Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

I am really hurt .
Very sad morning in Pakistan.

Pakpattan: Blast at Baba Farid’s shrine; 6 killed

A bomb blast occurred at the shrine of Hazrat Baba Farid Gunj Shakar at Pakpattan, which killed at least 6 people including 2 women and injured over 20 others.
According to the eye witnesses, after the Fajar prayers two persons parked their motorbike next to the Sharqi (eastern) Gate of the shrine, and right after ten minutes a huge blast took place.
The explosive material is said to be planted on the motorbike. The sound of explosion was heard across the city, while ten shops located next to the shrine were also completely destroyed.
According to security officials, the blast took place at 6:05 am. Soon after the blast, people managed to shift the injured persons to District Headquarter Hospital where most of them were stated to be in critical condition. Emergency has been imposed in DHQ Hospital.

According to the latest news one woman more expired in hospital. Death toll reached to 7

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Yes, really really sad news Pasha sb. Inalillahe wa inna ilaihe rajioon.

Disgusting animals!!!!! Fajar is the most peaceful of all prayer times!!!

When would the 'authorities' wake up? About time!!!

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

اصل ذمہ دار وہ سوچ ہے جو سردار المافقیں عبدللہ ابن ابی کے ناجائز وارث ضیاالحق کے دور میں پروان چڑھی -
پاکستان کو مذہبی تعصب اور فرقہ واریت کی دلدل میں دھکیل دیا گیا -

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

InnaLillahe WaInnaElahe Rajeun

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

InnaLillahe WaInnaElahe Rjeun
Allah Pakistan kay halat theek karay ab is hakoomat se to koi umeed nahi.

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Very sad news...Inna lillah...

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Thats worse :teary3:

ALLAH is mulk ko apne amaan me rakhe, ameen

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Very sad news

not a day goes by without bad news. one day its killings in Karachi, other day its bombing elsewhere! :(

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

May Allah swt help the families affected and forgive the dead ones.

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Its bad news...the rule of law and security is totally destroyed in Pakistan...
police are idiots, even though they had high security and full body pat downs, they failed to check a parked motorbike right infront of the gate...

however I was shocked to see GEO file fottage of people kissing graves/monuments in this dargah and thinking they are fulfilling some great job like HAJJ or umrah (naoodhobillah min dhalik)
people are so ignorant...the dead cannot benefit them ....
Obvioulsy I had heard of it, however never saw it with my own eyes..and in the year 2010, it is so unreal to see our nation still stuck in the same rut...."AFSOS SAD AFSOS"

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Innah lillahi wa inna elayhe rajioon

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

How relevant are these comments on this occaion! By the way the people who had committed this crime would have this pretext in mind.

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

The extremists are winning against Sufis, Brelvis and Shias. Off course they all blame US for the attacks.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/LJ22Df03.html

Extremists winning the mind games
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

ISLAMABAD - The promotion of a progressive intellectual movement in the Muslim world was the brain-child of various American think-tanks as a means to counter radical Islam and al-Qaeda’s ideological appeal.

In Pakistan, the regime of General Pervez Musharraf (president from June 2001 to August 2008) adopted the idea and brought forward credible modernist Islamic scholars and their schools of thought.

Another experiment after Musharraf stepped down and his idea fizzled was to launch a Sufi movement to confront radical Islam.

Sufism is defined by its adherents as “the inner, mystical dimension of Islam”.

However, this creeping modernizing, which attained considerable success, was halted in its tracks, handing the advantage back to extremists, including the Taliban.

The establishment-backed Sufi movement was led by the Brelvi school of thought, but it turned the debate of enlightenment and radicalism into a sectarian debate over Sufis and Salafis (Sunni Muslims in general opposed to both Sufi and Shi’ite doctrines).

Sufis were promoted in Khyber Agency and in the Swat area and other parts of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province to convince the population to turn against the Taliban. Government-sponsored conferences by the Brelvi school of thought against the Taliban were staged in urban centers.

Militants, though, exploited this sectarian sentiment to such a degree that the whole process of modernization was taken back to square one, and the government had to enlist the help of traditionalists to quell spiraling violence - more than 46 Sufis were killed in Swat in 2009.

Unrest continues, and this year militants have carried out organized attacks on Sufi shrines. The most recent strike was on October 7 against Abdullah Shah Ghazi’s tomb in the port city of Karachi in which two suicide bombers killed eight people. This forced the closure of other shrines in Sindh province.

This sectarian strife has further evolved into a battle between radical Islam and moderates, whether they adhere to Sufism or a modernist Islamic school. Hence, articulate and non-aggressive modernist intellectuals have also been drawn into the line of fire.

A prominent Pakistani psychiatrist and religious scholar, Dr Farooq Khan, was among the modernist scholars; he was shot dead by the Taliban after they issued a target list of intellectuals working against their interests.

The main ideologue of the modernist movement, Dr Javed Ghamidi, left the country for Malaysia after learning of this threat, while others went into hiding and dropped out of the public eye.

The attack on the Abdullah Shah Ghazi shrine was the third high-profile incident in the past few months. Militants bombed the shrine of Sufi poet Rahman Baba in Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province, attacked the shrine of Syed Ali Hijwari in Lahore, beside assaults on a number of small shrines across the country. Scores of people have been killed and hundreds injured.

“We simply don’t have the police force to guarantee the safety of these shrines which have now become very vulnerable - every day crowds of hundreds go to them,” a senior police official told Asia Times Online, adding that there were hundreds of shrines in Punjab alone. “It’s not humanly possible to protect them.”

Musharraf’s gamble
Musharraf’s move to launch an intellectual movement against radical Islam was risky as it meant going against centuries-old religious beliefs, in particular the Mavera-un-Nahri traditions of Islam, a promoter of radicalism.

Musharraf’s important policy speeches were written by a select group of modernist scholars who harshly criticized traditionalists. One of the most prominent, Javed Ghamidi, was installed as chairman of the Islamic Ideological Council, an official organization for the interpretation of Islamic tenets.

The Ministry of Information sponsored television programs that introduced Ghamidi and his ideological aides, including Khan - who left the country - and Dr Khalid Zaheer.

This intellectual movement emphasized that only a Muslim state could declare jihad (war) and therefore dismissed the Taliban-led Afghan resistance, the Palestinian struggle, the Iraqi resistance and all other Muslim struggles, saying they were not jihad.

Most of these modernist scholars, including Ghamidi, were formerly prominent figures of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI - a South Asian version of the Muslim Brotherhood, the world’s oldest and largest Islamic political group that was founded in 1928 in Egypt.)

The JI has for years been the premier Islamic party in Pakistan and traditionally it has been considered the only intellectual Islamic movement that challenges liberal and secular systems in South Asia. In Pakistan, 80% of opinion leaders are believed to be adherents of the JI.

However, after leaving the JI, Ghamidi started to change the ideological course of the country. While lower cadre in the JI were siphoned off by al-Qaeda, the intellectual cadre were completely, according to a JI leader’s own term, “Ghamidized”. (See Pakistani students prefer guns to books Asia Times Online, July 27, 2010.)

At the same time, a sizeable number of young intellectuals in the radical camp were turned by the moderates, and these new “recruits” broadcast their newfound views in the media and in books.

Some of them became effective preachers on popular television channels against jihad. These scholars adopted a very moderate approach on other tenets of Islam, such as wearing the veil and music, and they strengthened Musharraf’s argument for “enlightened moderation” in Pakistan. They also built up support for a modern syllabus in madrassas (seminaries) that traditional clerics had no choice but to accept.

At this point, Musharraf resigned and the movement lost momentum. The subsequent attempt to induct Sufism as an opposition force against the Taliban has now backfired and rolled back the whole process.

The main ideologue of the Sufi movement, Dr Sarfaraz Naeemi, was killed by a suicide bomber in 2009 and the serious of attacks on shrines this year has effectively closed down the epicenters of Sufism in Pakistan and silenced key leaders.

The government has even removed Ghamidi as chairman of the Islamic Ideology Council and replaced him with a traditionalist, Maulana Mohammad Khan Shirani, a member of the pro-Taliban Jamiat-e-Ulema-s-Islami.

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

^ I wanted to post that article myself Ajju. I remembered it as soon as I heard the sad new about Farid Ganjshakar. Baba Farid was so right when he said 8 centuries or so back:

کنھ مصلا، صوف گل، دل کاتی گڑ دات
باہر دسے چاننا دل اندھیاری رات

( کاندھے پر مصلا رکھے، گلے میں کالی کفنی پہنے، دل میں ذبح کرنے والی چھری اور منہ میں مٹھاس،
باہر سے تو روشنی لگتا ہے پر دل تاریک رات ہے)

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

You are right, it is bad news. Kharjees keep striking and police could not do anything. It seems time is getting closer when Muslims would lose patient and would start striking Kharjees worshiping places, Madrasas and gatherings. I can only wish and pray that such time does not come in Pakistan, as that could cause lot of bloodshed.

[quote]
however I was shocked to see GEO file fottage of people kissing graves/monuments in this dargah and thinking they are fulfilling some great job like HAJJ or umrah (naoodhobillah min dhalik)
people are so ignorant...the dead cannot benefit them ....
Obvioulsy I had heard of it, however never saw it with my own eyes..and in the year 2010, it is so unreal to see our nation still stuck in the same rut...."AFSOS SAD AFSOS"
[/quote]
Bhai, it seems you do not know Islam and only heard of Islam that is why you wrote what you wrote above. I know that your comment above is due to you not having appropriate knowledge of Islam, but you would be surprised that Muslims consider those who think what you wrote as Kafirs (atheists) or Kharjees. :) You should try to learn and understand Islam and then you would understand Islamic practices that only Muslims could know and knowledgeable Muslims could understand. That is obvious, as it is only Muslims who build graves, believe on graves, visit graves, give respect to graves, and pray on graves ... because all is part of Islam.

I won’t go into detail or argue on the issue. Only thing I would say is that, Kafirs and Kharjees, both could not know or understand why Muslims build graves, believe on graves, visits graves, pray on graves, and why they do what they do on graves, as Kafirs and Kharjees have no idea what life and death is, have no idea regarding importance of graves, have no idea regarding the position of those close to Allah even after death, neither they know why Muslims build, respect, and visit graves.

 Well, Kafirs (especially atheists) do not even build graves so visiting, believing, respecting and praying on graves is impossible for them anyhow. As for Kharjees, they are same as Kafirs with a little difference. Since Kharjees like to call themselves Muslim and know that Muslims build graves, they reluctantly put their jahannumi dead in grave to rot even though they would prefer burning their dead to ashes, as grave is immaterial to them. That is why you would not find Kafirs and kharjees building, respecting or visiting graves. As for Muslims, when Kafir or Kharjees die, they say that ‘Mar giya mardood, na fatiha na darood’.

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

[mod]Please refrain from discussing theology in this forum. If you wish to discuss the importance of graves, you are welcome to do so in religious forum..!!![/mod]

Re: Sad news. Sad morning, Blast at Dargah Baba Farid Ganj e Shakr Pakpattan

Latest;
** Pakpattan blast: city wears mourning look**

Updated at: 1302 PST, Tuesday, October 26, 2010

PAKPATTAN: Pakpattan is witnessing mourning after it was rocked with a blast that occurred at shrine of Hazrat Baba Farid Ganj-e-Shakar yesterday morning, Geo News reported Tuesday.

Preliminary investigations laid bare the fact the blast became possible owing to lax security.

Baba Farid shrine is hitherto closed for the visitors and the devotees since the blast.

Punjab Auqaf Minister Ehsanud Din Qureshi said it would take time for the authorities to reopen the dargah.

It should be mentioned here that Ulema-o-Mashaikh Conference would be held at dargha’s mosque today after Zuhr Prayer.

Meantime, it was disclosed in the preliminary inquiry of police that only two out of ten close-circuit cameras were functional at the time of blast. Auqaf is responsible for installing and taking care of cameras inside and outside the dargah.

The inquiry also exposed that two months ago, police and Special Branch sent a letter to Auqaf regarding a possible terror activity at rear door of the dargah and its adjoining wall.