Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/story/219991.html

Religion and the Pakistan team
Finding Faith

Osman Samiuddin

September 23, 2005

During India’s tour to Pakistan last year, an Indian journalist asked an ex-player from the `80s with as much flippancy as seriousness why, in his time, Pakistan players didn’t feel the urge to exhibit their faith as openly as current members did. Having been tickled by a stream of pre- and post-match comments littered with traditional Islamic salutations and on-field celebrations of landmarks with a sajda (kneeling down in Muslim prayer), the query was justified. Suitably, the reply was simultaneously glib and revealing: “Clearly we weren’t good Muslims.”

Certainly during his time and periods preceding it, public displays of religiosity at least (not its private practice) were absent. At one defining moment in its recent history, when Javed Miandad struck a leg-side full toss for six in Sharjah, Pakistan cricket had no overt religious commemoration of the event. Instead, Miandad and non-striker Tauseef Ahmed dashed off wildly, arms akimbo, as natural and impulsive a celebration as you could imagine.

Six years later, at arguably a greater epochal moment in Melbourne, a handful of players knelt in sajda and offered thanks for winning the World Cup. Today, if you talk to any cricketer, on or off the record, replies will begin with and be bookended by a bismillah (“In the name of Allah” - it is a traditional recitation at the start of any Muslim act) or inshallah (“God Willing”). And now, with Yousuf Youhana’s conversion to Islam and a new identity - Mohammad Yousuf - the growing phenomenon of faith within the team finds its most intriguing example.

It is difficult to say with any certainty how or why this gradual change has come about. Superficially, we can pinpoint key actors and factors. Saeed Anwar, after the traumatic death of his young daughter, turned to religion and spirituality and took to the Tableeghi Jamaat (missionaries), who practise a stricter adherence to the codes of Islam than most. Anwar’s influence spread among senior players such as Saqlain Mushtaq, Mushtaq Ahmed and Inzamam-ul-Haq and the group travel together regularly to Raiwind, a small town near Lahore, where the Tableeghis congregate for prayer and dialogue.

Yousuf’s revelation that he had actually converted some time ago adds further credence to the theory that Anwar’s role has been crucial. Three years ago, during the World Cup, there were persistent rumours that he had converted under Anwar’s influence.

Maybe too, in the spectre of match-fixing, there lies a compulsion towards religion. Sharda Ugra, senior editor with India Today, suggested in an article on the subject last year during India’s tour to Pakistan that “the post-match-fixing generation in Pakistan cricket is grappling with a `double burden’; as sportsmen not only are they under scrutiny for their professional conduct, they have also become characters in a public morality play, always vulnerable to being accused of match-fixing should they fail.”

Tellingly, when Salim Malik was first accused by Rashid Latif and Basit Ali of match-fixing during the African jaunt of 1994-95, almost the first thing manager Intikhab Alam asked him to do was swear on the Quran that he wasn’t guilty of any such deed.

But for younger or newer members of the team, who haven’t played with Anwar, scouring for the roots of their religiosity is a more difficult proposition. To an extent, conformism and peer pressure play a part. But a broad, not infallible, argument can also be drawn: as the socioeconomic and geographic composition of the team has altered so too has the inclination of the team towards religion.

Where once the national team was sourced in large part of players from the metropolises of Karachi and Lahore, and where the leading figures were urbane and rounded personalities such as Asif Iqbal, Majid Khan and Imran Khan, this is no longer the case. In Pakistan’s last Test match, against the West Indies, only four members of the team were born in Lahore or Karachi.

There will be some who will argue that in smaller towns, such as Sialkot and Sheikhupura, religion perhaps holds a greater significance in people’s lives than it does in Karachi or Lahore. Levels of education are poorer, fewer people are literate and because awareness is generally low, religious beliefs, orthodox and otherwise, assume an enhanced importance. Abdul Razzaq’s mysterious illness and dizzy spells during last year’s Australia tour is an example: apparently he was on a spinach-only diet that a pir (spiritual leader) had advised would make him stronger.

But this assumption can be, and often is, countered by some Pakistani sociologists who rightly point to the higher incidence of sectarian-fuelled violence in cities like Karachi and Lahore that suggests the opposite to be true. This indicates, they say, that the importance of religion has grown in urban, rather than rural, Pakistan over the last decade or so.

Maybe the development isn’t linked so much to changing demography as it is to changing times. Many Pakistanis will tell you that the country as a whole has increasingly come to identify itself in religious terms. When Pakistan came into being it wasn’t, after all, officially known as the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, as it is now. The gradual Islamisation of the country began towards the end of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto’s premiership in the mid-'70s. Bhutto declared Ahmadis non-Muslim, banned alcohol, shut down nightclubs and changed the weekly holiday from Sunday to Friday to appease the religious front.

The subsequent policies of General Zia-ul Haq - he brought in the Shariah law (the Islamic legal system) - and the pre-eminence of Islamic political parties such as the new religious alliance under the banner of the MMA have since enhanced the process. But even here, it can be argued with some justification that the right wing Jamaat-e-Islami party held sway over Karachi’s politics through the '60s and '70s.

In recent months, two of the more heated domestic debates have been whether or not to retain a column that asks you to identify your faith in the Pakistani passport (after much debate, the column has been retained) and the impending implementation of a Hisba bill in the North-West Frontier Province. The bill essentially puts forth yet another parallel legal Islamic system, one which liberal circles decry as an act of Talibanisation, so strict are its moral codes.

Younger players in the current team are children of this era, unlike players such as Imran, Javed and even Akram. When Salman Butt says, as he did in a recent Wisden interview, “we are Muslims and we believe in Allah. We do whatever Islam says and we try to be what we are supposed to be. Religion is the complete code of life and we follow its guiding principles,” it is but natural for someone born in 1984, at the peak of Zia’s rule, to not just say it, but stress upon it.

Ultimately, of course, there isn’t anything to suggest the trend really matters in terms of either performance or selection. It forms but an interesting aside in what is, intrinsically and traditionally, an interesting team.

Cynics have speculated that Yousuf’s conversion was the derivative of the belief that being Christian would preclude his elevation to captaincy. Disregarding his credentials as captain, the more cynical would counter that having a Christian as captain of Pakistan, an Islamic country fighting a global war on terrorism and a domestic one on extremism, would in fact be an admirable international PR coup for the media-savvy President Musharraf, who also doubles as Patron-in-Chief of the PCB.

In any case, Yousuf has denied that his aspiration to captaincy had any link with his decision. In a matter as personal as this, we must go by his word and nothing else, not speculation, rumour or the displeasure expressed by his very vocal family on the subject.

Osman Samiuddin is Pakistan editor of Cricinfo

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

http://www.jang.com.pk/thenews/sep2005-daily/25-09-2005/oped/o5.htm

Youhana LBW*
*

Masood Hasan

While one is delighted to learn that the ranks of the faithful have further swelled with the arrival of test star, Yousaf Youhana, the conversion business having spread into cricket, the manner in which the switch has been conducted gives it a strange and unpleasant twist. This business of what faith you profess is strictly a personal affair, although looking around Pakistan, you would be hard pressed to believe so. YY’s jump from the arms of Jesus into the arms of the beards is his business but what’s going on?

There is Saeed Anwar, a superb stylist in his hey days, now a dedicated opening batsman for the Raiwind Desperate Brigade. He has worked overtime and converted YY to the faith. The parents of Youhana have made it clear that their son was brainwashed by Saeed Anwar and party and have made no bones about what they think about this business. While it is public knowledge that Saeed’s tragic loss of a daughter turned him from a dashing cricketer into a brooding young man who apparently found solace in spreading the good word, what personal unhappiness and delusion with the living world did Youhana face that made him question his set of beliefs? From all accounts he has done amazingly well. Coming from nowhere with social disadvantages larger than a cricket stadium, he managed to get into the national test side by the sheer class of his stroke play. It was as if he just could not be stopped. Now and then one heard of social spats within the team – Wasim Akram’s wife allegedly refused to eat breakfast at the same table as the Youhanas in Australia – so the story went, but nothing sensational ever came out. If Youhana was burdened with his faith in the middle of a side that was leaning more and more towards a public display of their belief, no one ever said a word about it. His gesture of crossing himself when he went out to bat or when he reached a landmark was endearing and in my personal opinion, this was a feeling shared also by the public. For most Muslims it was a good sign, a reinforcement of an inner belief that we are, at heart, good people who can live in peace with others who may not necessarily follow the same path as we do. What Youhana’s addition to the ranks of the faithful will do for the spread of Islam, I cannot say, but the signals it is sending out, are not good.

In Pakistan’s cricket, there have been less Christian cricketers than the fingers of a hand. Wallis Mathias, Duncan Sharpe are two names that come to mind. Maybe there were another two or three but whatever score they notched up, it was never into double figures. That’s a bad record given that we have been playing cricket just about as long as we have had the army messing up our lives. Considering the proportion of “white” that represents the minorities in the hugely dominant green flag (although wags have a theory why the mast rises through the white part only), the numbers are even lower than the proportion promises. With the President’s government bleating on and on about enlightened moderation, a beast getting more and more mythical each passing day, the sight of a Christian and a Hindu – Danish Kaneria, in the national side, fighting for the green and white flag, did more for our “image” than all the billions that have been and will be squandered on ill-conceived plans and horrifically priced consultants. It wasn’t as good as watching Azharuddin leading India or more recently, Irfan Pathan wrecking sides or Sania Mirza spiralling into the top 30 tennis players in the world, but it was still some small satisfaction – a reinforcement of beliefs most of us hold privately but are afraid to profess openly.

However, the sight of Youhana locked between the beards, his trousers rolled up to the mandatory ankle-level hasn’t sent the spirit soaring into the skies. It is only a matter of time before the beard will start to sprout and Youhana will further the widely held belief that we cannot tolerate those who don’t see things the same way as we do. Youhana may find inner peace but at a great cost to us. As for the large, poor and socially disadvantaged Christians for whom he had become a role model, it is a cruel reminder that the fairy tale is over. The growing dominance of players in the national side, who are openly brandishing an evangelist brand of religion, is not a good sign. It will not lead to a broader vision of the world but a narrowing focus and the dangerous conviction that we are the chosen ones and that’s where the buck stops.

In Pakistan, particularly since Zia ul Haq’s 11 dark years, the public display of holy morality has continued to show up, often in ridiculous situations. In his reign, just about anyone who had a position to protect or a favour to obtain, made their piety very public. The idea was to impress everyone, particularly those ranked higher, so that they would look upon such devout supplicants as being good and noble people.

Those who earlier went to bed in nothing less than three-piece suits could not be persuaded to let go of their “sherwanis” and “shalwars”. Those who did not even know what times were ordained for prayers, began preparations hours before. Soon enough, feet arrived in basins meant to wash hands, ankles made a broad re-appearance and a host of other rituals followed. Somehow it was all-important to show your faith to as many spectators as you could find. This continues. Congregation of “Jamaats” on PIA flights is now common – the hell with rules. What’s worse, even crewmembers join in. Some years ago, invited to watch our PIA flight descend into an early-dawn Rome, we instead saw our Captain with a beard that would have had Moses in thrall, crouched low over the controls offering his prayers to his Maker. Shaken, we dashed back and fastened our seat belts.

Now that the “Tablighees” have pierced the corporate fortress of the PCB, what are we to expect next? Danish Kaneria’s conversion? Mandatory prayer timings? Haj pre-requisite for team selection? Trousers rolled up to ankle length? Skullcaps over helmets? Who knows? What is clear is that getting visas for the players will become harder and harder, our enlightened moderation bleating notwithstanding.

The writer is a Lahore-based columnist

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20051003&fname=Youhana+(F)&sid=1

**Carols For Allah **

AGHA AKBAR

Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s dream of a secular Pakistan has taken yet another shattering blow in an unlikely arena: cricket. Yousuf Youhana—the only Christian in the current Pakistani cricket team, its mainstay of many years, its veritable Mr Dependable who has attained fame for his batting prowess—declared last week that he and his wife Tania had embraced Islam and adopted the Muslim names of Muhammad Yousuf and Fatima. For long a symbol for those who claimed Pakistan wasn’t biased against non-Muslims—that at least on the cricket field, performance mattered more than the player’s faith—Youhana’s conversion to Islam leaves behind Hindu leggie Danish Kaneria as the only non-Muslim in a team which increasingly has members who wear their religion on their sleeves, or more visibly, on their faces.

Ordinarily, a person’s change of faith ought not to be subjected to public scrutiny. But many here wonder whether Youhana’s leap of faith was indeed prompted by a genuine change of heart. There’s enough evidence to suggest that Youhana was more or less a pariah in the dressing room who would eat and drink separately; his views were rarely sought on issues of import to the team. And Tania, too, experienced the pangs of isolation: wives of other cricketers hung out together on tours, leaving her solitary.

Earlier this year, Youhana was replaced by Younis Khan as vice-captain for the tour of India. The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) justified the decision claiming it wanted to tackle the malaise of complacency supposedly afflicting the team. Ironically, Youhana was made a scapegoat for the team’s poor performance against the mighty Australians playing on its own turf; Inzamam-ul Haq retained the captaincy even though Imran Khan thought the Pakistan skipper had taken the ruse of a bad back to duck the Australian fast bowlers.

Youhana’s tale of woes did not end with that unkind cut. He was sent back from the West Indies in May this year, apparently after an ugly altercation with some senior players. Publicly, though, it was claimed Youhana had returned to Pakistan to tend to his ailing father. It was another matter that Papa Youhana wasn’t sick enough to be admitted to hospital. Then one fine morning, after his return, Youhana’s Mercedes was pelted with stones, at his home in a posh Lahore locality.

Coincidence or coercion? Well.

Each of Youhana’s mates has warmly welcomed his conversion to Islam. And why not, most of them are born-again Muslims. This process of rediscovering

Islam started when Saeed Anwar in 2002, then emotionally vulnerable owing to his toddler daughter’s death, came under the influence of the Tablighi Jamaat, a conservative Islamic missionary group. He started sporting a beard and found solace in spreading the Word. What better place to start than the Pakistan dressing room.

Almost the entire Pakistan team was then recovering from match-fixing allegations. Call it pangs of guilt or a desire to reform, Anwar found a receptive audience in Waqar Younis, Inzamam, Shahid Afridi, Saqlain Mushtaq and Mushtaq Ahmed. The entire milieu around the national team witnessed a dramatic change. From indulging in carnal pleasures, they began to spread the mat in the dressing room for prayers. Interestingly, none of these born-again Muslims, some of whom had a dishonourable mention in Justice Qayyum’s Judicial Report on match-fixing, publicly confessed to their dalliance with the bookies.

Younhana’s conversion has shocked the Christian community already reeling under jehadi bomb attacks. “After all, he was a role model for the entire community, perhaps the best known Christian here. He was an inspiration to those who wanted to strike it big,” said a Christian journalist.

An official of Pakistan’s National Council of Churches (PNCC) thought it was abominable if Youhana converted under peer pressure or to save his career. Dismissing Youhana’s claims that he had converted three years ago and was only making it public now, the official asked, “If he had done it three years ago, why was he making the sign of cross whenever he reached a fifty or a hundred as recently as the West Indies tour?”

I.A. Rehman, director of the Pakistan Human Rights Commission, is concerned about the star batsman’s conversion. “It seems to me that Youhana was finding it difficult to keep his place in the side. Everyone is free to change one’s religion but to my mind, there is apparently an element of coercion here,” Rehman told Outlook.

For Pakistan cricket officials, Youhana’s conversion could turn into a PR disaster. A top PCB official feels the British media which will accompany the English team’s tour of Pakistan next month could turn the spotlight on the Youhana affair—and consequently on the status of the Christian community in Pakistan. “It could become Pakistan cricket’s Mukhtara Mai,” he said.

Youhana himself, though, is demonstrating the zeal so typical of new converts. Not only has he been pictured praying with team members, he has shifted his children to a school supposedly better suited for Islamic education.

But his parents are aghast at the proselytisation. His mother has been cursing Saeed Anwar and his brother, the two who had been preaching to Youhana, and had even threatened to disown her son. She has since relented and is back to talking to her son. Youhana’s father is livid, more so because his other son, Tariq Youhana, too might follow in his elder brother’s footsteps. “Yousuf has been a good son; he has been kind to his family all along. We have lived on one floor in his house and he has bought houses for his brothers,” said Youhana’s father Masih, who insisted he wouldn’t convert even if each of his sons did. He added, “But Yousuf has sinned by converting. God will punish him for that.” For the Pakistani team, you hope it isn’t on the cricket field.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

It seems it is a secret crime to be non muslim in the pakistani cricket team...or even non sunni for that MATTER!

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

It is a person's right to chose his/her religion. If Yousuf has selected to be a Muslim, then he is a mature person and can take decission on his own. Jinnah was never here to force him to do so. It looks like Yousuf has provided another front to people who already have a lot to say against Pakistan and Jinnah.

Anyhow, I guess Shoaib Akhter must accept Christianity to balance this. By doing so he can claim a bottle of shampaign in almost every second game. ( :) )

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

It seems it’s a crime to convert, especially for Youhana, since he provided us with such good PR. Pakistanis would have him remain a Christian because it makes us look good in the eyes of the West rather than respect Yousaf’s decision. If an individual truly has had a change of hear, who are we to say there are ulterior motives involved?

That said, the episode about dressing room isolation and Wasim Akram’s wife, if true, is downright ugly. We, as a nation, do have deep-rooted social and racial biases that are hard to weed out.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

shut your chutiapay. everyone knows kay azaab ajata agar koi player sunni say shia hota, ya muslim say non muslim ho jata. sub ko jihadi takhreeb kari karnay ka sur pay charha howa hota. west waghaira kay chutiapay comments mutt bolo, aur try to understand a point churya insaan.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

Agreed. He is considered a pariah in the team anyways.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

Some1 ka bacha,
There is no need to post links from indian sources on this issue because they have zero validity and will be treated accordingly.
Youhana’s place in the team was never in any doubt, so that fact that he converted to save his place in the team is laughable

This is a Pakistani issue so bhindians should mind their own business

there is nothing to suggest that he was treated like a pariah in the dressing room, unless your source is the crap indian one that some1 posted?
and what about wasim akram’s wife?

again exaggerating beyond all proportions. What next? Is it a secret crime to be non punjabi sunni in the pakistani cricket team? :rolleyes:

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

If it helps, AGHA AKBAR (the author of that piece) is a Pakistani !!

And you don’t have to quote the whole article to respond to me.

And also that Akram incident is from your own posting from Jung …you moron, read the article yourself before you post it…you really are stupid.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

the next person to be muslimized is Kaneria. Otherwise there is no place for a hindu in our cricket team. Got any problems with that, you ****bird :slight_smile:

Jokes aside, Like i said this is an internal issue to be discussed by Pakistanis and the opinions of a bhindian like you mean jacksh1t

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

^You have been officially exposed as a moron. Your comments are not even worthy of response now.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

Some1, you can't sleep now since Yoyo have converted, can ya? What the f are you trying to prove by posting all *ty crap all over about Yoyo converting to Islam.
He converted 3 freaking years ago, and like any human being Yoy have the right to be muslim. Deal with it...
*
"ISLAMIC Republic of Pakistan"

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

Kashur Saab, here are some facts :

(1) I did not start the 2 threads on the subject.
(2) In this thread, all I did was post an article from Outlook about the subject which I thought people might be interested in reading.
(3) Two articles about it had already been posted by Lahori_moron.
(4) I came into the discussion when Lahori_moron contradicted what he himself posted :)

I couldn't care less if Youhana became a Jew tomorrow though I am slightly concerned about how Paki cricket is becoming Islamized (but you are right, its your problem not mine....you being a Pakistani)

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

A million dollar question:

If he had accepted Islam three years ago by his own will as claimed by Yoyo, why was he making the sign of cross whenever he reached a fifty or a hundred as recently as the West Indies tour?

Please answer. Thanks

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

^^ May be because if would have done a sajda at that time, the whole cricketing world would have been shocked, and the attention would have diverted from the series to Yousuf :)

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

I hope finally you got this thing in your thick brain that it shoudn’t be your problem or concern if there is islamization in our cricket team. Shabash SOME 1 beta do something for team india which is right now making a mockery of cricket.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

Abey, I am taking care of my own team alrite…but just remember…11 bearded mullahs on the field is not gonna be a pretty sight.

Re: Religion and the Pakistan Cricket Team

^^ Yeah sure its not gonna be a pretty sight for some sore losers cuz you never know out of those 11 bearded mullahs couple of them might hit 194 or maybe 200+ ;)