Pakistan gave Muslims of the Sub-Continent an identity and an Independent homeland as a safe haven. The architect of the “Miracle of the Twentieth Century” is no other than Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

join on facebook

Friday, July 29, 2011

Jinnah: the leader of modern times


Jinnah: the leader of modern times




The period between March 23, 1940 and August 14, 1947 can play an integral part in helping Pakistanis realise the importance of certain ideas in life; whether it's the life of an individual or of an entire nation. To understand all of this, just reading about the steps that the Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah took during these seven vital years can be sufficient enough.
The Pakistan Resolution passed on this very day in the year 1940 bears testimony to the fact that the Quaid had a vision and he was fearless not only to declare it but also to work upon realising it despite numerous hurdles that came in his way. When Jinnah delivered his speech at Minto Park, Lahore and emphasised that by any definition of international law, Muslims of the United India were a separate entity; millions in India identified with his message. Only true leaders can expect to receive this kind of response from the masses.
In 1942, when the British initiated the Cripps Mission, Jinnah and his Muslim League associates were vigilant so as not to fall for the loopholes in that proposal. Through the Cripps Mission, the British had proposed that they would grant full dominion status to the Indian Union, right after the then ongoing Second World War ended. More importantly, it was also said that some provinces would be given the choice to opt out of this perceived Union. While the Congress rejected the proposal for giving this choice of withdrawal to some provinces, the Muslim League also resisted it. The reason for doing so was that Jinnah's men outrightly stated that the proposal was only suited to provinces and the choices they could exercise whereas the majority of Muslims in India were pursuing nothing less than a separate state. 
A leader is one who has immensely powerful foresight. While Gandhi is known the world over for waging a civil disobedience movement against the British and starting the Quit India Movement in 1942, Jinnah was careful in taking sides at that time. Hence, the Muslim League preferred to neither support nor oppose the British and did not press for the British quitting India so quickly and haphazardly that the demand of the Muslims -- for a separate homeland -- remained unmet and neglected.
When the Gandhi-Jinnah talks took place in 1944, Gandhi put forward the idea that at that point in time, Congress and Muslim League should work together to make the British leave India first and later work upon the technicalities of a separate state for Muslims. However, he also stated that even when the British would leave, areas such as defence and foreign policy should remain with the central authority. Jinnah eyed this dual policy on the part of Congress and reiterated that Muslims demanded a separate country at all costs, and they were not ready to be the part of an Indian federation in future. The Quaid also told Gandhi explicitly that by initially stating that the creation of Pakistan could be worked upon and then talking of a central authority, Congress had itself clearly exhibited the low strength of its promise towards Muslims and Pakistan.  In the 1945-46 elections in India, it took a man of unfazed dedication and strength such as Muhammad Ali Jinnah to obtain the overwhelmingly positive results for Muslim League. Election results showed that Congress had been able to obtain 91 per cent of the general votes whilst the Muslim League had won 87 per cent of the Muslims vote, grabbing every single Muslim seat in the Central Legislature. It must be noted here that people often tend to label Gandhi as the peoples' leaders while Jinnah is usually referred to as the legal-minded individual. However, this massive victory of the Muslim League shows just how popular he and his party were.
In 1946, it was the Cabinet Mission plan which tested Quaid-i-Azam's persistence again. The Cabinet Mission put two options in front of him: Either accept Sindh, West Punjab, North West Frontier Province, Balochistan and East Bengal as a separate state or agree to a loose federation constituting the whole of Punjab and Bengal provinces with portfolios such as defence, communications, and foreign policy lying with the centre. Jinnah had the courage to reject both these options. According to him, Pakistan would be mutilated from its very beginning if major provinces such as Punjab and Bengal were not included in their whole forms with Pakistan. The latter option of a loose federation was again totally unacceptable for Indian Muslims. It must have required a great deal of perseverance and a dash of risk-taking from Jinnah to keep refusing all these offers in order to acquire a Pakistan which was the exact replica of how he had imagined it to be for his people.
August 1946 arrived, with little hopes of anything concrete and positive happening for Muslims in the coming days. With every passing day, the feeling that the British might leave India without tackling Muslims' issues increased and thus created uncertainty among India's Muslim population. This was when Jinnah decided to use people's power as the last and final resort. Muslim League gave a call for Direct Action Day on August 16, 1946 with the fact that they would attain independence exactly a year from then unbeknownst to them. The Direct Action Day was observed to get Muslim force registered in the minds of Hindus and British alike. Demonstrations took place across India, with riots taking place in Calcutta, leaving thousands of people dead; of them more Muslims than Hindus.
This action immediately spelt trouble for the Muslims. The British government, just ten days after these protests, announced that an interim government was to be made within a month's time and it would not have any representative from Muslim League in it.
By May 1947, considerable progress had been made and Jinnah's Pakistan was slowly inching closer towards Muslims. The last Viceroy of India, Lord Mountbatten announced that India would be partitioned by June 3, 1948 and by default, the constitution of both separate states India and Pakistan would be the 1935 Government of India Act. It was announced that a Boundary Commission would be established for demarcating boundaries officially and princely states would have the liberty to join India, Pakistan or even stay independent.
Controversies abound to this day. The first one is that just a couple of days after the announcement of the June 3 Plan, it was suddenly announced that the British would leave India much earlier; as early as August 15, 1948. The demarcation of boundaries did not take place as had been formally planned, leaving Pakistan in a quite weak position strategically. The division of financial and military assets was not up to the mark as well.
Still, Jinnah took all of this in his stride and did not complain, for that would have lowered the morale of his followers. Instead, he insisted that Pakistanis must remain positive and look ahead. Despite all these injustices, there was never a streak of negativity in any of his speeches. In his words, it is evident that he wanted to give Indian Muslims a country of their own and at the same time never sound prejudiced against people of other religions. His demand appears clear: Give Muslims their due rights and let others coexist peacefully, whether in Pakistan or on the other side of the border.
It takes centuries to produce people who are so apt at exploiting time to its utmost potential. Jinnah was given just seven years to actualise the words he had spoken at Minto Park, Lahore and he showed us all that it was both possible and achievable.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Manifest Destiny of Pakistan




Pakistan 
Manifest Destiny
by 
Atif F Qureshi
 





“The world, but not self, thou canst see; 
How long in thy ignorance wilt thou sit? 
With thy ancient flame let the night be lit; 
The hand of Moses is sleeved in thee!
Set forth thy foot from the circling skies; 
Greater and older than these thou art; 
Fearest thou death in thy deathless heart? 
Death’s but a prey that before thee lies!
Life, once given thee, none can take; ‘
Tis for lack of faith men faint and die; 
Learn to be sculptor, even as I,
And haply anew thy self-hood make!”
        Allama Iqbal
“In keeping silent about evil, in burying it so deep within us that no sign of it appears on the surface, we are implanting it, and it will rise up a thousand-fold in the future. When we neither punish nor reproach evildoers... we are ripping the foundations of justice from beneath new generations.”
Alexander Solzehnitsyn

Introduction

Pakistan’s arrival onto the world stage was nothing short of miraculous, a nation bursting into life through the sheer force of divine providence. Foreseen in the vision of Allama Iqbal and created with the perspiration of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the new nation was the fulfilment of a manifest destiny - arising to defend the Ummah in her darkest hour. But in the critical moments after independence, Pakistan was in difficult territory. A land of subsistence farmers and struggling immigrants, the nation’s position was precarious and her long term prospects were uncertain.

Yet even through those early days, even after the spilt blood, the lost wealth, and the broken ties, there was a sense of enormous anticipation. The Pakistani people were energised, aspiring and free, daring to strike out into a bright future no longer burdened by world war, religious insecurity or the shame of subservience to foreign masters.

But the optimism soon turned to ashes. The great tragedy of the Pakistani saga is the sense of frustration carried in the hearts of its people today. The people of Pakistan love their nation immensely, but they so richly deserve the Pakistan that should have been. Instead, betrayed by fate, they now witness a "terra incognita"- an unrecognizable land.



Pakistan was once only an inspired vision. In 1947, through great sacrifice, a miraculous new nation was born. With its people energized and free, it seemed there was no height Pakistan would not scale. Now, many decades later, as we look back on years of strife, division and poverty cultivated by generations of misguided leaders, we find ourselves wondering how this glorious inheritance became so spoiled.

Atif F Qureshi examines the causes of the calamity, in particular the explanation that trumps all others - the import of Western political, legal and economic systems. Detailing why these methods are wholly unworkable for an independent Muslim nation, he examines how Western concepts such as socialism and English Civil Law have led to crises ranging from economic stagnation to terrorist insurgencies. Yet the decline is not irreversible. Qureshi outlines policies that by returning to core Islamic values will revive, rejuvenate and revitalise this beautiful nation. From defence and the environment to education and banking, every aspect of national planning is explored. He shows how in spite of all the travails, Pakistan is well-placed for a glorious future. After all, a manifest destiny awaits…



Download free pdf


Iqbal and Quaid e Azam







Iqbal Aur Quaid e Azam
by
Ahmed-Saeed



“Endeavour to obey, O heedless one! Liberty is the fruit of obligation. By duty a man of no worth is made worthy; by disobedience his fire is turned to ashes. Whoso would master the sun and the stars, let him make himself a prisoner of Law!”


                                                                                     Allama Iqbal





“Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you’re a man, you take it.”






Quaid e Azam




Quaid e Azam 
by
Maqbool Anwar Dawoodi








two personalities




Aik Tassur Do Shaksiatain
by Saira Hashmi





sayings that are alive




Aqwal-e-Zinda 
Quaid ke farmudaat






Our great leader





 Hamaray Quaid-i-Azam
 

DOWNLOAD



our great leader
Quaid e azam







life of quaid e azam



 Hayat-i-Quaid-i-Azam 
Aik Nazar Mein
by
Professor Dr. Ghulam Hussain

DOWNLOAD




Historic Struggle for Pakistan 1857-1947







 Historic Struggle for Pakistan 
1857-1947





Islamic Democratic Welfare State




Islamic Democratic Welfare State
as Visualised by the Quaid-i-Azam
written by
Dr. Rafique ahmad






Jinnah A Political Saint




Jinnah: A Political Saint
by 
mian atta rabani




Quaid e azam speeches







Khutbaat-e-Quaid-e-Azam

DOWNLOAD



Quaid e azam speeches
published in a form of a book by tanzeem ul islami







does Quaid e azam wanted to make pakistan a secular???




kia Quaid-e-Azam Pakistan ko Secular State banana chahty thay

DOWNLOAD

does Quaid e azam wanted to make pakistan a secular???
read this book to know the answer




Monthly Nazria-i-Pakistan Magazine




Monthly Nazaria-i-Pakistan Magazine 
December-2010





quaid's life and achievements






Quaid-e-Azam 
Hayaat-o-Khidmaat
 





Quaid and Iqbal




Quaid-e-Azam aur Allama Iqbal
by 
Ahmad Saeed







Quaid and Muslim Womens







Quaid-e-Azam aur Muslim Khawateen
by
Dr. Sarfaraz Hussain Mirza

DOWNLOAD



Islamic thinking of Quaid




Quaid-e-Azam kay Islami Afkar

DOWNLOAD




Question answers(Sawal jawab)




Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah
Sawalan Jawaban

DOWNLOAD
 

bani e pakistan, baba e qoum hazrat Quaid e azam muhamamd ali Jinnah's life and achievements.





question and answers about quaid e azam




Quaid-e-Azam Sawal Aur Jawab Ki Roshni Mein
 

DOWNLOAD

Quaid e Azam Quizz
Questions and their answers about Muhamamd Ali Jinah





Quaid and minorities




Quaid-i-Azam aur Akliyatain
By
Muhamamd Hanif Shahid


DOWNLOAD


This book deals with quaid e azam's vision about minorities, what quaid said about rights of minorities.


According to quaid's vision Hindus would cease to be Hindus and Muslim would cease to be Muslims ---- not in the religious sense, he explained, “but in the political sense”.




Quaid and muslim press




Quaid-i-Azam aur Muslim Press
by
Dr sarfaraz Hussain Mirza


DOWNLOAD



quaid and understanding of Quran







Quaid-i-Azam aur Quran Fehmi
by
Muhamamd hanif shahid


DOWNLOAD



Quaid and students




Quaid-i-Azam aur Tulaba
(Quaid and students)
 


DOWNLOAD
 


Quaid and students is another beautiful book written by Dr. sar faraz Hussain mirza on the role of students with quaid e azam. and the relation of quaid with students





Quaid's ideology of pakistan






Quaid-i-Azam ka Tassawur-i-Pakistan
Quaid e azam's vision about pakistan


DOWNLOAD
 

Quaid's ideology of Pakistan written by Dr Sarfaraz Hussain Mirza, 
download and read this book to know what type of pakistan quaid wanted to make.
whether Quaid wanted to make a secular pakistan or islamic paksitan???
why was actually pakistan made??
dr sarfaraz hussain mirza has put some light on the ideology and purpose of pakistan




book: quaid's Vision about education




Quaid-i-Azam Kay Tahlemi Afkaar



DOWNLOAD

Quaid e azam's Vision and saying about education written by sarfaraz hussain mirza. download book



book: Quaid-I-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah




Quaid i Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah
by
Maqbool anwar daoodi






This is an award winner book on the life of Quaid e Azam





book: quaid as a lawyer




Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah as a lawyer
Written by
Syed Sharif ud din Pirzada
Nazria e pakistan trust




"Having qualified as a barrister in England and having made his mark in India, Jinnah's name could be justly added to the 'list of great lawyers' academically linked to Lincoln's Inn. Jinnah practiced both law and politics for half a century; he made a fortune as an advocate and earned glory and gratitude of prosperity as leader of the Indian Muslims. When Jinnah left the shores of free England and voyaged to subject India in 1896, he had perhaps no idea that, one day, he would be obliged by the erstwhile Hindu leaders to make history and his biggest brief would be to win the case of the Indian Muslims for a separate homeland."
Aziz Beg, Jinnah and his Times.
 
 

Jinnah was a lawyer by profession who won many cases due to his brilliance in law. He is by far the most successful lawyer to have become a head of state. According to those who saw him in action, few lawyers commanded a more attractive audience than he. In fact, an angry Justice Martin once addressed him during a case as ‘Mr Jinnah, you are not addressing a third-class magistrate!’

‘There isn’t a third counsel before your Lordship,’ came the astute reply.

 






book: Life and Work of quaid







Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah 
Life and Work


DOWNLOAD



download complete book



Book: interesting and moral incidents from quaid



Quaid-i-Azam 
Zindagi ke Dilchasp aur sabq aamoz waqiaat
By
Zia Shahid



DOWNLOAD

interesting and moral incidents from the life of Quaid e azam muhamamd Ali Jinnah.
download complete book





Book: sayings of quaid e azam

at and t


Rawish Rawish Roshan 
Farmodat-e-Quaid-e-Azam
by
Sardar Muhamamd Chaudhry



DOWNLOAD



Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Quaid, Baldev Singh and jawahralal Nehru




Quaid-e-Azam with Baldev Singh and jawahralal Nehru In London,Dec 6 1946

Mountbatten visit to karaci on 14 august 1947

The Mountbattens come to Karachi to witness the birth of Pakistan - 14 August 1947

The Charismatic Leader




The Charismatic Leader Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah 
and the Creation of Pakistan
by
Sikandar Hayat

DOWNLOAD

DOWNLOAD



Description:
This book provides a detailed and systematic analysis of the charismatic leadership of Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the leader of Indian Muslims during the crisis-ridden decade of 1937-47. Based on the concept of charisma formulated by Max Weber and developed by recent writers, the study concentrates on the ‘personality-related’ and ‘situational’ factors that led to the emergence of Jinnah as the charismatic leader of the Muslims and sustained him in that role until the creation of Pakistan.




The Charismatic Leader: Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah and the Creation of Pakistan by Sikandar Hayat. Karachi: Oxford University Press, The founder of Pakistan, Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, continues to attract the attention of scholars who want to understand his role in history more deeply and comprehensively. The Charismatic Leader takes the discussion further by placing it in the conceptual framework of charisma on the one hand and sociological analysis of the prevalent elite structure of Muslim India on the other. The author uses Max Weber’s two perspectives on charisma to explore the nature and character of Jinnah’s bond with the Muslims of India and to explain his leadership.
 
Perhaps first a word on Weber’s concepts: for the sociologist, charismatic authority was one of three forms of authority, the other two being traditional authority and rational-legal authority. Weber explained that charismatic authority (which exists when the leader’s personality inspires the loyalty and obedience of his followers) flows from the leader and in his absence can vanish. (This is different from a situation where the authority flows from institutions.) However if this authority is incorporated into society, it can lead to power being exercised by a bureaucracy. The process through which this happens, Weber called “depersonalisation and routinisation” of charisma. And as the story of Jinnah unfolds in the context of these concepts, it is evident that a rational (bureaucratic) rather than an emotional (charismatic) approach defines both the means and the end of the Pakistan Movement.

In addition, the book offers unique observations on well-known facts. The author demonstrates that Jinnah first pursued and then emerged as the guardian of “Muslim interests”. Instead of a one-dimensional approach rooted in rigidity, he took a dynamic and pragmatic approach to men and matters: first supporting the cause of Hindu-Muslim unity, then focusing on Muslim unity per se. In a similar vein he did first consider the separate electorates negotiable before holding them indispensable. 
Last but not least he agreed to the Cabinet Mission Plan but abandoned it as soon as the British went back on “their plighted word”.
Somewhere along the path to Pakistan, Jinnah started to realize the difference between the “national interests” and “Muslim interests”, and thus moved towards establishing the League as the symbol of the Muslim “nation”. The writer systematically traces Jinnah’s steps towards building “national consciousness”. In and around the 1937 elections, Jinnah’s charisma started to take its final shape through crystallization of the“Muslim cause” and its expression through a set of constitutional positions. Hayat’s analysis of the “Muslim crisis” in British India is an excellent piece of scholarship. According to him, this crisis was twofold – Muslims suffered a “Systematic crisis” characterized by the widening gulf between the perceived interests of the two
leading communities, Hindus and Muslims. This was merely aggravated by the political developments: as the British government in India lost its authority and legitimacy and the institutional-constitutional governing framework proved inadequate, as did the political formulas emanating from parties, the political system in the country ground to a halt. 

The second crisis was one of “leadership”. Here the author does a sociological analysis of the Muslim leadership, which indeed is rare in research on Jinnah and on the Pakistan movement. He discusses the “social elites” – especially landlords and the educated professional middle class, pointing out that they lost ground after the Khilafat Movement. His analysis of provincial leaders such as Fazl-e-Hussain, Sikandar Hayat, Khizr Hayat and Fazlul Haq highlights the fact that their inability to appeal to the electorate beyond their immediate region is led, indirectly, to Jinnah’s emergence as a national leader. The relative decline of the Jamiat Ulema Hind and the Congress Muslims led by Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad similarly reveals how Jinnah gained the support of the people.
 
After defining the “Muslim crisis” and explaining that it provides the political context for the emergence of Jinnah, the author focuses on the final phases of the latter’s career, in which the Muslim leader acquires the Weberian charisma by delivering on the promise of a separate state for the Muslims of the subcontinent, Pakistan. In this part of the book, one sees an embattled Jinnah meandering through the maze of Indian politics faced by a foe as formidable as the Congress and a confused and by-no-means friendly British government.

And as the author focuses on Jinnah’s strategy to politically mobilize and organize the Indian Muslims he brings in Weber’s concept of routinisation. Jinnah’s mobilization of all the available political resources – including landed elite’s control over peasantry, the ideological strength of the intelligentsia, the organisational experience of urban-based party cadres and the financial support of the nascent Muslim bourgeoisie – indicates, according to Hayat, the structural aspects of his charismatic appeal. The formidable Muslim organization that emerged as a result of jinnah’s efforts represented the “routinsation” of his charisma, even as his personal appeal continued to transcend all party politics.

The creation of Pakistan, which is the title of the last chapter of this book, represents an impressive finale. Jinnah’s charisma worked miracles among the Muslim masses. At the same time, it put a huge amount of responsibility on him, as he moved on the chessboard of Indian politics, choosing between a larger Pakistan within a federated India and a smaller but independent and sovereign Pakistan.
 
Nonetheless, Hayat proves his point that charismatic leadership is about a relationship with a people: it results from the needs, aspirations and trust of the followers and keep evolving. This is evident as the book elaborates on the bonds between Jinnah and his followers and traces the genesis and the historical evolution of Jinnah’s leadership.
 
Dr. Mohammad Waseem is Professor of Political Science at Lahore University of Management Sciences, Lahore.
Published in The Herald, April 2009.


at and t

The Divine Imprint on the Birth of Pakistan







The Divine Imprint on the Birth of Pakistan
by
Tariq Majeed

DOWNLOAD

An Untold Story

THE DIVINE IMPRINT ON THE BIRTH OF
PAKISTAN
 
“He is the Irresistible, (watching) from above His worshippers; and He is the Wise, acquainted with all things”.
(Qur’an, 6:18)

“And Allah hath full power and control over His affairs; but most among mankind know it not”.
(Qur’an, 12:21)


This exposition is on a rare and fascinating topic. It is best to study it with an open but thoughtful and, by all means, a questioning mind. It will not fail to clear any doubts or questions you may have. It will, Insha-Allah, give you immense inspiration and a wonderful new insight into the meaning and purpose of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan as well as your own life. 

Pakistani intellectuals, no doubt, have produced many outstanding books on various aspects of Pakistan Movement, Two Nation Theory and the Birth of Pakistan, and on the two distinguished personalities, Allama Muhammad Iqbal and Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, who were key contributors to its independence. However, a full-length, fully-documented, officially-recognized and comprehensive history of the establishment of Pakistan, including its singular origin and nature, has yet to be written. Similarly, the requirement of a profound work on Nazria-e-Pakistan, has yet to be met; Nazria in this case meaning both the Ideology and the Purpose of Pakistan. What is presented in this study closely concerns, indeed embraces, both the unique Birth and the unique Nazria of Pakistan. It is hoped the facts and the conclusions brought out in it would enlighten the readers on these features of our Country and would find appropriate mention in the future literature on them Does God intervene in the affairs of individuals and nations? Yes, He does. And we should remember, though we tend to forget it, that the Creator hears, sees and knows everything, including what is in the hearts of the people, and that whatever is happening on the Earth and in the Universe is according to the intentions of His Plan. 

A poet has described it in captivating verses:

Truth forever on the scaffold
Wrong forever on the throne
Yet that scaffold sways the future
And behind the dim unknown,
Standeth God within the shadow,
Keeping watch above His Own.

Allah Almighty, in fact, is intervening all the time in the lives of men and nationshelping, warning, testing, punishing or rewarding them, as they deserve by their actions and intentions. The method of His intervention is usually indirect and, although it comes as an unexpected, abnormal development or event, it occurs in such a way as it appears to be a part of the normal ups and downs of worldly matters. Besides, it requires genuine faith, some understanding of God’s Sunnah or Practice, and ability to ponder and analyze the circumstances in which such an event occurred, to know its real nature. As such, most people do not recognize divine intervention in their personal affairs or in the affairs of their countries or in those of the world at large. 

Sometimes the divine forces create events or changes that defy normal explanation and cannot be attributed to natural causes. People are expected to recognize them as God’s direct intervention, and to deduce and learn the appropriate lessons from them. However, human ego or rather arrogance, spurred by a lack of faith, still tries to come up with ‘worldly’ explanations for them. There are only a few who are wise or humble enough to see the Hand of God in such cases and to take heed.

In certain rare situations Allah’s intervention is not only direct but also is accompanied by circumstances that show the situation concerned to be an undeniable act of divine will. Its occurrence may be as a punishment or as a favour for a people. Such a situation is always momentous in nature and gives a clear signal that Allah intends the recipients to have no doubt about its origin and purpose.

If such a direct and irrefutable intervention is meant to bestow a great favour on a people they are certainly most fortunate and privileged. They should reflect upon it with utmost priority, attention and sincerity and determine what it was in their circumstances, which appealed to Allah to favour them so visibly, and what responsibilities He required them to fulfill now. If their effort is sincere, they should be able to see the exceptional situation, in its glorious true reality, that had been created for them. They will literally see and feel the presence of divine power. Their hearts and minds will be filled with tremendous inspiration
and renewed faith, and with the dynamic spirit that can face any challenge of life.

These assets, besides giving other benefits, give the people the ability to become aware of both their strengths and weaknesses and to know the real nature of the perils and problems facing them and how to deal with them. This writer firmly believes that God had blessed Pakistan with that exceptional situation. Study and learn about it, obtain from it the treasure of assets and energies it holds, and seek to know the key for making it happen again. God’s direct intervention to favour a people can always occur again if the people can learn how to invoke it.





Like

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...