<P> In 1931, Fatima Jinnah joined her brother in England . From then on, Muhammad Jinnah would receive personal care and support from her as he aged and began to suffer from the lung ailments which would kill him . She lived and travelled with him, and became a close advisor . Muhammad Jinnah's daughter, Dina, was educated in England and India . Jinnah later became estranged from Dina after she decided to marry a Christian, Neville Wadia from a prominent Parsi business family . When Jinnah urged Dina to marry a Muslim, she reminded him that he had married a woman not raised in his faith . Jinnah continued to correspond cordially with his daughter, but their personal relationship was strained, and she did not come to Pakistan in his lifetime, but only for his funeral . </P> <P> The early 1930s saw a resurgence in Indian Muslim nationalism, which came to a head with the Pakistan Declaration . In 1933, Indian Muslims, especially from the United Provinces, began to urge Jinnah to return and take up again his leadership of the Muslim League, an organisation which had fallen into inactivity . He remained titular president of the League, but declined to travel to India to preside over its 1933 session in April, writing that he could not possibly return there until the end of the year . </P> <P> Among those who met with Jinnah to seek his return was Liaquat Ali Khan, who would be a major political associate of Jinnah in the years to come and the first Prime Minister of Pakistan . At Jinnah's request, Liaquat discussed the return with a large number of Muslim politicians and confirmed his recommendation to Jinnah . In early 1934, Jinnah relocated to the subcontinent, though he shuttled between London and India on business for the next few years, selling his house in Hampstead and closing his legal practice in Britain . </P> <P> Muslims of Bombay elected Jinnah, though then absent in London, as their representative to the Central Legislative Assembly in October 1934 . The British Parliament's Government of India Act 1935 gave considerable power to India's provinces, with a weak central parliament in New Delhi, which had no authority over such matters as foreign policy, defence, and much of the budget . Full power remained in the hands of the Viceroy, however, who could dissolve legislatures and rule by decree . The League reluctantly accepted the scheme, though expressing reservations about the weak parliament . The Congress was much better prepared for the provincial elections in 1937, and the League failed to win a majority even of the Muslim seats in any of the provinces where members of that faith held a majority . It did win a majority of the Muslim seats in Delhi, but could not form a government anywhere, though it was part of the ruling coalition in Bengal . The Congress and its allies formed the government even in the North - West Frontier Province (N.W.F.P.), where the League won no seats despite the fact that almost all residents were Muslim . </P>

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