Social Sciences, asked by uzair1565, 1 year ago

quaid e azam Ke 14 nukat Tehrir karein​

Answers

Answered by rahul0067
1

HEYA MATE WE ARE NOT GETTING WHAT YOU HAVE WRITTEN


shayanbhai: He is speaking in urdu
Answered by AmazingSyed15
1
14 Points of Quaid e Azam were proposed by Mr. Muhammad Ali Jinnah as a constitutional reform plan to safeguard the political rights of Muslims in a self-governing India. The report was given in a meeting of the council of the All India Muslim League on March 28, 1929. The seven out of fourteen points of Quaid-e-Azam was directly in support of constitutional reforms and indirectly were supportive of the Muslims’ interest, while five points were unswervingly insisting for the Muslim rights.

The keen observers and seasoned analysts of that era drew an impartial comparison between Mr. Jinnah’s fourteen points and Nehru’s report of 1928 and considered them as a political gap between the Muslims and the Hindus in India. Jinnah’s aim was to get more rights for Muslims. While giving his 14 points Jinnah stated that it was the “parting of ways” and that he did not want and would not have anything to do with the Indian National Congress in the future.

These points became the demands of the Muslims and greatly influenced the Muslims thinking for the next two decades till the establishment of Pakistan in 1947.
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