Miss Dina Jinnah - beloved daughter of Mr Jinnah.
Born on 15 August, 1919, she turned 91 in August, 2010.
Mountbatten
negotiating with the Founder. Due to the text below this photograph,
the book "Freedom At Midnight" is technically 'banned' in Pakistan ever
since its publication more than 30 years ago. They titled the picture
"Pakistans' improbable prophet."
The
Founding Fathers attend the Round Table Conference, 1930. Mr Jinnah is
second from right in the front row and Sir Zafrullah Khan is second from
the left. The Ali brothers are also there, while Begum Shahnawaz sits
next to Sir Zafarullah Khan.
Rutten
Bai Petit married Jinnah in 1918. Born a Parsi, on her 18th birthday
and left her fathers' mansion with two pets only to marry Jinnah.
Exactly eleven years later she died of abdominal cancer. Jinnah never
married again and died a lonely man. Known as the nightingale of Bombay,
Ruttie died on her 29th birthday on 20 February, 1929.
Jinnah and Liaquat - Uneasy relations?
Third President of Pakistan 1969-1971. Deposed and placed under house arrest
Sir Abdullah Haroon with his daughter Doulat Haroon
Jawaharlal and Kamala Nehru on their wedding
Subhas Chandra Bose with Mr. Jinnah
An
ICS officer from Bengal, S. C. Bose (1897-1945) resigned from service
and was twice elected president of the Congress but had to quit due to
ideological differences with Gandhi and Nehru. He later became President
of the Indian National Army during World War II. He travelled to
Germany but disillusioned with Hitler, he moved to Japan and fought for
the independence of India from British rule. Here he is seen in a
meeting with Mr. Jinnah. Bose, commonly known as Netaji in India, is
believed to have died in an air crash on 18 August, 1945, over Taiwan
but his death is shrouded in mystery. He may have died as a Russian PoW
in Siberia.
What Mr. Jinnah actually got. He called it a 'moth eaten' Pakistan,
but agreed to it
Mr Jinnah with a black Doberman and West Highland Terrier in Bombay during the forties
Mr
Jinnahs' first and last birthday in Pakistan - 25 December, 1947.
Reading about the felicitations on his birthday in the 'Dawn.' The
headline says '71 today' The main headline is a statement given by Sindh
Prime Minister Khuhro and reads 'Khuhro doesn't want Hindus to leave
Sind.'
Mohamed Ali Jinnah on the cover of Time Magazine in 1946
The
Founder takes the salute, 14 August, 1947. His ADCs include Gul Hassan
Khan later the last C-in-C of the Pakistan Army and Syed M. Ahsan C-in-C
of the Pakistan Navy and Governor of East Pakistan
Two Sardars - Sherbaz Mazari with Akber Bugti, 1954
Comrades
in Arms - Four Future Air Force Chiefs in the Royal Air Force. Seen in
the picture are Air Chief Marshal Mehra Indian CAS from 1973 to 1976,
Air Marshal Asghar Khan, Air Marshal Nur Khan and Air Marshal Zafar
Chaudhry. While Asghar Khan opted for politics after retirement and
never cared for power, Nur Khan was Deputy CMLA, Minister for all the
Social Sectors and Governor of West Pakistan. Like Asghar Khan and Nur
Khan, Zafar Chaudhry also headed the PIA before heading the PAF
WHERE
THE ROT STARTED:Justice Munir deals a death blow to Pakistan. When
Governor General Ghulam Muhammed dismissed the Constituent Assembly of
Pakistan in 1954, the Sindh Chief Court declared his action ultra vires
of the constitution. However under a lure of Deputy governor General
ship offered to Justice Munir he validated the order under the Doctrine
of Necessity and dealt a death blow to the judiciary. Subsequently
sodomy cases were filed against the honourable judges of the Sindh Chief
Court, who ruled against the Governor General
Three
trusted comrades of Ayub Khan. Air Marshal Nur Khan, Gen Musa and Vice
Admiral A R Khan headed the three services during most of Ayubs' rule.
A young Air Marshal Nur Khan
Gen
Ayub Khan - Prime Minister for 13 hours. Gen Ayub Khan was appointed
Chief Martial Law Administrator on 7 October, 1958. 20 days later
President Iskander Mirza appointed him as Prime Minister and he is seen
presiding over a Cabinet meeting. 13 hours after his appointment, Mirza
was deposed and Ayub Khan became the second President of the country. To
his left civilian Deputy CMLA Mr Aziz Ahmed fixes his knot while
Generals Azam, Burki and Sheikh, Manzur Qadir and 29-year old Z A Bhutto
look on.
Ayub
Khan signing the Tashkent Agreement in 1966. Commerce Minister Ghulam
Faruque, Foreign Minister Z A Bhutto and Foreign Secretary Aziz Ahmed
look on. Prime Minister Shastri died the same night of a heart attack. A
member of Pakistan entourage woke up the Foreign Minister and told him
on the telephone, 'The [Edited Out] is dead'. Still in his sleep Bhutto
asked 'Which one?'
Remembering Zaibunissa Hamidullah 1921-2000
Zaibunnissa
Hamidullah was a pioneer amongst women journalists of South Asia. A
column writer for English newspapers, including Dawn, Zaibunnissa
launched Pakistans' first womans' weekly in English, The Mirror. Even
though a socialite magazine, it often created ripples by its strong
political editorials critical of the policies and actions of the rulers
of the day in a language and style that at times earned her the wrath of
the wielders of power. The power of her pen rattled Ayub Khan when she
lashed out at him for elevating himself to the rank of Field Marshal,
and in November 1957, his predecessor Iskander Mirza, shut the paper
down for six months when Mirror flayed him for dismissing the Suhrawardy
ministry. The paper was read as much for its social content as for the
biting sarcasm and wit that characterized the writings of its editor.
The magazine closed down in 1972 after twenty-one years of struggle
against authoritarian trends in our politics and bigotry and fanaticism
in society. The sting in her writings earned her quite a few enemies,
but even her detractors admired her for the courage of conviction and
the strength of character she displayed throughout her professional and
personal life.
President Yahya Khan arrives in Moenjodaro Airport in January 1971. Mr Bhutto received him
Friends turned Foes - Sherbaz Mazari with Z A Bhutto in 1959
Z A Bhutto with Indira Gandhi in the lush lawns of Simla 1972 negotiations
BRISTOL HOTEL – KARACHI (1910-1994)
For
those who may remember the Bristol Hotel Karchi was constructed by a
Welshman in 1910 near the Cantonment Railway Station-Karachi, parallel
to the rail tracks between Karachi Cantt and Karachi City Railway
Station. It is in close proximity to the current location of the British
Council. Initially a Tavern & Bistro for the affluent ones..mostly
the high echelons and army officials under the British Raj of early
1900s. The hotel was also mostly the venue of the most talked about New
Year parties, May Queen Ball and wedding parties and became the most
popular place of Kolachi or Kurracchee then which continued till the
late fifties when the Welshmen’s son Grout, left for UK selling it to a
Pakistani namely Mr Rizvi, an income tax officer in 1960. At that time,
Karachi had hardly a few hotels, which were worth a stay; Metropole,
Palace, Beach Luxury, Grand, Excelsior, Taj…with Intercontinental (now
PC) commencing its operations in May 1961. Mr. Rizvi maintained the
grandeur of BRISTOL and it’s BAR and particularly it’s cuisine, which
was probably the best in Karachi attracting people from far and wide.
The New Year Parties and May Queen Ball continued with the same fervor
and glamour. During the sixites the price tag of NYP entry for a couple
was Rs.300 - a small fortune in those days. Bristol continued to attract
affluent Karachi-ites for it’s cuisine, large rooms, lush green lawns
with Saturday Night Discos and Night Club with groups from Thailand,
Germany and France were in attendance later adopted by the Minwallas of
Metropole for their ever popular SAMAR night club and dine out of the
seventies. The BRISTOL Hotel breathed it’s last when it was attacked by
some dacoits and Mr. Rizvi suffering injuries in 1994 which re-occurred
and within six months. Mr Rizvi was virtually forced to call it quits.
The building of the hotel, however, remains as a home now. It is said
that the American movie star Donna Reed stayed at Bristol sometime in
1961 during her overnight visit to Karachi enroute to Cairo on the
arrangement by PAN AMERICAN airlines which used to house it’s crew at
Malir’s GRAND Hotel of Minwallas, near Karachi Stargate Airport of 1935
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