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  1. JINNAH, MOHAMMAD ALI (1876–1948), first governor-general of Pakistan. Quaid-i-Azam ("Great Leader") Mohammad Ali Jinnah, considered the father of Pakistan, was its first governor-general. Reared in Sind's port of Karachi, the eldest son of a wealthy Muslim merchant, Jinnah was shipped off to London at sixteen to study British management methods.

  2. Citazioni su Mohammad Ali Jinnah [modifica] Jinnah con Gandhi nel 1944. Il coraggio e la dedizione di Jinnah alla causa musulmana ci ha reso cittadini di un paese libero, indipendente e sovrano. (Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq) Il paese unito che Mohammed Ali Jinnah aveva fondato nel 1947 dopo la spartizione dell'India era morto con la nascita del Bangladesh.

  3. 1 mag 2024 · Ziauddin Ahmad Suleri, in Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Founder of Pakistan (1976), p. 1; Jinnah was the originator of the dream that became Pakistan, architect of the State and father of the world's largest Muslim nation. Mr. Jinnah was the recipient of a devotion and loyalty seldom accorded to any man. Harry S. Truman, 33rd president of the United States

  4. The Jinnah family ( Urdu: خاندان جناح) was a political family of Pakistan. It has played an important role in the Pakistan Movement for creation of Pakistan, a separate country for Muslims of India. The family held the leadership of All-India Muslim League, and its successor, Muslim League, until it was dissolved in 1958 by martial law.

  5. 11 ago 2022 · Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, sought to create a democratic, egalitarian and secular country where the Muslims of the subcontinent, who constituted about 25% of the population ...

  6. Muhammad Ali Jinnah left for England in May 1928 and returned after six months. In March 1929, the Muslim League session was held in Delhi under the presidency of Jinnah. In his address to his delegates, he consolidated Muslim viewpoints under fourteen items and these fourteen points became Jinnah's 14 points and the manifesto of the All India Muslim League.

  7. Address by Muhammad Ali Jinnah to the Muslim League, Lahore, 1940. Source: (Islamabad: Directorate of Films and Publishing, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of Pakistan, Islamabad, 1983), pp. 5-23. Paragraph numbers in double brackets have been added by FWP for classroom use, and punctuation slightly clarified in a few places.