Home
1st Year English Notes
Responsibility of the Youth
Short Question Answers
Responsibility of the Youth in Nation-Building | UNIT - 2 | Short Question Answers

Responsibility of the Youth in Nation-Building | UNIT - 2 | Short Question Answers

Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah delivering a powerful speech, inspiring the youth to fulfill their responsibility and his dream for a strong Pakistan.


Q.1: How does Quaid-e-Azam describe the transformation that came with the independence of Pakistan? Why does he stress the importance of understanding its implications?

After partition, Pakistan came out of slavery and emerged as an independent state where people have their own government. Quaid aims to make youth realize of their responsibility to work as a united and disciplined nation.

 

Q.2: Discuss the contrast he draws between the militant spirit of pre-independence days and the constructive spirit required in a sovereign state. Why is the latter more challenging?

Militant spirit is required to fight for freedom whereas after independence, it is the constructive spirit that uplifts a country. However, constructive spirit is more challenging because it demands vigilance, fairness, manual work and hard work.

 

Q.3: Discuss how two of the speaker's main ideas—youth’s responsibility and economic self-reliance—interact with one another. How does this interaction help reinforce the overall message of the text? Use at least two textual references.

Quaid has urged the youth to pay attention to the technical education and divert their attention from government job to commerce and industry. This realization of both the responsibilities in youth may result in the economic development and overall uplift of their state.

 

Q.4: Explain the significance of the speaker's criticism of the colonial education system. What mindset did it create among students?

Quaid’s criticism of the colonial education system serves as a guide for youth to get out of rut. The main object of this system was to prompt the graduates to look for government job only.

 

Q.5: Why does Quaid-e-Azam discourage the pursuit of government service as the sole ambition of graduates? What problems does he foresee with this trend?

Quaid has discouraged the pursuit of government service on the ground that the avenues like commerce and trade provide more opportunities to grow fast than to work merely in a circle of clerkship. If they succeed, they will become mere a clerk and in case of failure, they may be exploited.

 

Q.6: What does Quaid-e-Azam mean when he says that 'freedom does not mean license'? Explain in your own words.

It does not mean that you can behave as you please and do what you like, irrespective of the interests of other people or of the State.

 

Q.7: How does the idea of responsible citizenship connect with the idea of self-reliance and career diversification? Discuss how Quaid-e-Azam develops both ideas throughout his speech.

Youth’s realization of their responsibility to get technical education and their preference to trade and commerce can collectively contribute to the overall development of their state. Quaid develops this realization in youth by laying emphasis on the need of manual work and hard work.

 

Q.8: Track the development of the speaker's argument about government jobs and their impact on the mindset of the youth. How does this idea evolve and support the broader message about nation-building?

The speaker argues that if any graduate gets some government job, he considers it his final destination and resultantly lives a life of clerk throughout. Alternatively, he may have opted commerce or industry for a more prosperous life and thus contributing to the overall uplift of his state.

Historic Curzon Hall at Dhaka University, where Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah delivered his seminal address on student responsibility and nation-building.
Dhaka University

No comments