Hindu Antecedent Of Muslim Jinnah
BY R.K.MISRA
Nearly 70 years after his death, Muhammed Ali Jinnah’s portraits
continue to adorn places like Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), Bombay High
Court and Sabarmati Ashram in India. On the other hand, the Karachi Chamber of
Commerce and Industry building’s foundation stone states that it was laid by
Mahatma Gandhi in 1934.
Recently, BJP MP Satish Gautam sought to remove a Jinnah
portrait from AMU. It was ironic because, instead of vilifying Jinnah, the Modi
Government should have actually decorated the Qaid-e-Azam,
posthumously, with a Bharat Ratna because, it was Jinnah who created a
Hindu-majority Bharat from the rarefied, nebulous India, while pushing the
Islamists to a corner of the subcontinent and that was why
the Deoband School opposed Jinnah!
Had India remained undivided, its Muslim population
would now have been around 600 million, vis-à-vis the Hindus’ 1,000 million.
Would the Hindus have lived peacefully with this large ‘minority’? Or,
had India been balkanized, as Winston Churchill and others had
predicted? Such an India would have been the largest Muslim nation in
the world!
This is what journalist-author Virendra Pandit’s 2017
book, Return of the Infidel, argues. He claims that, for Jinnah,
a non-practicing Muslim, the Pakistan project was
more of getting even with his caste rival Gandhi, rather than any fulfillment
of the Muslims’ aspirations! An understanding of the dynamics of Indian caste
system helps us unravel the mystique of Partition, he says.
Interestingly, both their families hailed from neighbouring
districts in the Saurashtra region in Gujarat: Gandhi (Porbandar) and Jinnah
(from Moti Paneli village in Upleta taluka,Rajkot district).
The book provides interesting insights into the key figures’
persona and politics of the time that reflects in the present and projects
into the future. He surmises that Gandhi virtually “manipulated” Jinnah into
demanding Pakistan, and take the failed Partition of Bengal (1905) to its
logical conclusion of the Partition of India (1947) through well-calibrated and
subtle stratagem. And an ‘innocent’ Jinnah followed this Gandhian script!
Gandhi hailed from the Modh Vania/Bania caste
whereas Jinnah, despite his grandfather’s conversion to Islam, inherited
his Lohana-Thakkar caste’s obstinate habits. Both these rival
castes were seen as great achievers.
Jinnah was the eldest among seven siblings. None of them settled
in Pakistan after 1947. Like his dream project of Pakistan, he
was himself ‘half quail, half partridge’, a personality split to the core. So
much so that the lawyers of his only daughter Dina Wadia, 88, laid claim to the
Jinnah House property in Mumbai in 2008 on the basis of Hindu inheritance laws!
The Father of Pakistan himself had, in his will, divided his assets in
accordance with the Hindu laws!!
“For three generations, the Jinnah family struggled to find its
Islamic identity after being ex-communicated from their Hindu caste,
Lohana-Thakkars, of the Saurashtra region. This caste was believed to have had
a Raghuvanshi descent, from the family tree of Lord Rama, and some thought they
were Bhatia Rajputs. Like some other drifted Hindus who had found themselves on
an Islamic island, many of the Thakkars, too, continued to use both their
Islamic and Hindu names and maintain traditions in alternate generations to
retain their roots in both the old and the new worlds.”
Jinnah’s grandfather was a faithful Hindu, Premjibhai Meghji Thakkar.
In the early 19th century, Premji, who joined a fishing business, was forced to
convert to Islam after his ex-communication by the Hindu orthodoxy. His family
members opposed this conversion and tried to get him re-converted. The priests,
however, refused to re-induct them into the Hindu-fold, forcing Premjibhai to
stay a nominal Muslim. His son Poonjabhai was nicknamed Jhiniabhai due to his
wiry physique. They all remained nominal Muslims throughout life. Jinnah
derived his surname and the wiry physical frame from his father, Jhinia.
Thinly-built Gujaratis continue to be nicknamed Jhinia even now.
Interestingly, Premjibhai had not converted to the mainstream
Sunni or Shia beliefs. He had embraced, instead, the heretic
Khoja-Ismailia sub-sect for two reasons: one, this helped him expand business
as the rich followers of the Aga Khan, the head of the sub-cult, assisted him
financially; and two, this taught a lesson to his Hindu detractors who had him
ex-communicated for ‘violating’ Vaishnavite pure vegetarianism. Even after
conversion, Premjibhai continued to worship the family deity Shrinathji, an
incarnation of Lord Krishna, and Thakorji, besides the Tulsi tree. Outside, he
would, however, go to the mosque. Premjibhai had joined the Khoja sub-sect, thanks
to Adamji Khoja, his friend, philosopher and guide who had brought him into the
fish trade and then into the Aga Khan fold.
Premjibhai’s three sons—Gangji,Nathhu and Poonja (Jhinia)—found
it difficult to marry in their caste because of this reason and had to marry in
similarly converted families. They also moved out of their conservative
village. Jhinia settled down in Karachi.
Jinnah’s father’s full name was Jhinia alias Poonjabhai
Premjibhai Thakkar. True to the traditions in freshly converted families who
wanted to hide their religion, Jhinia had named his eldest boy ‘Mamad’ instead
of Muhammed. Jinnah’s full name was Mamadbhai Jhiniabhai Thakkar, or M. J.
Thakkar. When Jinnah was studying at
the Christian Missionary Society High School on Lawrence road, Karachi,
his future rival M.K.Gandhi was also a student in a Christian
school, Alfred High School, Rajkot.
When, in January 1893, Mamad went to England, he tried new
names: he first sought to be known as “Mohammedali Jhiniabhai of Karachi”,
then as “Muhammed Z. Thakkar”, by changing Jhinia into Zina, and, finally
“Muhammed Ali Jinnah” or M.A. Jinnah.
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