The partition of India, 1947, some call it
vivisection
as Gandhi had, has without doubt been the most wounding trauma of the
twentieth century. It has seared the psyche of four plus generations of
this subcontinent. Why did this partition take place at all? Who was/is
responsible – Jinnah? The Congress party? Or the British?
Jaswant
Singh attempts to find an answer, his answer, for there can perhaps not
be a definitive answer, yet the author searches. Jinnah’s
political journey began as ‘an ambassador of Hindu-Muslim
Unity’ (Gopal Krishna Gokhale), yet ended with his becoming
the
‘sole spokesman’ of Muslims in India; the creator
of
Pakistan, the Quaid-e-Azam : How and why did this transformation take
place?
No Indian or Pakistani politician/Member of Parliament has ventured an
analytical, political biography of Quaid-e-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah,
about whom views necessarily get divided as being either hagiographical
or additional demonology. The book attempts an objective evaluation.
Jaswant Singh’s experience as a minister responsible for the
conduct of India’s foreign policy, managing the
country’s
defense (concurrently), had been uniformly challenging (Lahore Peace
Process; betrayed at Kargil; Kandahar; The Agra Peace Summit; the
attack on Jammu and Kashmir Assembly and the Indian Parliament;
coercive diplomacy of 2002; the peace overtures re initiated in April 2003).
He asks where and when did this questionable thesis of
‘Muslims
as a separate nation’ first originate and lead the Indian
sub-continent to? And where did it drag Pakistan to? Why then a
Bangladesh? Also what now of Pakistan? Where is it headed? This book is
special; it stands apart, for it is authored by a practitioner of
policy, an innovator of policies in search of definitive answers. Those
burning ‘whys’ of the last sixty-two years, which
bedevil
us still. Jaswant Singh believes that for the return of lasting peace
in South Asia there is no alternative but to first understand what made
it ‘abandon’ us in the first place. Until we do
that, a
minimum, a must, we will never be able to persuade peace to return.















