One can understand why Advani would have empathy for Jinnah. He too led one of the most divisive movements in recent Indian history; but during the climax, when Babri Masjid actually fell, he wrung his hands and said it was the “saddest day” of his life. To this day he struggles to be accepted as a secular liberal. In personal life, Advani is no fundamentalist. Jinnah was an elitist with a taste for delicately cut sandwiches and fine spirits. But that in itself is no evidence of his being liberal or secular. On the contrary, it reveals that he could practice the most cynical politics, driven by personal ambition and thwarted ego (apparently vis-a-vis Jawaharlal Nehru). The real liberal and humanist was dhoti-clad M.K. Gandhi, who had discarded all accoutrements of his class origins. From the vantage point of his upper-class nose, Jinnah is said to have looked down upon Gandhi, though historians tell us it is Nehru who really annoyed the barrister.