Early Life;

                                                Jinnah was born in Karachi, Pakistan on December 25,    1876.When Jinnah was 6 years old, his father placed him in the Sindh Madressatul-Islam School. Jinnah was far from a model student. He was more interested in playing outside with his friends than focusing on his studies.                                                                                                  When Became ambassador; 

                                                                   When Jinnah passed his legal exam in May of 1896, he was the youngest ever to have been accepted to the bar.                                            With his law degree in hand, in August 1896 Jinnah moved to Bombay and set up a law practice as a barrister in Bombay’s high court. Jinnah would continue to practice as barrister up through the mid-1940s. Jinnah’s most famous successes as a lawyer included the Bawla murder trial of 1925 and Jinnah’s 1945 defense of Bishen Lal at Agra, which marked the final case of Jinnah’s legal career.                                                                                                                   India National Congress;

                                                             In 1904, Jinnah attended a meeting of the Indian National Congress. In 1906 he joined the congress himself.

                  All India Muslim League;

                                                            In 1912, Jinnah attend the meeting of all India Muslim league and well known by the thoughts of congress. In 1913, he joined Muslim League.

                 Independent Pakistan;

                                                        By 1939 Jinnah came to believe in a Muslim homeland on the Indian subcontinent. He was convinced that this was the only way to preserve Muslims’ traditions and protect their political interests. His former vision of Hindu-Muslim unity no longer seemed realistic to him at this time.

                                                      During a 1940 meeting of the Muslim League at  Lahore, Jinnah proposed the partition of India and the creation of Pakistan, in the area where Muslims constitute a majority. The independent state of Pakistan that Jinnah had envisioned came to be on August 14, 1947.

              Death;

                         On September 11, 1948, just a little over a year after he became governor-general, Jinnah died of tuberculosis near Karachi, Pakistan —the place where he was born.                                                             

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