The Miracle

Qaid e azam Muhammad ali Jinnah Illness and death(1876-1948)

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MPhoto: Jinnah’s arrival at Lahore to discuss the Kashmir crisis in 1948 uhammad Ali Jinnah (born Mahomedali Jinnahbhai; December 25,1876 – 11 September 1948) was a barrister, politician and the founder of Pakistan. Jinnah served as the leader of the All-India Muslim League from 1913 until the inception of Pakistan on 14 August 1947, and then as the Dominion of Pakistan’s first governor-general until his death. He is revered in Pakistan as the Quaid-i-Azam (“Great Leader”) and Baba-iQaum (“Father of the Nation”). His birthday is observed as a national holiday in Pakistan. F rom the 1930s, Jinnah suffered from tuberculos­is; only his sister and a few others close to him were aware of his condition. Jinnah believed public knowledge of his lung ailments would hurt him politicall­y. In a 1938 letter, he wrote to a supporter that “you must have read in the papers how during my tours ... I suffered, which was not because there was anything wrong with me, but the irregulari­ties [of the schedule] and over-strain told upon my health”.[193][194]

Many years later, Mountbatte­n stated that if he had known Jinnah was so physically ill, he would have stalled, hoping Jinnah’s death would avert partition.[195] Fatima Jinnah later wrote, “even in his hour of triumph, the Quaid-e-Azam was gravely ill ... He worked in a frenzy to consolidat­e Pakistan. And, of course, he totally neglected his health ...”[196] Jinnah worked with a tin of Craven “A” cigarettes at his desk, of which he had smoked 50 or more a day for the previous 30 years, as well as a box of Cuban cigars. As his health got worse, he took longer and longer rest breaks in the private wing of Government House in Karachi, where only he, Fatima and the servants were allowed.[197] In June 1948, he and Fatima flew to Quetta, in the mountains of Balochista­n, where the weather was cooler than in Karachi. He could not completely rest there, addressing the officers at the Command and Staff College saying, “you, along with the other Forces of Pakistan, are the custodians of the life, property and honour of the people of Pakistan.”[198] He returned to Karachi for 1 July opening ceremony for the State Bank of Pakistan, at which he spoke. A reception by the Canadian trade commission­er that evening in honour of Dominion Day was the last public event he attended.[199]

On 6 July 1948, Jinnah returned to Quetta, but at the advice of doctors, soon journeyed to an even higher retreat at Ziarat. Jinnah had always been reluctant to undergo medical treatment, but realising his condition was getting worse, the Pakistani government sent the best doctors it could find to treat him. Tests confirmed tuberculos­is, and also showed evidence of advanced lung cancer. He was treated with the new “miracle drug” of streptomyc­in, but it did not help. Jinnah’s condition continued to deteriorat­e despite the Eid prayers of his people. He was moved to the lower altitude of Quetta on 13 August, the eve of Independen­ce Day, for which a ghost-written statement for him was released. Despite an increase in appetite (he then weighed just over 36 kilograms or 79 pounds), it was clear to his doctors that if he was to return to Karachi in life, he would have to do so very soon. Jinnah, however, was reluctant to go, not wishing his aides to see him as an invalid on a stretcher.[200] By 9 September, Jinnah had also developed pneumonia. Doctors urged him to return to Karachi, where he could receive better care, and with his agreement, he was flown there on the morning of 11 September. Dr. Ilahi Bux, his personal physician, believed that Jinnah’s change of mind was caused by foreknowle­dge of death. The plane landed at Karachi that afternoon, to be met by Jinnah’s limousine, and an ambulance into which Jinnah’s stretcher was placed. The ambulance broke down on the road into town, and the Governor-General and those with him waited for another to arrive; he could not be placed in the car as he could not sit up. They waited by the roadside in oppressive heat as trucks and buses passed by, unsuitable for transporti­ng the dying man and with their occupants not knowing of Jinnah’s presence.

After an hour, the replacemen­t ambulance came, and transporte­d Jinnah to Government House, arriving there over two hours after the landing. Jinnah died later that night at 10:20 pm at his home in Karachi on 11 September 1948 at the age of 71, just over a year after Pakistan’s creation.[201][202] Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru stated upon Jinnah’s death, “How shall we judge him? I have been very angry with him often during the past years. But now there is no bitterness in my thought of him, only a great sadness for all that has been ... he succeeded in his quest and gained his objective, but at what a cost and with what a difference from what he had imagined.”[203] Jinnah was buried on 12 September 1948 amid official mourning in both India and Pakistan; a million people gathered for his funeral led by Shabbir Ahmad Usmani.[204] Indian Governor-General Rajagopala­chari cancelled an official reception that day in honour of the late leader. Today, Jinnah rests in a large marble mausoleum, Mazar-eQuaid, in Karachi. Source: en.wikipedia.org

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