Sunday 29 April 2012

Famous Punjabis before 1947, Part 2: Sardar Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan

Sardar Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan, KBE, KCSI, Doctor of Oriental Lit etc (5 June
1892 in Multan – 25/26 December 1942) was , as we have noted below, a renowned statesman from the Punjab; and the son of late Nawab Muhammad Hayat Khan CSI, of Wah, a close associate of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, and a prominent scion of the Khattar
tribe of Attock, North Punjab.

Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan is chiefly remembered today as he led the Unionist Party, an all-Punjab political party formed to represent the interests of the landed gentry and landlords, as well as farmer agrarian class of Punjab, which included Muslims, Sikhs, Christians and Hindus. He had taken over leadership of this group from Sir Fazli Husein. Khan led his party in the 1937 elections, held under the Government of India Act 1935. He governed the Punjab as Premier in coalition with the Sikh Akali Dal and the Indian National Congress. Being basically an all-Punjab party, for and by great Punjabis including (in addition to Sir Sikandar) Sir Chotu Ram, Malik Sir Khizar Hayat Tiwana, and other stalwarts, the Unionists did their utmost to save above all that most important asset of the Punjab, its fertile land, ‘’dharti’’, and tillers of the soil, ‘’zamindars’’, from ruin and utter destruction at the hands of usurers and money-lenders. It passed many ‘golden laws’ to save and salvage the peasants and their agrarian areas, so that these could go on being the bread-basket for all the subcontinent and the nursery of future generations of honest and strong men and women.

Khan opposed the Quit India Movement of 1942, and supported the Allied powers
during World War II. Khan believed in politically cooperating with the British
for the independence of India and the unity of Punjab.

In 1937, Khan signed the famous Sikandar-Jinnah Pact at Lucknow, which led to the
Lahore Resolution of 1940, calling for an autonomous or semi-independent Muslim majority region within the larger Indian confederation-- which demand later after his death, led to the demand for an independent Pakistan. In his lifetime, he controlled the Muslim League too, and with his sagacity, saw that this move of reconciling Muslim interests with Indian and Punjabi unity was paramount. “I am a Punjabi first, and then a Muslim”, he used to say.

Khan died in 1942. He is buried at the footsteps of the Badshahi Masjid in
Lahore, commemorated for his contributions to Islam by having restored and
revitalized the grand mosque, which had been in a very poor state when he became Premier/CM.

 His son, late Shaukat Hayat Khan, continued the family's political role in
post-Independence Pakistan. Among Sir Sikandar's famous grandchildren, are Yawar Hayat Khan, the Pakistani television director/producer and Tariq Ali a British -Pakistani writer and lecturer of international repute. Among his great-grandchildren, is the noted Pakistani poet, writer, research scholar and social activist Omer Tarin.


Main Sources: Wikipedia, Shaukat Hayat Khan’s ‘’Memoirs’’ (1995) and Dr Iftikhar H Malik’s ‘’Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan: A Political Biography’’ (1985).




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