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The next day, Dawn pronounces “The Quaid-i-Azam is dead. Nine months later, on September 11, 1948, Mr Jinnah surrenders to a prolonged bout of tuberculosis, an illness that afflicts him over the last decade of his life, and is kept a secret. (Your breath alone is sufficient for the nation, oh Quaid-i-Azam/ You alone have been the binding force for the nation, oh Quaid-i-Azam.) The words of the poem are: Millat kay liye aaj ghaneemat hai tera dumm, Aey Quaid-i-Azam/Sheeraza-e-Millat ko kiya tu ne faraham, aey Quaid-i-Azam. He leaves early to attend a private birthday party given by his colleague, Sir Ghulam Hussain Hidayatullah.Īs the Commander of the Sind Women’s National Guard, Pasha Haroon sings a birthday poem written for him by a poet in Lahore he is visibly embarrassed and keeps knotting the napkin placed before him on the table. Later, Mr Jinnah attends the official reception at Governor-General House. Those were days of hope six years later, Dawn, published by Pakistan Herald Limited Karachi, is a living reality. He has come a long way from when he founded Dawn Weekly in October 1941. The newspaper item on the front page congratulates Mr Jinnah on his 71st birthday, and there is a trace of a whimsical smile on his lips. And yet, at the behest of his colleagues, he picks up the copy of Dawn at his side and agrees to be photographed reading it. Never in his career has Mr Jinnah ever endorsed what today we would consider to be a ‘product’ or ‘brand’.
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They find him reading the morning’s edition of Dawn.Īs he reminisces about the heady days when Dawn is founded in Delhi, he expresses his satisfaction that the title and the ethos of Dawn are preserved and are prospering in Karachi.Īnd then something unusual happens. The morning starts when a smal delegation of journalists from Dawn Karachi, led by the editor, Altaf Husain, calls on him to express their best wishes. Mr Jinnah’s first birthday in Pakistan on December 25, 1947, is tragically his last one too. In the photograph above, courtesy Dawn/White Star Archives, Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah reads Dawn on his 71st birthday. TOWARDS THE FUTURE DECEMMR JINNAH’S LAST BIRTHDAY This feature covers 42 years from 1906 to 1948, an astonishingly short period of time, during which the freedom movement emerged and subsequently achieved the creation of a separate Muslim state under the dynamic leadership of Mohammad Ali Jinnah - the Quaid-i-Azam - the monumental founder of this nation.Īs the nation marks its 70th year, Pakistan’s story becomes your story. It is estimated that over 15 million people were displaced during the Partition of the Indian subcontinent and two million lost their lives in the ensuing communal violence.