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The
name Pakistan was derived from an idea first suggested in
1933 when a student, Chaudhuri Rahmat Ali, proposed that
there should be a separate homeland which would be comprised
of the Muslim-majority provinces in the north-west as well
as the geographically contiguous princely state of Jammu and
Kashmir.
The name was formulated from: P for Punjab, A for the
Afghanis of the north-west frontier, K for Kashmir, S for
Sind and Tan denoting Baluchistan. The word also means land
of the pure in Urdu.
The partition of the Subcontinent, however, led to severe
rioting and population movement as Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus
found themselves on the wrong side of the partitioned
provinces of Punjab and Bengal. The latter of these became
East Pakistan. An estimated half a million people died in
communal violence, millions more became homeless.
Jammu and Kashmir, a collection of culturally distinct
regions, were nominally brought under the rule of Sikhs in
the early 19th Century. After the British fought the Sikhs
in 1846, instead of assuming direct control over the area,
Britain installed a Hindu ruler as Maharaja.
The Maharaja's territorial possessions included the Buddhist
area of Ladakh, the predominantly Hindu region of Jammu, the
majority Muslim valley of Kashmir, as well as smaller Muslim
kingdoms in the west.
In the days of the British Empire, the state of Jammu and
Kashmir was one of more than 560 autonomous princely states
owing allegiance to Britain. At independence, the rulers
were advised to join, by means of an instrument of
accession, either of the two new dominions, India or
Pakistan, bearing in mind their state's geographical
position and the religion of their inhabitants.
By August 1947, the date of partition, the ruler of Jammu
and Kashmir had not decided which dominion to join.
Over 50 years later, Pakistanis still believe that Jammu and
Kashmir should have become part of Pakistan because the
majority of the state's population, concentrated in the
valley of Kashmir, is Muslim.
India, says the state of Jammu and Kashmir belongs to India
because by the October 1947 instrument of accession, the
Maharaja finally agreed to join India.
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