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Introduction:

Pakistan was one of the cradles of civilization. Since the beginning of Pakistan as a safe haven
for British Indian Muslims in 1947, Islam has been the one string that creates popular unity in a
state that is traditionally divided along local, political, religious, social, financial and linguistic
lines. Regular citizens and military pioneers have utilized Islam to get the authority and fortify
the function of strict gatherings in legislative issues and culture for their standard and as
instruments of state strategy. Both geological and sociocultural contrasts among Muslims were
dismissed by the All India Muslim League, the ideological group that drove the mission for a
different country for Muslims of British India. Rather, they depended on religion as an important
reason to build up another legislature. In any case, most pioneers of the Muslim League were
liberal-disapproved, including President Mohammad Ali Jinnah. In the opposite side, the
Pakistan development was scrutinized by Muslim strict figures. The Muslim League, the first
name of the All India Muslim League, a political gathering that contributed to the creation of a
separate Muslim nation at the time of the British India parcel (1947). For securing the rights of
Indian Muslims in 1906 The Muslim League was established. From the start, the association was
energized by the British and was commonly ideal for their standard, yet the association embraced
self-government for India as its objective in 1913. For a very long while the class and its
pioneers, outstandingly Mohammed Ali Jinnah, called for Hindu-Muslim solidarity in a unified
and autonomous India. It was not until 1940 that the community called for the creation of a
Muslim express that would be separated from the expanded free nation of India. The party
wanted a separate country for the Muslims of India because it expected the Hindus to overpower
the autonomous India.

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