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KARACHI: Need to free history from sentimentalism stressed
Prof Sharif-ul-Mujahid observed that the purpose of holding this conference was to rekindle interest in the Muslim League and to assess its triumphs and failures. He said that the decade of 1937-47 was the League’s most active, as before this it was largely a “paper organisation.” He noted that the creation of Pakistan was the League’s biggest achievement and pointed out that in an editorial, a British newspaper of the time (1947) had observed that Pakistan was the most major achievement of the Muslims after the fall of the Ottoman caliphate. “However, we have not done justice to the Muslim League,” he lamented, as far as scholarship was concerned. Indian scholar Prof Aslam Jawed delivered his comments in Urdu, saying that he was glad to be able to speak in his mother tongue. He succinctly summed up the latter history of Indian Muslims, starting from the decline of Mughal rule after Aurangzeb, to the nadir of the Indian Muslim nation following the defeat of 1857, mentioning the machinations of the British in pursuit of their policy of divide et impera – divide and rule – along the way. KU Vice-Chancellor Prof Dr Qasim Raza Siddiqui, in his presidential address, said that conferences like these provided opportunities for history to be set right, free from prejudices, while Dr Syed Jaffar Ahmed, Director of the Pakistan Study Centre pointed out that though the All India Muslim League’s centenary was in 2006, logistical issues had pushed the conference to 2007.
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