Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

Salaam all,

Share your views about the following article published in the Daily Times, Pakistan. Are we that uncomfortable being ourselves?

Link: http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\08\14\story_14-8-2009_pg3_2

Reclamation of Pakistan’s South Asian Muslim identity, so poignantly reflected in Jinnah’s speech, is as crucial for the survival of a democratic Pakistan as the battle for defeating the Taliban

Rooted in a democratic struggle that ended British rule in the subcontinent, there was something remarkable about Pakistan’s emergence on August 14, 1947 as a sovereign Muslim state. This was as much reflected in the founding father Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s address to Pakistan’s first Constituent Assembly as in its national anthem and flag celebrating Pakistan’s founding moment.

Jinnah’s speech on August 11, 1947 set the direction for Pakistan as a modern democratic state, where religion was a personal matter that had “nothing to do with the business of the state”, and people could creatively rework a divisive past for a promising future. At the same time, the inclusive spirit of a South Asian Muslim identity was reflected, on the one hand, in the first national anthem composed by Jagan Nath Azad, a scholar of Indo-Persian culture, and on the other hand, in a flag that celebrated Pakistan’s three percent religious minorities by giving them twenty five percent of the flag’s space — its white section.

Such eclecticism rooted in an Indo-Persian culture also prevailed in the new national anthem — first played at Karachi airport on March 30, 1950 when the Shah of Iran visited Pakistan, but formally adopted seven years later. As with the Urdu word for ‘national anthem’ (qaumi terana in Urdu, terana e qaumi in Persian), the anthem is as much in Urdu as Persian, the composition is by a Zoroastrian — Ghulam Ahmed Chagla, and the chorus giving it an ‘Indian’ musical aura comprises of almost equal numbers of female and male singers, respectively five and six. (See Ashfaque Naqvi. “A word on Jagannath Azad”, Dawn, June 27, 2004)

Indeed, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s populist slogan of “Islam, Democracy and Socialism” that gave him a landslide win in Pakistan’s first general elections held in 1970 also reflected the eclectic spirit of Pakistan’s South Asian Muslim identity. However, General Zia-ul Haq, who toppled Bhutto’s government in a military coup in 1977 and had him hanged two years later, set Pakistan on a different track that eroded the South Asian spirit of its identity. Lacking a political or social base of his own other than the army, Zia carved out a constituency for himself through a Saudi-backed politics of ‘Islamisation’ that infused Islamic conservatism in the state and society and co-opted religio-political parties, including the Jama’at-e Islami that had historically stood in opposition to Jinnah and Pakistan. Moreover, Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan in support of Kabul’s Marxist regime in 1979 helped in entrenching General Zia’s regime and turning Pakistan into “America’s most allied ally” as a Cold War frontline state.

Indeed, if the Cold War had given General Zia a shortcut to legitimacy on the international front, the Afghan jihad enabled Zia to stake Pakistan’s future on the jihadi politics in Afghanistan , giving rise to a plethora of home-grown militant outfits. Clearly, the upshot of the US-Saudi backed Afghan jihad in a regional context shaken by Shia revivalist Ayatollahs of the Iranian revolution had fateful consequences for Pakistan.

At the same time, with the virtual collapse of state education, religious schools linked with jihadi outfits rapidly expanded as breeders of a violent jihadi culture that eclipsed Pakistan’s South Asian identity while promoting an ‘Arabist shift’ — a tendency to view the Arab as the only ‘real’/pure Muslim, and then using this trope of purity as a self-righteous weapon for recasting the present in a glorified imaginary of a triumphal Arab past.

Such reasoning is reflected in a detained Pakistani suicide bomber’s interview on Geo Television on July 2, 2009. The would-be bomber justified the killing of innocent children and citizens in the ongoing spate of suicide bombings by invoking the fatwa of “a great Arab cleric”, to the effect that those who died in the bombings were not innocent victims as they did not support Taliban’s jihad.

Indeed, back in the 1990s when Pakistan helped Taliban’s rise to power in Afghanistan, Talibanic Islam became virtually synonymous with Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda through fusion with Wahhabi-Salafi radicalism, even as Peshawar became “the capital of the Islamic world”, as noted by Al Qaeda strategist Abu Mus’ab al-Suri in Brynjar Lia’s Architect of Global Jihad: The Life of Al Qaeda Strategist Abu Mus’ab al- Suri. (Hurst. London. 2007) According to al Suri, “every ongoing discussion and debate (in Peshawar) quickly spread out to the rest of the world, through audio communiqués, books, leaflets, audiocassettes, and through couriers and visitors”.

Moreover, if the founding moment of Indo-Persian culture was rooted in the 11th century publication of Kashf ul Mahjub, (The Unveiling of the Veiled), a treatise on Sufism by Lahore’s patron saint Ali Osman Hujwiri or Data Ganj Baksh as he is popularly known across the country, the publication in Peshawar of al Suri’s The Experience and Lessons of the Islamic Jihadi Revolution in 1991 might well have signalled the internationalisation of the Arabist shift in Pakistan.

At the same time, Arab and Pakistani jihadis continued to flourish in the training camps of Afghanistan and Pakistani-administered Kashmir after Zia’s death and Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, even as Pakistan briefly realised its dream of gaining ‘strategic depth’ in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.

However, all this changed following the September 11, 2001 suicide attacks on the United States, masterminded by Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda that Taliban had hosted in their Islamic Emirate. And although the invasion by US and NATO forces in October 2001 led to the rout of the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, this further radicalised Pakistan’s Islamist groups, even as the Taliban and Al Qaeda sought refuge in Pakistan. Indeed, most Pakistanis regarded the Taliban as ‘true Muslims’ and bin Laden a ‘hero of Islam’, thereby enabling the terrorists to exploit local hospitality in Pakistan. The existential threat that Pakistan faces is not only because of the Taliban per se, but also a complicit culture largely blurring the boundaries between ‘extremist’ and ‘mainstream’ in the Islamist spectrum.

However, a sea change has occurred in Pakistan’s public perceptions of Al Qaeda and the Taliban since May 2009, after the Pakistan Army was finally compelled to crush the Taliban insurgency. Even so, military action against the Taliban would remain inconclusive without socio-economic and educational measures for winning “hearts and minds”, especially of the people displaced by recent fighting.

At the same time, such measures should aim at promoting a new political culture in sync with Pakistan’s founding moment, summed up by Jinnah’s speech to the Constituent Assembly. Indeed, reclamation of Pakistan’s South Asian Muslim identity, so poignantly reflected in Jinnah’s speech, is as crucial for the survival of a democratic Pakistan as the battle for defeating the Taliban.

Suroosh Irfani is an educationist and writer based in Lahore. (Courtesy a special edition of Viewpoints entitled “The Islamisation of Pakistan: 1979-2009.” The Middle East Institute, Washington DC)

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

Just yet another politically loaded article

I don't understand why despite recognising that America backed up the regimes to start an onslaught against mutual enemies that these pro-secularist democrats do not recognise that their ideal (i.e. America) is the very instigator of that what they speak out against.

The Taliban whatever is meant by this term these days is not the cause of the downfall of Pakistan, the Taliban whatever that means is just another pawn in the chess game being played by the secular West. If what Pakistan was made for has not become manifest it is because those were lies. Pakistan was not meant to be for Islam and Muslims, just as the article states above. Pakistan was not even meant for democracy .... In fact Pakistan is fulfiling it's plan 100% ... The people in the country are suffering as a result.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

The vision of the leaders who formed Pakistan was a country that is powerful, progressing, and one that provides an identity and a happy living place for the Muslims of the South Asia. The trouble is that our people are now taught wrong history right from the school days, where the heroes are mostly Arab criminal, rapist, and bandits. We need to get back to our roots and learn the history of the region like the joint struggle of Hindus and Mulsims in 1857.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

Ramesha I know how much you adore this concept of statehood , first formulated at the demise of pious caliphate by ummayyads

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where religion was a personal matter that had “nothing to do with the business of the state”, and people could creatively rework a divisive past for a promising future.

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was Jinnah superior to RasoolAllah ?

if pakistan is to be a islamic republic then caliphate is the only LEGAL form of goverment

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

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We need to get back to our roots and learn the history of the region like the joint struggle of Hindus and Mulsims in 1857.
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Why not the example of Syed Ahmed Shaheed of Barelvi ?

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

Also since that "rebellion" thread is closed , clarification on the word "whore" its also used for an unscrupulous person or who compromises on principle and thats why I used it against that woman in the video.So before you guys call me "sick" better understand the multiple uses of a term.
Why did I use it ? as that woman was making a mockery of Hadith of khawarij and using it in a very WIDE context.
Its a dangerous development when muslims have resigned to the fate of being ruled by nonreligious tyrants and anyone who rises against them is called a khariji.If thats the case will she call Hussain b Ali sayyid -e-shuhada a khariji ? and all the subsequent sahaba & tabeen who followed his example

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

Anyway back to this thread

I find it pleasently amusing that 12ers here (ramesha and pagluu) are against sharia law in pakistan. Do they oppose the 12er islamic revolution in iran which started sharia laws there ?

reason why 12ers so actively promote secular agenda in pakistan is that islamic law in paksitan will be sunni hanafi , which would put them at a disadvantage.

A lot of sunnis too go along with this because of their abhorence of islamic laws.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

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I don't understand why despite recognising that America backed up the regimes to start an onslaught against mutual enemies that these pro-secularist democrats do not recognise that their ideal (i.e. America) is the very instigator of that what they speak out against

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bingo ! afterall who was promoting mr zia ul haq in 80s ? at that time these islamists were allies

You with your tunnel vision may not understand what I said.

Btw, large majority, if not all Muslims will be in favour of every single law of the land being under the Quran and Sunnah.

So u do favor shariah law ? and what does majority have to do with it , if pak is an islamic state then its the DUTY of the govt to enforce shariah even by force if neccesary.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

In my personal life, I try to find all the answers from the Sharia, so ofcourse I favour Sharia. And if there is a survey conducted around the Muslim world, large majority would favour the Sharia.
The question shouldn't be if the Muslims want Sharia, but what type of Sharia.

Quran has mentioned the word Sharia only once and has warned in the same verse not to follow the ones "who do not know".

[45:18] Then We have made you follow a course in the affair, therefore follow it, and do not follow the low desires of those who do not know.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

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In my personal life, I try to find all the answers from the Sharia, so ofcourse I favour Sharia. And if there is a survey conducted around the Muslim world, large majority would favour the Sharia.
The question shouldn't be if the Muslims want Sharia, but what type of Sharia

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great so whats the problem ? why dont you agree with the implementation of shariah laws according to the most prevalent sharia in that land.I fully endore that in iran as jafari fiqah is prevalent there do you endorse hanafi or any other sunni fiqah in pakistan then ?

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

I will respect anybody fairly chosen by the people to represent them.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

^ the leader itself (or caliph) can be choosen by people , but the system he follows HAS to be shariah that is not upto the people to decide.That is divine dictatorship and as long as we call ourselves muslims we should not follow any other system than shariah.

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

^ Caliph can be chosen by the people OR caliph is chosen by the people?

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

^ if thats the case then we should stop looking towards jinnah's speeches as basis for our identity his concept of religion being a "personal issue" has no place in a shariah state

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

^I asked you a question.
Anyways, Jinnah was the founder of Pakistan an led a movement backed by masses of Muslims. You guys should propogate your ideas and views without blowing Muslims up with bombs and may be start with bringing forward a candidate or two for the seat of the Caliph. Then you will be atleast in some position to criticize Jinnah.

I will answer what sayyidna umar b khattab said about this issue

"someone better than me ( abu bakr) choose a successor and someone better than him ( Rasoolallah) did not.So thats why I will not choose a successor".

AT any rate give me a leader that enforces shariah in all spheres of life ( not selectively like mr zia and his disastrous foreign policy of backing afghan bandits) and I will be happy no matter how he gets into power

Jinnah was remarkable leader no doubt , and had many fine qualities but we are under no obligation to follow his example.
So do u follow sunnah of Muhammad (saw) or Jinnah ?

Re: Plan to restore Pakistan- Reclaiming the founding moment

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You guys should propogate your ideas and views without blowing Muslims up with bombs and may be start with bringing forward a candidate or two for the seat of the Caliph

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How is that possible when every attenpt at introducing shariah is condemned as "talibanification" by secular media in pakistan.