The 'Lahore Resolution' (''Qarardad-e-Lahore'' قرارداد لاھور), commonly known as the 'Pakistan Resolution' (قرارداد پاکستان ''Qarardad-e-Pakistan''),
[1] was a formal political statement adopted by the
All India Muslim League at the occasion of its three-day general session on 22-24 March
1940 that called for greater Muslim autonomy in
British India. This has been largely interpreted as a demand for a separate Muslim state,
Pakistan.
[2] The resolution was presented by
A. K. Fazlul Huq.
Although the idea of founding the state was introduced by
Allama Iqbal in
1930[3] and the name
Pakistan had been proposed by
Choudhary Rahmat Ali in his
Pakistan Declaration[4] in
1933,
Muhammad Ali Jinnah and other leaders had kept firm belief in
Hindu-
Muslim unity.
[5] However, the volatile political climate and religious hostilities gave the idea stronger backing.
[6]
Background
With the beginning of the
Second World War in September
1939, the
Viceroy of India Lord Linlithgow declared India's entrance into without consulting the
provincial governments. In this situation,
Jinnah called a general session of the All India Muslim League in
Lahore to discuss the circumstances and also analyze the reasons for the defeat of
Muslim League in the Indian general election of
1937 in some Muslim majority provinces.
Proceedings

Chaudhry Khaliquzzaman seconding the Resolution with Jinnah presiding the session
The session was held between
22 March and
24 March, 1940, at Minto Park (now
Iqbal Park),
Lahore. The welcome address was made by Nawab Sir Shah Nawaz Mamdot. In his speech, Jinnah recounted the contemporary situation, stressing that the problem of India was no more of an inter-communal nature, but manifestly an international.
[7] He criticised the Congress and the nationalist Muslims, and espoused the Two-Nation Theory and the reasons for the demand for separate Muslim homelands. According to
Stanley Wolpert, this was the moment when Jinnah the former ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity totally transformed himself into Pakistan's great leader.
[8]
Sikandar Hayat Khan, the
Chief Minister of the
Punjab, drafted the original 'Lahore Resolution', which was placed before the Subject Committee of the All India Muslim League for discussion and amendments. The Resolution text unanimously rejected the concept of United India on the grounds of growing inter-communal violence
[9] and recommended the creation of an independent Muslim state.
[10]
After the presentation of annual report by
Liaquat Ali Khan, the Resolution was moved in the general session by
A.K. Fazlul Huq, the Chief Minister of undivided
Bengal and was seconded by
Choudhury Khaliquzzaman who explained his views on the causes which led to the demand of a separate state. Subsequently,
Maulana Zafar Ali Khan from Punjab, Sardar Aurangzeb from the
NWFP,
Sir Abdullah Haroon from Sindh, and Qazi Esa from
Baluchistan, and other leaders announced their support. In the same session, Jinnah also presented a resolution to condemn the Khaksar massacre of
19 March, owing to a clash between the
Khaksars and the police, that had resulted in the loss of lives.
[11]
The statement
The principle text of the Lahore Resolution was passed on
24 March. In
1941 it became part of the Muslim League's
constitution. In
1946, it formed the basis for the decision of Muslim League to struggle for one state for the Muslims.
[12] The statement declared:
Additionally, it stated:
Commemoration
★ To commemorate the event, ''
Minar-e-Pakistan'' (
Lighthouse of Pakistan), a 60 meters tall distinctive
monument in the shape of a
minaret has been built at the site in
Iqbal Park Lahore, where the resolution was passed.
★
23 March is a
national holiday in Pakistan, celebrated as
Pakistan Day to commemorate Lahore Resolution as well as the day in
1956 when the country became the first
Islamic Republic in the world.
[13]
See also
★
Khakrsar Movement
★
History of Pakistan
★
Pakistan Movement
References
1. Francis Robinson (1997), ''The Muslims and Partition'', History Today, Vol. 47, September
2. Christoph Jaffrelot (Ed.) (2005), ''A History of Pakistan and Its Origins'', Anthem Press, ISBN 978-1843311492
3. Shafique Ali Khan (1987), ''Iqbal's Concept of Separate North-west Muslim State: A Critique of His Allahabad Address of 1930'', Markaz-e-Shaoor-o-Adab, Karachi, OCLC 18970794
4. Choudhary Rahmat Ali, (1933), ''Now or Never; Are we to live or perish forever?'', pamphlet, published 28 January. (Rehmat Ali at the time was an undergraduate at the University of Cambridge)
5. Ian Talbot (1999), ''Pakistan: a modern history'', St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0312216068
6. Reginald Coupland (1943), ''Indian Politics (1936-1942)'', Oxford university press, London
7. Lahore Resolution (1940), Story of Pakistan website, Retrieved on 23 April, 2006
8. Stanley Wolpert (1984), ''Jinnah of Pakistan''. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195034127
9. Muhammad Aslam Malik (2001), ''The Making of the Pakistan Resolution'', Oxford University Press, Delhi. ISBN 0-19-579538-5
10. Syed Iftikhar Ahmed (1983), ''Essays on Pakistan'', Alpha Bravo Publishers, Lahore, OCLC 12811079
11. Nasim Yousaf (2004), '' Pakistan's Freedom & Allama Mashriqi: Statements, Letters, Chronology of Khaksar Tehrik (Movement), Period Mashriqi's birth to 1947''. page 123. AMZ Publications. ISBN 0976033305
12. I H Qureshi, (1965), ''Struggle for Pakistan'', Karachi
13. Stanford M. Mirkin (1966), ''What Happened when: A Noted Researcher's Almanac of Yesterdays'', I. Washburn, New York. OCLC 390802 (First published in 1957 under title: When did it happen?)
External links
★
The Pakistan Resolution,
Government of Pakistan Official website. (Retrieved on
23 April,
2006)
★
Lahore Resolution (1940) at Story of Pakistan website. (Retrieved on
23 April,
2006)
★
Lahore Resolution at Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.(Retrieved on
23 April,
2006)
★
Pakistan Resolution or Muslim League's Search For Survival