ARCHIVAL COLLECTION
documentary
1 hours, 32 minutes
Mr. Jinnah: The Making of Pakistan
released: October 12, 1997
This documentary, produced in Ireland, is an informational source on the Muhammad Ali Jinnah, considered the founder of Pakistan. The documentary features an interview with Jinnah’s daughter, Dina Waheed among other family members. It also includes Pakistani, Indian, and English scholars and former members of the army who worked with Jinnah or served at the time of Jinnah’s political career. With family and political perspectives presented, “Mr. Jinnah: The Making of Pakistan” describes the life of the founder and his impact on Pakistani politics from a strong Pakistani perspective.
The film discusses Partition politics, mentions the Bihari population, and describes the early formations of what was primarily West Pakistan.
Mr. Jinnah: The Making of Pakistan, by Akbar S. Ahmad, available via Internet Archive, licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. No changes were made.
Due to licensing restrictions, we are not able to provide subtitles for this film. The film is in English, with English subtitles for non-English interviews embedded.
Source: https://archive.org/details/full-documentary-mr.-jinnah-the-making-of-pakistan-12-octiber-1997
directed by
Christopher Miller
produced by
Akbar S. Ahmad
category
Documentary
Political
language
English
Urdu
Regional Pakistani languages
Disclaimer
Joja’s Archival Collection is curated from public domain and non-commercial and non-editable usage. As such, films in this collection do not have advertisements nor are they meant to promote Joja Entertainment itself.
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Content warning
The views in this collection are not representative of Joja Entertainment and serves to show artifacts demonstrating pertinent cultural representation of Pakistan and Pakistanis, at times without self-definition. Films not made by or involving Pakistanis may be shown if its content played a key role in depicting the country to much of the world. While this is not the purpose of Joja Entertainment’s commercial licensing works, sharing films which shaped public perception of Pakistanis have their own educational and entertainment value.