's c.1942 proposed flag for Pakistan, as depicted on the cover of
Choudhry Rahmat Ali's pamphlet "The Millat of Islam and the menace of 'Indianism'". In 1942, the
Pakistan National Movement published a pamphlet, "The Millat of Islam and the menace of 'Indianism'", by the founder of the
Pakistan Movement,
Choudhry Rahmat Ali, depicting on its cover a flag of a proposed Pakistan with a thin white crescent and five white stars on a green field. A graphic illustration of Ali's flag in a critical work from 1946 more clearly portrays the stars in a pentagonal arrangement. Each star apparently represented a constituent nation of the proposed state:
Punjab,
Afghania (NWF),
Kashmir,
Sindh, and
Balochistan. The design eventually adopted as the Flag of Pakistan was based on the flag of the
Muslim League. In 1937, the
Muslim League began using a solid green banner charged with white descending crescent and star. In the early 1920s, during the era of the
Khilafat Movement, Muslims had begun using a green banner with crescent and star, but as a religious rather than national symbol. By the 1930s, Muslims in India had become leery of the acceptance of the tricolor flag of the
Congress Party as the national flag of India, in significant part because the discourses and rituals of hoisting the flag invoked explicitly Hindu religious themes. In 1940,
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, leader of the
Muslim League and future founder of the state of Pakistan, declared the
League's flag the 'national flag of Muslim India'. By 1944,
Muhammad Ali Jinnah was publicly declaring that they intended it to be the flag of Pakistan. This would become the flag of Pakistan, albeit charged with a white
heraldic side or flank at the hoist. The resulting flag bears a striking resemblance to the various iterations of the
Saudi flag from 1744 to 1937 which featured a white
heraldic side or flank at the hoist and a green field charged with white calligraphic text (the
Shahada). In 1947, the
Viceroy of India,
Louis Mountbatten, proposed a national flag for the state of Pakistan which comprised the flag of the
All-India Muslim League albeit with a
Union Jack in the
canton. This proposal was rejected by
Muhammad Ali Jinnah on the grounds that a flag featuring both
Saint George's Christian Cross alongside an
Islamic star and crescent would not be accepted by the
Pakistani people. A team led by
Syed Amir-uddin Kedwaii created the design that would ultimately be approved as the national flag. It was officially adopted by the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on 11 August 1947, a few days before Pakistan gained its independence from British rule. Upon independence it became the flag of, first, the
Dominion of Pakistan and then from
23 March 1956 that of the
Islamic Republic of Pakistan. The design remains unchanged since its initial adoption. {{gallery|align=center|width=150|height=75|whitebg=no|captionstyle=text-align: center ==Symbolism==