Muhammad Ali Jinnah was a barrister, politician and the founder of Pakistan. He served as the leader of the All-India Muslim League from 1913 until Pakistan’s independence on 14 August 1947. Jinnah also served as Pakistan’s first Governor-General until his death in 1948. He is revered in Pakistan as Quaid-i-Azam and Baba-o-Qaum.
About Muhammad Ali Jinnah in brief

He attended the Sindh-Madrasa High School and the Christian Missionary Society High School in Karachi, now in Sindh, Pakistan. His parents were from a Gujarati Khoja Shi’a Muslim background, though Jinnah later followed the Twelver Shi’a teachings. As a boy, he lived for a time in Bombay with an aunt and an aunt, and may have attended an aunt’s primary school. He also lived with his brother and aunt in Bombay, where he may have met his siblings as he was a boy. He became a key leader in the All India Home Rule League, and proposed a fourteen-point constitutional reform plan to safeguard the political rights of Muslims. In 1920, he resigned from the Indian National Congress when it agreed to follow a campaign of satyagraha, which he regarded as political anarchy. By 1940, he had come to believe that Muslims of the Indian subcontinent should have their own state to avoid the possible marginalised status they may gain in a Hindu-Muslim state. In that year, the Muslim League, led by Jinnah, passed the Lahore Resolution, demanding a separate nation. During the Second World War, the League gained strength while leaders of the Congress were imprisoned, and in the elections held shortly after the war, it won most of the seats reserved for Muslims. He worked to establish the new nation’s government and policies.
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