After his mother's early demise in 1919, the young Shaukat and his siblings were taken care of by their aunt and in due course, he was sent to study at the Aitchison College and the Aligarh Muslim University, briefly, before he was sent, in keeping with family tradition, to join the British Indian Army, upon passing the qualifying examinations.[7]
Early military career
Upon completing his military training or cadetship at the Indian Military Academy, he was formally commissioned as a Second Lieutenant on the Special List with effect from 15 July 1937.[8] He was then attached to the 1st battalion Northamptonshire Regiment for a year then in August 1938 joined the 16th Light Cavalry.[9][10] After some service on the North West Frontier, when the Second World War broke out, he volunteered to go abroad for active service with any cavalry regiment being sent out to the Front, and was therefore seconded to Skinner's Horse.[11] He thereafter served in Somalia, the Middle East and North Africa from 1940 to 1942, first promoted Captain April - July 1941, after that as a temporary Major until after his father's death in December 1942, when he quit military service to take up his political role in the Punjab. Upon taking his release he was regularized with the rank of major. He stayed in London for a short period during 1943.
Early political career
On taking up his late father's political mantle, he was duly elected to the Punjab Assembly and made a member of the cabinet under the new Punjab premier, Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana, and subsequently served as Minister for Public Works in the Unionist Muslim League government. Dismissed in 1944 for his increasingly pro-Muslim League and pro-Jinnah ideals and policies, he was subsequently elected Deputy Leader of the Punjab League. Re-elected to the Punjab Assembly in 1946, he became one of the most prominent activists in the Muslim League's "Direct Action" campaign through its paramilitary wing the Muslim National Guard and the most famous and popular of the League's young leadership, winning the title of "Shaukat-i-Punjab "(Shaukat[12] of the Punjab) from Jinnah himself.[13] He played a significant role in eventually winning over the Punjabi Muslims in large numbers, to the cause of the League and of an independent Pakistan.[14]
Later career
After partition he left the Muslim League party amidst conflicts with Mian Mumtaz Daultana and briefly joined the Pakistan Azad Party along with Mian Iftikharuddin. Between the 1950s and 1970s, in his own words, he was 'an unlucky witness to the gradual destruction of the Quaid's (i.e. Jinnahs) Pakistan',[15] at the hands of greedy and corrupt politicians and the martial law regimes.
Elected again from Attock in the 1970 general elections, he played a key role in the opposition negotiations with Zulfiqar Bhutto which led to the passage of Pakistan's first interim constitution.[16] He was also one of the few Pakistani statesmen in 1970–71, who tried to negotiate amicably with the Awami League, to try to salvage former East Pakistan, which seceded and became Bangladesh soon afterwards.[17] Disillusioned, Khan soon afterwards resigned permanently from political life.[18]
He died in Islamabad on 25 September 1998 and is survived by two sons and four daughters. His son Sikander Hayat Junior has twice fought provincial elections from the PPP.[4]
Memoirs
He wrote his memoirs entitled The Nation That Lost Its Soul: Memoirs of a Freedom Fighter (Lahore: Jang, 1995), its Urdu version being called Gumgashtah Qaum : Ek Mujāhid-i Āzādī Kī Yād Dāshten̲.
^Khan was made Captain in 1941 and War Substantive Major in 1942 after passing a promotion course at Haifa Staff College. He was regularized as Major upon early release in 1945. See Indian Army List 1945
^ abPress release (November 1998). "Obituaries: Shaukat Hyat Khan"(PDF). Salaam Society Journal. Vol. 28, no. 11. p. 49. Retrieved 24 December 2013.
^Shaukat Hayat Khan (1995). The Nation that Lost its Soul: Memoirs. Lahore: Jang Group of Publishers. p. 12.
^Shaukat Hayat Khan (1995). The Nation that Lost its Soul: Memoirs. Lahore: Jang Group of Publishers. p. 17.
^Originally the 1st Madras Lancers, the senior-most regiment of the Indian Cavalry. See C. Kempton, A Register of the Titles of the Units of the HEIC & Indian Armies, 1666–1947, Bristol: British Empire & Commonwealth Museum, 1996. ISBN978-0-9530174-0-9
^1st Duke of York's Own Cavalry, the Bengal Lancers. For further details, see John Gaylor, Sons of John Company: The Indian and Pakistan Armies, 1903–1991, Orig. pub. London, 1992. Reprint New Delhi: Lancer International Publications, 1993, pp. 59–61. ISBN81-7062-185-2
^Literally implying 'honour' and 'fame', a play on SHK's name. See Shahid Mahmud, Islamic Names and Titles in India and Pakistan, Rawalpindi: Ashraf Books, 1969, p.36
^See 1998 Obituary by Omer Tarin, reprinted in Selected Shorter Essays, pub. TSI, Pakistan, and Lulu Publishing, USA, 2011, p. 15. ISBN978-1-105-15532-1