Of our own making
In spite of the gradual infiltration of ubiquitous religious symbolism and mentality in the social spheres of everyday life, Pakistan has managed to remain afloat as a dynamically pluralistic society comprising various ethnicities, religions and Islamic sects.
However, starting in the late 1970s, an anti-pluralistic process was initiated by the Zia-ul-Haq dictatorship that soon spiralled beyond mere posturing and sloganeering.
With the ‘Afghan jihad’ raging against the former Soviet Union, Zia, his intelligence agencies, and parties like Jamat-i-Islami and Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam started embracing a narrow and highly political version of Islam.
This was done to radicalise large sections of the Pakistani Muslims who had historically been part of a more apolitical and tolerant strains of the faith —the kind that over the centuries had evolved within the highly pluralistic milieu of the subcontinent.
Most Pakistanis were historically related to the mazaar and sufi traditions of the subcontinent, and thus, were least suitable to fight a ‘jihad’ that Zia was planning to peddle in Afghanistan. Their beliefs were not compatible at all with Zia or Maududi’s version of Political Islam.
To compensate this ideological ‘deficiency’, the Zia regime sprang up indoctrination centres in the shape of thousands of madrassas. Almost all of them were handed over to radical puritans. These were preachers and ‘scholars’ who had become critical of the strains of faith most Pakistanis adhered to. Accusing these strains of being ‘adulterated’, they fell instead for the assertive charms of the Political Islam of the likes of Abul Ala Maududi, Syyid Qutb and Khurram Murad.
What was worse was the eventual degeneration of this Political Islam which, by the late 1980s, had steadily regressed to become the kind of totalitarian dogma we now associate with monsters like the Taliban and Al-Qaida.
The impact this process had on society was catastrophic. The dividing lines between various Muslim sects and fiqh in Pakistan had for decades remained blurred and apolitical due to a subconscious consensus of tolerance between the sects. But these divides became politicised when they were exploited to put forward a prejudiced line of thought. This thought now propagated ‘real Islam’ to mean violent jihad, xenophobia, isolationism, coercion, and at times sheer barbarism that was proudly explained as acts replicating the mythical ways of ancient Muslim rulers.
Since this new meaning of the faith did not exhibit any tolerance whatsoever for any critique (scholarly or otherwise), the tradition of meaningful debate on matters of faith too got lost. The open debate culture was now labelled as ‘a conspiratorial secular tool to defame Islam’.
Pakistanis eventually gobbled up a myopic and unthinking brand of Islamic logic. So much so, that today the overall intellectual faculties of critique in the society have been overpowered by loud discourses that are incapable of ever venturing outside from the top-of-the-mind clichés about religion that have been fed to us ever since the 1980s.
These clichés and notions were cleverly engineered into our system by years and years of misinformation on the subject. That’s why most Pakistanis today, both young and old, become like social time bombs, always going off the moment anyone dares question these notions. The truth is, these retaliatory sparks are nothing more than what has been uncritically lapped up as Islam and Islamic history.
Political Islamists and their followers have a habit of invoking events and memories from the early Islamic history, but none of their listeners bother to realise that this history that is taught to us in schools and via TV is mostly derived from documents written by men who were writing this history as a way to guard the political and dynastical interests of the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphs that they served.
Also, most of the sources, from which Islamists concoct their myopic versions and traditions of Islamic history and law, were documented from 8th century onwards or almost 150 to 200 years after the arrival of Islam!
In such a distorted scenario, when certain disturbing events start taking place in the name of faith, how can one expect Pakistanis to react accordingly? Most of us just shy away, or distract ourselves by blaming ‘enemies of Islam’.
By continuing to tolerate a psychotic faith-based fringe for so long, we have actually helped it metamorphose into an unrestrained monster that has zero tolerance for what we think or do.
To tackle and face it, we will have to liberate our minds from the concoctions we’ve been fed in the name of Political Islam and history. We need to become critical again, so we can escape the unfounded guilt many of us feel in responding rationally to anyone calling for the implantation of ‘divine laws’ and ‘holy writ’.
We have to stop shrinking away (or worse, appreciate) the many barrages of outmoded clichés and arguments cleverly moulded with fiery (but empty) buzzwords that try to contemporise religious history and thought that in actuality is frozen in the past.
Today, this frozen, but arrogant thought can only create grave social and political dichotomies between not only the Muslims and other religions, but among various Muslim fiqh and sects as well.
It must be remembered and appreciated that Pakistan under Jinnah adopted a healthy and tolerant tradition of belief. The cracks in it are of our own making.
Filed under: DAWN, Images on Sunday, Smoker's Corner | 2 Comments
I totally agree to all of the above. This ‘untouchability’ of the religious teachings throughout our lives, especially starting from a very young age, is baffling for me. These thoughts and cliches have shredded our social and religious fabric and all we do is not talk about the authenticity of our teachings. Be it the tachings of our ‘modernized’ school syllabus or Friday prayers! I love NFP’s work. Just wish there were more liberalized people in our beloved country like him.
Sir,
Some of us are not able to read your Cafe’ Black column on Dawn due to some technical difficulties. Would it be possible for you to post those on this site?
Regards,
Anubha.