. Zamzam 17.7.1938 cited by Pakistan Struggle and Pervez, Tulu-e-Islam  Trust, Lahore, p-614
15. Ibid. p-314
16. Hasan (rose) from Basrah, Bilal from Abyssinia, Suhaib from Rome,  Deoband produced Husain Ahmad, what monstrosity is this? He chanted from  the pulpit that nations are created by countries, What an ignoramus  regarding the position of Muhammad! Take thyself to Muhammad, because he  is the totality of Faith, And if thou does not reach him, all (thy  knowledge) is Bu Lahaism.
17. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, in his biography, India Wins Freedom, fixes  the responsibility for the partition of India, at one place on  Jawaharlal Nehru, and at another place on Vallabh-bhai Patel by  observing that “it would not perhaps be unfair to say that Vallabh-dhbai  Patel was the founder of Indian partition.” H.M. Seervai, Partition of  India: Legend and Reality, p-162
18. Dr. Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi, op. cit., p-328
19. Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi, The Struggle for Pakistan, p-237
20. Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi, Ulema in Politics p-334
21. Justice Sayed Shameem Hussain Kadri – Creation of
Pakistan – Army Book Club, Rawalpindi ,1983 — p-414
22. Ayub Khan, op. cit., p-200
23. According to Dr. Mohammad Iqbal, the present state of affairs of the  Moslem world. Dr. Iqbal said: “It seems to me that God is slowly  bringing home to us the truth that Islam is neither nationalism nor  imperialism but a league of nations which recognizes artificial  boundaries and racial distinctions for facility of reference only and  not for restricting the social horizon of its members.” (Reconstruction  of Religious Thought in Islam, p-159) Dr. Iqbal had apparently in mind  the following verse from the Holy Quran: O Mankind ! We created you from  a single (pair) of a male and a female and made you into nations and  tribes, that ye may know each other. (49:13)
24. Qureshi, op. cit., p-378
25. Afzal Iqbal, Islamization in Pakistan, p-26
26. Ayub Khan, op. cit.,p-202
27. Wilfred Cantwell Smith, Modern Islam in India, Lahore: Sh. Muhammad  Ashraf, 1963, p-173
28. Afzal Iqbal, op. cit., p-29
29. Qureshi, op. cit., p-383
30. Wilfred Cantwell Smith, Islam in History, p-215
31. Munir Report, p-205
32. Ibid. p-218
33. Ibid. p-219
34. Anita M. Weiss, Reassertion of Islam in Pakistan, p-2
35. Leonard Binder, Islam and Politics in Pakistan, University of  California Press, 1961, p-29
36. Anita M. Weiss, p-21
37. Ibid. p-21
38. When Pakistan appeared on the map, they (Ulema) found no place for  themselves in India and they all came to Pakistan and brought with them  the curse of Takfir (calling one another infidel). Munir, From Jinnah to  Zia, p-38
39. Prof. Rafi-ullah Shehab – The Quaid-e-Azam and the Ulema – The  Pakistan Times, Islamabad 25.12.1986.
40. Ahmad Bashir, Islam, Shariat and the Holy Ghost, Frontier Post,  Peshawar, 9.5.1991
41. Ibid.
COURTESY: MR. ABDUS SATTAR GHAZALI.
 Mixing Religion with Politics: Liaquat Ali Khan was the one to bring  for the first time religion into politics. His alliance with the mullahs  produced the ‘Objectives Resolution’, which declared Pakistan to be an  ‘Islamic state’. Common perception holds Zia or Bhutto responsible for  mixing religion and politics, but it was Liaquat Ali Khan under whose  leadership mullahs were given entry into politics and the right to  decide the fate of the nation [Daily Times]
Article 2 and 227: if State’s Religion is Islam then which Islam? and  what definition?. Recently on FACEBOOK a video of a Pir and his Dancing  Disciples was floated on which several members commented “Shirk –  Polytheism” whereas that point of view was of Ahl-e-Hadiths/Wahabis and  Deobandis. Barelvis. Shias, and Sufis may differ from their view. Even  if that wasn’t enough such Urs are celebrated Officially and Private TV  Channels also give special coverage to such occasions which as other  school of thought are “Bida’at – Innovation” so when there is no  consensus on the definition of Islam then this Drama of Islamic Clauses  should be done away forthwith. For Further Clarification read: Here lies  the so-called Muslim Ummah! – 1
 http://chagataikhan.blogspot.com/2008/11/here-lies-so-called-muslim-ummah-1.html
 Calamity of Takfir [Rulings of Heresy - Apostate]
Here lies the so-called Muslim Ummah! – 2
 http://chagataikhan.blogspot.com/2008/11/here-lies-so-called-muslim-ummah-2.html
 Barelvi and Deobandi Maulvis on Shias being Infidels [in Urdu.] CLICK  THE LINK AND READ THE LAST PART Here lies the so-called Muslim Ummah! –  3 READ AND LAMENT
 http://chagataikhan.blogspot.com/2008/11/here-lies-so-called-muslim-ummah-3.html