1st Edition

Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic Identity The Search for Saladin

By Akbar Ahmed Copyright 1997
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    Every generation needs to reinterpret its great men of the past. Akbar Ahmed, by revealing Jinnah's human face alongside his heroic achievement, both makes this statesman accessible to the current age and renders his greatness even clearer than before.

    Four men shaped the end of British rule in India: Nehru, Gandhi, Mountbatten and Jinnah. We know a great deal about the first three, but Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, has mostly either been ignored or, in the case of Richard Attenborough's hugely successful film about Gandhi, portrayed as a cold megalomaniac, bent on the bloody partition of India. Akbar Ahmed's major study redresses the balance.

    Drawing on history, semiotics and cultural anthropology as well as more conventional biographical techniques, Akbar S. Ahmad presents a rounded picture of the man and shows his relevance as contemporary Islam debates alternative forms of political leadership in a world dominated (at least in the Western media) by figures like Colonel Gadaffi and Saddam Hussein.

    I: Who's Afraid of Mr Jinnah?; 1: Understanding Jinnah; II: Divide and Quit; 2: The Struggle for History; 3: Jinnah's Conversion; 4: Jinnah and the Pakistan Movement; 5: Mountbatten; 6: Partition; III: A Tryst with Destiny?; 7: Pakistan; 8: Is Jinnah still Relevant?; III: Epilogue

    Biography

    Akbar Ahmed

    'Timely and significant' - Benazir Bhutto

    'It is stimulating, and is an important contribution to Pakistan's historiography' - Patrick French, The Sunday Times

    '[I] am glad that it has been written and that I have read it' - Philip Ziegler, The Daily Telegraph

    'Hugely entertaining' - Ian Talbot, Times Literary Supplement