History, asked by HamnaFarhan, 3 months ago

Explain how Mr.Jinnah Reorganised the Muslim League. What were the results?

Answers

Answered by hello12348
5

Answer:

The Muslim League and Mohammed Ali Jinnah

Long before the British invaded and seized control of the subcontinent, Muslim armies had conquered the settled populations in the rolling flat land that stretched from the foothills of the Hindu Kush to the city of Delhi and the Indo-Gangetic Plain and eastward to Bengal. The last and most successful of the Muslim conquerors was the Mughal dynasty (1526–1857), which eventually spread its authority over virtually the entire subcontinent. British superiority coincided with Mughal decline, and, following a period of European successes and Mughal failures on the battlefield, the British brought an end to Mughal power. The last Mughal emperor was exiled following the failed Indian Mutiny of 1857–58.

Less than three decades after that revolt, the Indian National Congress was formed to give political representation to British India’s indigenous people. Although membership in the Congress was open to all, Hindu participants overwhelmed the Muslim members. The All India Muslim League, organized in 1906, aimed to give Muslims a voice so as to counter what was then perceived as the growing influence of the Hindus under British rule. Mohammed Ali Jinnah, earlier a prominent Muslim member of the Congress, assumed leadership of the league following his break with Congress leader Mohandas K. Gandhi. A firm believer in the Anglo-Saxon rule of law and a close associate of Iqbal, Jinnah questioned the security of the Muslim minority in an India dominated by essentially Hindu authority. Declaring Islam was endangered by a revived Hindu assertiveness, Jinnah and the league posited a “two-nation theory” that argued Indian Muslims were entitled to—and therefore required—a separate, self-governing state in a reconstituted subcontinent.

Answered by riley6678
2

Answer:

Mr Jinnah turned the oppressive congress rule to his advantage and began a mass campaign to take his message to the Muslim Indians. The campaign reunited all Muslim parties under the Muslim League flag. he came to symbolize the Muslim dreams and hopes for a distinct identity. He was given the title of Quaid-e-Azam: or: great leader:.the next year in 1940, the Lahore resolution would demand Pakistan as a separate state within India

Explanation:

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