You are Free --- Jinnah!

An interesting editorial in today’s Wasington Post!

Radical Muslims Killing Muslims

Radical Muslims Killing Muslims
By Zahir Janmohamed
Wednesday, June 25, 2003; Page A23

When Pakistan was created, its founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, famously declared, “You are free, free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other places of worship in this state of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste or creed – that has nothing to do with the business of the state.” Fifty-six years later, I wonder what Jinnah would tell my family and countless others who lost loved ones because of rising religious intolerance in Pakistan. On April 2, 2000, my uncle, Sibtain Dossa, a doctor, was gunned down at his medical clinic by Islamic radicals seeking to cleanse Pakistan of its minority Shiite Muslims.

Over the past few years, extremist Islamic groups in Pakistan have mounted a unilateral terror campaign. But Americans and Christians have not been the only victims. Women, secular advocates and even Muslims – Ahmadis, dissenting Sunni Muslims and Shiite Muslims – have also come under attack.

Recently two gunmen on motorcycles opened fire on a truck full of policemen, killing 11 and wounding nine in the Pakistani town of Quetta, near the Afghan border. Nearly all the victims belonged to the minority sect of Shia Islam. The attack on Shiites was the third in Quetta in less than two weeks. Speaking of the attack, Rahmat Ullah, a Pakistani senior police official, accurately noted, “It was sectarian terrorism.”

The gruesome cycle of violence against Pakistan’s minority citizens could not have occurred without the complicity of the Pakistani government. Consider the example of Azam Tariq, a religious cleric and former leader of the radical, Saudi Arabia-inspired Sipah-i-Sahaba. In an interview with the BBC in 1995, Tariq openly praised the Taliban and endorsed attacks on Shiites in Pakistan. Instead being brought to justice, Tariq was rewarded. Today he is a member of Pakistan’s National Assembly.

There is a tendency to view the Muslim population as a monolith, with a uniform agenda and little dissent. This outlook on Islam has prompted a slew of articles with titles like “Why Do They Hate Us.”

But in Pakistan, many Islamic radicals hold equal (and sometimes more) animosity toward dissenting Muslims (particularly Shiites) than toward westerners. The Sipah-i-Sahaba have even killed many of their own Sunni clerics, because the clerics rejected their divisive agenda. Often, implementing a skewed understanding of Islamic sharia (religious law) – and not hatred of the West – is their prime motivation.

If the United States wishes to gain credibility in Pakistan, it should pressure Pakistan to protect all of its residents who stand threatened by the rise of Islamic radicalism in Pakistan – not just westerners and Christians.

As Muslims lobby the United States to treat its religious minorities with respect, Muslims themselves have averted their gaze while minority groups – particularly Ahmadi and Shiite Muslims – are butchered by their “fellow” Muslims. Indeed, much of the Muslim world looked away when Saddam Husssein was executing Shiites in Iraq and ignored the Taliban’s mass beheading of Shiites in Afghanistan.

This does not absolve Shiite Muslims of guilt. Many Shiite clerics have irresponsibly inflamed sectarian tension by denouncing beloved Sunni icons or, worse, endorsing retaliation. But a Muslim group that condemns violence when Islamic radicals kill Christians, then remains silent when Islamic radicals kill Shiite Muslims, is not a human rights group but a PR firm.

Pakistan can curtail the rise of sectarian violence and prevent the spread of extremist Islam by doing three things: punish (instead of reward) those who commit unprovoked acts of aggression against innocents of other faiths; block Saudi Arabia from flooding Pakistani schools with textbooks that preach draconian interpretations of Islam; and restore civil society in urban centers so that extremist groups cannot exploit Pakistan’s woes to promote their divisive agendas.

My last memory of my uncle was sitting with him in the sprawling garden next to the tomb of Jinnah in Karachi. I asked if Pakistanis – particularly Pakistani Shiites – still respected Jinnah.

“We do,” he told me. “Because at least Jinnah tried to create an open Islamic country where all could flourish.”

That seems to summarize the history of Pakistan: It has always tried but never achieved Jinnah’s goal.

Zahir Janmohamed is writing a book about the rise of religious violence in South Asia.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

Thank you for posting that article ahmadjee. It doesn't happen often, but I have tears in my eyes after reading this.

** "You are free, free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other places of worship in this state of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste or creed -- that has nothing to do with the business of the state." **

So ignorant and so much power. Line up the MMA and its ilk and put a bullet through each one of them. These protectors of the faith represent a majority of what is wrong with society, yet they cloak themselves the veil of Islam to protect themselves.

Its not the fault of Pakistanis... Many of these incident have been catalyzed and instigated by anti-Pakistani elements, within and outside the country. I do not blame the MMA for this.

Great all the sunni shia stuff is not home grown. Atleast we arent in denial over the issue.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by CM: *
Great all the sunni shia stuff is not home grown. Atleast we arent in denial over the issue.
[/QUOTE]

[quote]

within and outside the country

[/quote]

Having a hard time reading?

Whoops my bad.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by CM: *
Whoops my bad.
[/QUOTE]

np :)

True, wahabis from the Saudi Arabia have big hand in this.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
True, wahabis from the Saudi Arabia have big hand in this.
[/QUOTE]

Well, thats your opinion, but I would also point my finger to the right side.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by CM: *
So ignorant and so much power. Line up the MMA and its ilk and put a bullet through each one of them. These protectors of the faith represent a majority of what is wrong with society, yet they cloak themselves the veil of Islam to protect themselves.
[/QUOTE]

Actually, the MMA represents a quantum leap forward towards resolution of the sectarian conflict in Pakistan - it represents a union of some of the largest politically active Sunni organisations in Pakistan together with the largest politically active Shia organisation.

Which makes the MMA the largest politico-religious organisation in Pakistan, as well as a non-sectarian one.

Medic it also represents people that utilize corruption, illiteracy and stupidty to further their won political and immoral agendas.

maulvis who give khutbas on fridays are, to an extent, responsible for this terror. A man who had opened fire after entering a church admitted that he was told in the khutba that it was the duty of each muslim to kill christians coz of what the US had done in Afghanistan!!

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
Thank you for posting that article ahmadjee. It doesn't happen often, but I have tears in my eyes after reading this.

**
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No need to get overly sentimental. You'll be glad to know there were attempts even at that time to censor the whole you are free part of the speech. It was only when one of the high ranking, close associate of Jinnah threatened to resign that the speech got through to the press uncensored.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by ChthonicPowers: *
No need to get overly sentimental. You'll be glad to know there were attempts even at that time to censor the whole you are free part of the speech. It was only when one of the high ranking, close associate of Jinnah threatened to resign that the speech got through to the press uncensored.
[/QUOTE]
No need to tell how to think. What is your source?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
No need to tell how to think. What is your source?
[/QUOTE]

I did a project last semester on Freedom of Press in Pakistan 1972-2002. So I had the chance to read a few books on the topic, and to meet a few journalists. Anyhoo, the source is in one of the following books:

Press in Chains - Zamir Niazi
Press Under Siege - Zamir Niazi
Web of Censorship - Zamir Niazi
Pakistan State of Media & Press Freedom Report 2001-2002, and 1999-2000.

Can't remember which one it exactly was, but if you do find these books, go through them, and if you find it, you'll have your answer.

okthxbye

Please be more specific next time in your sources.

Imdad: I've heard the same, many of Jinnahs speeches with regard to Freedom of religion were suppressed especially during Zia's time.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
Please be more specific next time in your sources.
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oh please. you dont expect me to go through three books just to prove the truth to an e-person. do you? I may or may not be specific in quoting the source next time, doesnt change the facts and doesnt mean squat if you dont accept it.

:)

Jinnah was a great man indeed.

The more I learn about Jinnah, the more admiration I have for him. I wish he could have lived longer and created a system of government that would match his words. Alas, his followers turned out to be weak and put petty politics over vision and national interests.

The collective MMA, Bhutto and Co., Sharif and Co. and the generals are nowhere near the level of the Quaid. These are small people with small closed minds. Their indifference has resulted in the mess today. The Quaid would not even recognize the Pakistan of today.

In 1947 millions of Pakistanis opened their homes and hearts to migrating Muslims from all over the sub-continent. Today it seems evey fabric of our society hates the other. Sunni, Shia, Mohajir, Sindhi, Punjabi, Pathan, Baluch, etc. You name it, there is animosity between every group.

Not the same Pakistan. Definately not. :(