for making of Pakistan
All India Muslim League was founded in 1906 by Nawab Viqar-ul-Mulk and Dhaka (now part of Bangladesh). Pakistan Muslim League has two major factions 1. Pakistan Muslim League (Q) formed by Chodhry Shujaat Hussain (in 1999) 2. Pakistan Muslim League (N) formed by Nawaz Sharif
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, a member of the Muslim League in India.
All India Muslim League was the only political representative party for Muslims of India. Under leadership of Quaid e Azam and under flag of Pakistan Muslim League, Muslim succeeded in getting a separate and independent country for themselves.
The Muslim League was founded to strive to get fundamental rights for the Muslims under the British rule in India. Later on the Muslim League struggled to get a Muslim Independent State in India which it succeeded in achieving in 1947-The Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
The Muslim League was founded in 1906 to safeguard the rights of Indian Muslims. At first the league was encouraged by the British and was generally favourable to their rule, but the organization adopted self-government for India as its goal in 1913. For several decades the league and its leaders, notably Mohammed Ali Jinnah , called for Hindu-Muslim unity in a united and independent India. It was not until 1940 that the league called for the formation of a Muslim state that would be separate from the projected independent nation of India. The league wanted a separate nation for India's Muslims because it feared that an independent India would be dominated by Hindus. Jinnah and the Muslim League led the struggle for the partition of British India into separate Hindu and Muslim states, and after the formation of Pakistan in 1947 the league became Pakistan's dominant political party. In that year it was renamed the All Pakistan Muslim League. But the league functioned less effectively as a modern political party in Pakistan than it had as a mass-based pressure group in British India, and hence it gradually declined in popularity and cohesion. In the elections of 1954 the Muslim League lost power in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), and the party lost power in West Pakistan (now Pakistan) soon afterward. By the late 1960s the party had split into various factions, and by the 1970s it had disappeared altogether.
analyse the role of muslim league in the national movement and its impact on the future course of india and pakisthan
The Muslim League was founded in 1906 to safeguard the rights of Indian Muslims. At first the league was encouraged by the British and was generally favourable to their rule, but the organization adopted self-government for India as its goal in 1913. For several decades the league and its leaders, notably Mohammed Ali Jinnah , called for Hindu-Muslim unity in a united and independent India. It was not until 1940 that the league called for the formation of a Muslim state that would be separate from the projected independent nation of India. The league wanted a separate nation for India's Muslims because it feared that an independent India would be dominated by Hindus. Jinnah and the Muslim League led the struggle for the partition of British India into separate Hindu and Muslim states, and after the formation of Pakistan in 1947 the league became Pakistan's dominant political party. In that year it was renamed the All Pakistan Muslim League. But the league functioned less effectively as a modern political party in Pakistan than it had as a mass-based pressure group in British India, and hence it gradually declined in popularity and cohesion. In the elections of 1954 the Muslim League lost power in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), and the party lost power in West Pakistan (now Pakistan) soon afterward. By the late 1960s the party had split into various factions, and by the 1970s it had disappeared altogether.
Elite Muslims founded the All-India Muslim League (AIML) in the British India Empire. The league alongside other Muslims lobbied for the formation of a separate Islamic state. In 1947, the nation of Pakistan was detached from India.
Before the Second World War, Muslims and Hindus lived together under the British Raj. A number of the Muslims formed the All India Muslim League. After the Second World War, when the partition of India led to the creation of Dominion of Pakistan, the flag of the Muslim League served as the basis for the flag of Pakistan.
According to the recent consensus in India and Pakistan. Muslim population in India is much more the population of people in Pakistan.
The first annual session of the All-India Muslim League was held in 1907 in Quetta, the provincial capital of Balochistan (now part of Pakistan).