"So there we were finally at the western gate, waving the crescent-and-star and shouting the familiar slogans: Pakistan Zindabad... Quaid-e-Azam Zindabad... Na'ra-e Takbir, Allah-o-Akbar... Hans ke liya hai Pakistan, Lar ke lenge Hindustan. In front of us was the low boundary wall, behind which was the front yard of the school where we could see our fellow students assembling and forming rows. Most of them came through the eastern gate, for it was closer to most of the city, but quite a few also went past us. Given the population of the city, most of them were Hindus -- at the time there were only two Sikh families in the city and only one Sikh boy in our school. But, Muslim or Hindu, none of the boys going in challenged us. (We, on the other hand, probably accosted the Muslim boys and tried to stop them from going in. We had plenty of practice of doing that the previous year, during the provincial assembly elections, much to the discomfort of the numerically fewer kangresi Muslim boys.)"
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Original Language: English
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‘Hans ke Liya hai Pakistan, Lad ke Lenge Hindustan’ , is translated as : We took Pakistan with no effort, We will seize Hindustan by force, in : Venkat Dhulipala - Creating a New Medina. State Power, Islam, and the Quest for Pakistan in Late Colonial North India-Cambridge University Press (2015)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/C._M._Naim
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C. M. Naim
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