Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

I do not agree with many things that happen in and around mazars, but on the other hand I hate the way extremists declare every one as “kafirs” and start killing them. Sindh which has long been famous for its tolerance is slowly becoming infested by these militants. Something to be wary/concerned about.

Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban | Reuters

(Reuters) - Yielding to the hypnotic beat of drums and the intoxicating scent of incense, the woman danced herself into a state of trance, laughing and shaking uncontrollably alongside hundreds of others at Pakistan’s most revered Sufi shrine.

Swathed in red, the Sufi colour of passion, she shouted invocations to the shrine’s patron saint in an ecstatic ritual repeated daily in the dusty town of Sehwan Sharif on the banks of the river Indus.

With its hypnotic rituals, ancient mysticism and a touch of intoxicated madness, Sufism is a non-violent form of Islam which has been practised in Pakistan for centuries - a powerful antidote to extremism in places such as the province of Sindh.

It is scenes like this, where men and women dance together in a fervent celebration of their faith, that make Sufis an increasingly obvious target in the conservative Muslim country where sectarian violence is on the rise.

**At a crossroads of historic trade routes, religions and cultures, Sindh has always been a poor but religiously tolerant place, shielded by its embrace of Sufism from Islamist militancy sweeping other parts of Pakistan.
**
**But this year peace came to an end with a string of attacks across the province, including against Sufi places of worship, as militants seek new safe havens and new ways of destabilising the country.
**
“They are trying to kill us,” said Syed Sarwar Ali Shah Bukhari, whose father, a Sufi cleric, was killed in a bomb attack on the family’s ancestral shrine in February.
Bukhari, 36, is now the oldest living descendant of a prominent Sufi “saint” whose tomb his family has tended for generations in a tradition handed down from father to son.

**“It was never like this before,” Bukhari, wearing a black turban and silver embroidered slippers, said nervously outside the Dargah Ghulam Shah Gazi shrine, its vast dome shining bright above the bleak mud-brick homes of his native Maari village.
**
**“Suddenly everyone is hostile towards us. People are afraid,” added Bukhari, who took over as the shrine’s resident saint and custodian after the death of his father.
**
IRREDEEMABLE HERETICS

The influx of Taliban-inspired gangs into Sindh is a disturbing development in a country where Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s government is already struggling to contain a Taliban insurgency and escalating religious violence.

**“In Sindh, militancy was not common until now. It was known for its tolerance,” said Abdul Khalique Shaikh, a senior police officer who investigated this year’s Sufi attacks. “You can hardly find any Sindh-based religious extremists here.”
**
**Insurgents see Sufis as irredeemable heretics who deserve to die. Long entrenched in their tribal safe havens on Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, militants are seeping quietly into vulnerable, less protected areas, establishing cells in unlikely new places such as rural Sindh.
**
Sindh is home to Pakistan’s violent city of Karachi, long infiltrated by the Taliban. But until now, its rural interior has been of little interest to insurgents.

Police say there is evidence suggesting a group of well trained militants had been deployed in Sindh to prepare for more attacks.

“All of them are jihadists (Islamist militants). All of them were in Afghanistan,” said Shaikh, the senior police officer.

**Taliban-friendly seminaries - some funded by Middle East money - have sprung up around Sindh to inspire men to holy war. Men collecting donations often loiter outside radical mosques.
**
**The striped black and white flag of pro-Taliban groups flap on street corners across rural Sindh - a novelty in these parts.
**
**Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a radical Sunni sectarian outfit, has also made inroads into Sindh from the neighbouring Punjab province, setting up seminaries to spread its ideology.
**
**Security sources said militants in rural Sindh are based around the cities of Shikarpur and Sukkur. Zulfikar Memon, 33, who was wounded in the February attack in Maari, said jihadists opened an Islamist school in Shikarpur just before the blast.
**
“Before there were no Taliban madrassas here,” he said, referring to Islamic schools. “They are brainwashing young people. … It’s not in our power to do anything. We just follow our spiritual leader.”

Days before Bukhari’s father was killed, another cleric from the nearby town of Qambar survived a bomb attack on his car.

In May, Ibrahim Jatoi, a Shi’ite politician, narrowly escaped death when his convoy was hit by a suicide bomber near Shikarpur - the first sectarian assault of this kind in rural Sindh.

And, just a month after Sharif came to power, insurgents struck at the heart of Sindh’s military apparatus, attacking an intelligence compound in Sukkur. Seven were killed.

“Historically we Sindhis are not conservative or religious. We are secular,” said Shahzaib Chandio, 30, as he scanned shelves at a local library for books about Europe. “Those terrorists are from tribal areas. Security is now very fragile.”

“WE’RE A SOFT TARGET”

Steeped in centuries of subcontinental folklore, poetry and spiritualism, Sufism reflects the mystical side of Islam and involves scenes unthinkable in most other parts of Pakistan.

At Sehwan Sharif, drums conjuring up the spirit of 13th-century saint Lal Shahbaz Qalandar beat hypnotically. Wisps of incense swirl like ancient spirits. Fervent in their joy, men and women dance and sing with an intensity that sends many into a trance.

The Taliban, who believe music should be banned and women kept at home, are furious at such passionate free expression.

**“Women and men dance together, and that is totally against Islam,” said Shahidullah Shahid, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban. “We have a large number of fighters in Sindh. We will target everything which is against Sharia (Islamic law).”
**
Every year a million pilgrims descend on Sehwan, a maze of lanes teeming with people, donkeys and dervishes clad in red robes, for a major festival at its intricately decorated shrine.

**For residents, the extravaganza is the source of excitement and much-needed income. For militants, it’s a target.
**
“People believe the Qalandar (saint) will save them. He will protect us,” said Syed Muhammad Raza Shah, a Sufi student and son of the shrine’s custodian. “We are a very soft target.”

In Qambar, a ramshackle town in the shadow of rocky hills separating Sindh from the lawless province of Baluchistan, Sufis said only a miracle could save them after their spiritual leader Syed Ghulam Hussain Shah narrowly survived an attack this year.

The seminary is packed with turbaned students of all ages, with older, bearded peers poring over religious texts and singing Arabic verses in dimly lit, rose water scented rooms.

The memory of death hangs heavily amid its stone walls. This is where Pakistan’s former prime minister Benazir Bhutto came for spiritual guidance just days before she was killed in 2007.

“The enemies of Islam are killing people. Satanic forces are behind all this,” said Shah as he recalled the day Bhutto sat in front of him, asking questions and crying.

“The way this government and this country are run, I can see no hope in anything. People are not safe even inside their own houses … May God keep us all safe.”

(Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

**"Historically we Sindhis are not conservative or religious. We are secular," said Shahzaib Chandio **

interesting. but this sort of heritage and ideology is looked down up on by the educated guppies. not being conservative or religious, being secular - who would endorse this?

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Sindhis and Baloch, both have been historically secular. Pushtuns and punjabis have been more conservative.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Will they block Bulleh Shah and Sufi songs next?

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

there's no writ of the government. no establishment of islamic rule.. so who's going to do it? can't rely on the monkeys in gov and army.. someone has to..

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

So they are just spreading Islam there?

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Hence intolerant Salafi ideology is incompatible with life in the 21st century. God forbid if one day we were ruled by these nutheads, they would destroy our islamic heritage, destroy all the shrines incl. data darbar.

Sufism and its ethos of tolerance, goodwill, benevolence, peaceful co-existence and discipline have great appeal

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

If it was not for sufis and the culture that we find in Sindh and other parts of subcontinent ... most of Pakistani and Afghani Taliban ... and all those Kharjees claiming to be thekadar of Islam ... would have been idol worshippers today.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Our secularism came from Sufis who had respect for God and its existence. They didn't attack any ones religious sentiments in the name of freedom of expression by calling faith a blind dogma and whatever.

Result: Everyone respected them irrespective of religion they followed

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

These salafis cannot spread Islam, they can only push people away. You cannot simply force your point of view on others.The way things are going I foresee many people adopting atheism in the country.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Allah created all humans, be they Muslims or non-Muslims … difference is that, Muslims love Allah and all creations of Allah … non-Muslims also love their creator but they are misguided and have no recognition of their creator (at least according to Muslims believe) … so as long as Muslims and non-Muslims do effort to recognise Allah and do good to his creations across the board giving them love and respect, then there is chance that Allah will forgive them and give them reward after death … but:

Taliban, Kharjees and those who consider that they are theekadar of Islam … they only love themselves and what they believe … they have no love or care for Allah or what diversity Allah has created … and thus these ‘selfish children of evil’ would burn in hell forever (Insha-Allah).

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Justifying Talbian terrorism?

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

^ that's what I pointed out in another post! GS giving them a space to brain washed innocent readers.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Extremist Salfis are not the thekedaar of Islam. If someone is interested in islam he/she can/should do his/her own research instead of looking at Islam through the glasses of extremist Salfis and TTP. If one is not interested at all he/she has his/her own ways. there is no excuse for adopting atheism.
More importantly, things like atheism and agnosticism comes from being ignorant of religion one follows not because of extremists.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Thanks for your input, appreciated.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

This is the story of a guy who was behind the protests of Danish cartoons, he is now sorry for that and been labelled as a apostate by the extremists. He has seen the extemists closely.

Ahmed Akkari Repents Violent Opposition to Danish Cartoons Lampooning Islam - The Daily Beast

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

I'd rather be an ignorant of the religion than have lust for mass slaughter of innocent people in the name of God.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

We are seeing how ignorant of religion are violent equally as extremists are.
Look at secularists in Syria, Egypt’s then at invaders of Iraq, Afghanistan and many other Islamic countries. These secularists have a proven history of killing people indiscriminately. They kill ruthlessly in the name of collateral damage, they don’t bother.
You get what does ‘bother not on collateral damage’ means? It means hypocrisy! So I would rather choose to be faith follower, believer of Unseen, and not a hypocrite.

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

The many kaafirs that baba fareed etc converted to islam converted because they saw the good deeds and simple lifestyle of these people, so it actually DOES MATTER what people professing to be muslim do in islam’s name. The only other option would be a worldwide conference of muslims that kicks them out of islam. I am pretty sure saudia arabia would welcome that! :rotfl:

Re: Steeped in ancient mysticism, passion of Pakistani Sufis infuriates Taliban

Yes, you will have a case when a secular/agnostic/atheist suicide bomber blows up in middle of a crowded market.