Secularism Is Pakistan's Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

“Religionism” hasn’t given much to Pakistan. Lets try something different.

Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence*|*Malik Siraj Akbar

When armed gunmen stopped and shot dead 43 people from the Shia community in Pakistan’s largest city of Karachi on Wednesday, it was certainly not the first time that the terrorists had carried out such an atrocious attack. Islamic extremists operate across Pakistan with absolute impunity. The Pakistani Taliban murder unarmed civilians randomly regardless of their sectarian affiliations. The Sunni militants routinely target the members of the Shia community. Similar attacks also take place on the followers of the Ahmadiyya Muslims; the Hindus and the Christens. These attacks are not confined to one city or a province. They occur in places as remote as the provinces of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and in relatively modern cosmopolitans like Karachi and Lahore.

Of course the loss of precious human lives is the dark side of these attacks but the worst part is that these attacks take place so regularly that they just become a statistic for the government, media and the researchers. The government condemns these attacks, suspends a few policemen, makes some void promises to the people to take action against the terrorists sand then life goes. A few weeks or months later, the same terrorists strike in a different city in a newly crafted style. In this process, hundreds of Pakistanis lose their lives every year. Terrorists get strong and stronger by the day. They keep expanding their networks and invent new techniques to kill more and more people from the opposite religion and sect. In the recent times, the terrorists have found it convenient to wear police and army uniforms to gain immediate and unquestionable access to their targets.

The million-dollar question is why do these attacks take place again and again? Why doesn’t Pakistan have a strategy to address this challenge? As a matter of fact, there are no administrative and technical fixes to this problem. Violence in the name of religion does not specifically target people from one gender, race or ethnic group. The Pakistani state has been lucky that most of its citizens are not educated enough to hold it accountable for its failures to defend the lives of the citizens. The relationship between the state and the citizens should be based on mutual trust and benefits. In Pakistan, the state has excessively benefited from its relationship to a docile public. The state has imposed an Islamic identity and a jingoistic narrative on its population and kept the public emotionally blackmailed that questioning the role of Islam in every day lives would amount to committing blasphemy. Religion has become such an integral part of the State’s identity that people are unable to look at the world beyond religious frameworks. Given that context, people find it more comforting to trade conspiracy theories with the reality insisting that the Muslim extremists cannot be Muslims in reality. When the population does not blame the oppressor, this helps in exempting the government from accountability.

Recently, I attended a talk at Harvard Kennedy School of Government by a young Pakistani activist Jibran Nasir who has been struggling against religious extremists in Pakistan. Mr. Nasir, 28, just like many other activists, diagnoses Pakistan’s problem wrongly. According to him, Pakistanis have to “reclaim their mosques”. What does that mean? Nasir believes that religious obscurantists have taken hold of the mosques in Pakistan and they use these crucial platforms for preaching hatred and violence. Therefore, the Pakistanis have to reclaim their mosques. Well, this is not going to help Pakistan in getting rid of its existing problems with radical Islam. Pakistan has to renegotiate its relationship with all its citizens regardless of the faith they believe. Mosques should not be the place to decide the future of Pakistan. The Pakistanis should instead reclaim their constitution, parliament and democratic institutions and keep the mosque only as a place of worship without giving it any powers to decide the affairs of the state or individuals’ personal lives.

After all, why should the fate of a Pakistani Christen, Hindu or any other religious minority be decided inside a mosque? In spite of recurrent attacks on innocent citizens in the name of religion, there is surprisingly not enough protest in Pakistan from the people telling the state directly that they can no longer carry its burden of Islam. People believe in religions because they want to be connected with some spiritual or divine force that comforts them not to be manipulated as tool in the hands of a state for its own political ambitions.

States are supposed to treat all their citizens equally and respectfully instead of discriminating them because of their religion. In Pakistan, religion is certain to become a cause of bloodshed given the overwhelming emphasis on Islamic identity. Religion is a dangerous recipe for a society like Pakistan where millions of children do not go to school and another millions of women do not get out of their homes because men decide their fate. In a society where dozens of television channels and radio stations regularly preach one version of religion, it is too naïve to expect respect and tolerance for other religions and appreciation for difference of opinion.

The way forward for Pakistan is detaching the state from religion. Official patronage of religion at school or any other level should stop and there should be more emphasis on civic education. The State should have no business with religion. People should be allowed to practice whatever religion they believe in. But when the State advocates and defends only one religion, it ends up offering too much tolerance for those who kill fellow citizens for the same reasons. In a way, it helps the state to promote its idealogical mission but it is simply wrong and unaccetapble to have tolerance for extremist groups because they are on the side of the state’s narrative.

Exactly what I was thinking. Jinnah was a secularist. It’s time Pakistan headed back that way. Zia ul haqs militant culture has been a breeding ground for this sort of stuff. The world is honestly laughing at us right now.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

^ As much as I would like to blame Ziaul Haq but truly religious extremism has been society far longer, look at violence against Ahmadis.

By making Pakistan secular, are you guys talking about removing Islamic laws from constitution/penal code? or is it going the Turkish extreme ways of making sure nobody grows beard?

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

honestly, both would work pretty much at this point

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

IMHO as long as we have lawlessness, we have unemployment the poverty stricken families will dump their children to any institution who will teach them and feed them. By removing this source and not providing other needs of the society (law enforcement/security/employment) and merely removing religion from constitution/forcing people to stay away from religion is not going to cut it.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

It won’t. But it would be the best place to start from.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

You are missing the point Captain1. Purpose of our existence is based on false premise that Pakistan must be a religious state or we lose reason for our existence (after all India has more Muslims). That was not what the founders intended, but that is what happened when state mixed religion with politics. So, the point that author is trying to make is that state must separate itself from the religion & treat all citizens equal regardless of their religious beliefs. So, if you want to pray to, or not (among other things), state should have no business in that.

Btw, majority of these terror groups exist under state’s patronage & state is unwilling to tackle them b/c they share core ideological point with state itself.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

In order to make people understand the need to treat all people equal regardless of religion is actually to give more religious values to people not to cut them away from it even more than they are already …

People are zealous and bigoted in Pakistan … That is not the cause of the religion. If you cut away the religion they will find other ways to continue their zealotry and bigoted behaviour. Religious values will strip people away from such a mindset … An outward display of religion is not being religious … Secularism will not solve any problems … But if secular law is in place which it is already (it’s just not enforced because of corruption) that is enough … But to go down the route of anti-religion that will be a mistake … Religion is one of the few things humans have that keep us away from sin … Sin in the sense of theft, murder, cheating, etc … The reason why it is happening in Pakistan is because the people have no real faith.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

You, too, are missing the point. What the guy is arguing is not that at all. He is saying that people should not be treated differently by state b/c of their faith. For example, get rid of the stupid laws that says a non-Muslims cannot be president, or Ahmed shouldn’t believe whatever they believe in or person insulting prophet must be killed. When you do that you are directly empowering groups that are now destroying the state itself. How hard is that to understand?

I saw this quote somewhere, but it sums it pretty well “You don’t need religion to have morals. If you can’t determine right from wrong then you lack empathy, not religion.”

Again, that is not true. The reason this is happening in Pakistan and (everywhere else) is not b/c of lack of faith, but b/c we are human beings and we are needy and greedy (those are evolutionary/innate things within each of us).

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

How about leaving the good laws in place… Are good laws and Islam mutually exclusive ?

The merits of a law should be determined by their objective results, and not by whether or not those laws are deemed to be Islamic by one “scholar” or another.

My belief for what its worth, is that anything that is most beneficial and seeks to cause the least amount of harm, should be inherently “Islamic.” By that definition, Turkeys secular system, which has unquestionably been far more beneficial for the Turks then the Quasi-Islamic/Common law system has been for the majority of Pakistanis is thus inherently far more “Islamic” even though they dont call themselves as such.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

disagree

Education is the only way out.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

We have had this discussion before, but lets rehash if for no other reason then because it been a while since we have had a good debate on the subject.. :slight_smile:

People in Pakistan arent zealous and bigoted until religion is introduced. Mumtaz Qadri would have been content to be a lowly body guard, but for the motivating factor of religion. The people who support him, wouldn’t support him unless they were motivated to do so by an allegiance to their faith.

The people who murder Ahmadis, Shia, and Christian dont murder because they are zealous and bigoted by nature, but because its indoctrinated by their religious beliefs. Its a case of nurture over nature.

Now you would argue that its the quality of religious teaching that is an issue. I would agree, except that trying to pursue that “quality” in religion is a futile pursuit and one that has been shown demonstrably to be a dangerous and naive endeavor. Human history stands as testement to the the folly of trying to create an “ideal” society of any religious flavor. Pakistan itself is an example of what can go wrong where we mix religion where it doesnt belong.

honestly, you prescription for what ails the body is to treat hemorrhage with even more bleeding.
I think its obvious. Had religion not been a factor, those murdered on that bus would be alive today.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

Sometimes education just creates well-spoken bigots.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

Peace Med911

I thought what I wrote was clear … If your analogy was correct then the haemorrhage is the symptomatic problem … In Pakistan that problem is Zealotry and Bigotry which in my view is allowed to fester because of disregard of religious values. So to say that I am arguing for treating haemorrhage with more bleeding would translate to arguing for treating zealotry and bigotry with more zealotry and bigotry - is a dire mismatch … I am not … Religion in real terms is how a person conducts their life …it is not Islam or Christianity or so on … A person who selects from a dogma to suit himself has made the blunder of moulding his belief system around his ego … However, the person who subdues himself even in the areas he finds hard to suit his belief system is more religious … He has fully understood that to be in a religion is to follow and not to make fit for oneself …

If people followed they would be better humans … Pakistanis have a problem in following anything … They will break codes, rules, queues, systems, and religion to suit themselves … This is what needs to be treated …

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

they are persistent on their agenda and you have an opportunity to argue about yours, its the lack of education that is the basic problem not religion.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

This is exactly what Civil rights movement is trying to do in Pakistan. They want to promote tolerance and break the shackles of secteraniasm and hatred. Their leadership Jubran and others went to jail for protesting against shia’s genocide even though they are not. They did the same for Ismailis and they want to go an extra yard to raise this awareness.
However the biggest blow our agencies gave was in the form of the death of their leader Sabeen Mehmud for wutever reasons. But i hope that the movement keeps on growing and finally attain their objectives.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

secularism is the way forward. shariah law is good, and would work if followed down to a T but it isn’t. there will always be someone manipulating it somewhere to get one over on the basis of “religion” - and i’m sorry, in a world already full of mishaps.. bringing religion into the mix is just asking for trouble and intolerance. people are idiots and can’t be trusted in that regard so it’s best to separate both. as for whether education is the most crucial thing needed, it might be. but there’s no one solution. pakistan is stuck in its backward roots because it fails to help itself socially and economically. and as for the mullahs spewing nonsense, they should have some kind of law that forbids people from preaching any bs in the name of God without having a proper qualification from some kind of established institution. regulate what is taught.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

More than Education, I think awareness. All those fatwa lagaeng and fueling hatred are either Doctors or some big degree holders.

Parhay likhay jaahil.

Re: Secularism Is Pakistan’s Way Out to End Sectarian Violence

If you look at the origins of these laws those were introduced at the behest of the citizens of the same country. I do agree to the basic issue of state laws discriminating against lets say Ahmadis or Christians but what we are seeing in the country is far from that. Why secularism is mostly discussed when minority is targeted? We need to address the lawlessness and hatred-breeding institutions, once the bigots know that they will actually be punished for hate crimes then it won’t matter what sect/religion you belong to justice will be served. We can make new laws or twist existing laws or abolish any law we don’t like but if a law is not going to be enforced then it is not worth the paper it is written on it.

We need to make hate speech, hate crime punishable by death and then actually enforce the law regardless of who commits it then you will see the results.