Friday, March 15, 2013

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan - COMMENT : Democracy and Indian Muslims — Tufail Ahmad

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan - COMMENT : Democracy and Indian Muslims — Tufail Ahmad:

Daily Star, Lahore, Pakistan
Saturday, March 16, 2013

Democracy and Indian Muslims 
By Tufail Ahmad

Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, the self-confessed leader of the banned outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, may think that Pakistan is the best Islamic nation for the Bollywood star, Shahrukh Khan to move to, but it is India that is arguably the best Muslim country today. Muslims in India enjoy complete political and religious liberty, a free legislative environment to undertake economic and educational initiatives, a vibrant television media and cinema that teach liberal coexistence, and access to a vast number of universities and institutes of modern education. There is absolutely no Muslim country that offers such a vast array of freedoms to its people.

India is able to offer these freedoms to its citizens because it is a successful democracy. It was good for India to lose the 1857 war; if the British had lost, Indians would have continued to be governed by kings and nawabs, and under shari’a courts that existed during the Mughal era. At the time of independence, the British left behind a justice system that was blind to religious and caste inequities in Indian society, an inclusive democracy that guaranteed equal rights and religious and political freedoms for all; English language that opened doorway to enlightenment and scientific education; and a civil service that treated everyone as Indians rather than Muslims, Hindus or Christians. Muslims in India enjoy these freedoms because India is a thriving democracy, unlike Pakistan that chose a discriminatory constitution, barring its own citizens from holding top positions such as the president of Pakistan because they are Hindus or Christians. Over the past half century, hundreds of millions of Dalits and women have found political empowerment and social freedoms in Indian democracy.

Religion cannot be a good model of governance for modern times because it fails to imagine situations in which non-Muslim citizens could be trusted to govern a Muslim country. Conversely, democracies trust their citizens irrespective of their faith. In a democracy like India, any citizen could compete to be the elected ruler. As democracy matures, India has appointed its Muslim citizens to top positions, currently Hamid Ansari as vice president, Salman Khurshid as foreign minister, Justice Altamas Kabir as Chief Justice, and Syed Asif Ibrahim as the chief of the Intelligence Bureau. It is also true that Muslims lag behind in India’s collective life, but this is because they are under the influence of orthodox ulema or because Muslim politicians fail to imagine themselves as leaders of all Indians. A Muslim politician will be the country's prime minister the day Indian Muslims begin to view themselves as leaders of all Indians and not only of Muslims, much like Barack Obama who imagined himself as a leader not only of blacks, but of all Americans.

Effectively, India is a ‘western’ country. In the popular imagination, the west is viewed as a geographic concept, covering mainly the United States, Britain and parts of Europe. However, the ground realities are otherwise. Several countries, notably Australia, New Zealand, Japan and South Korea, are situated in the east, but in terms of their values and politics are firmly part of the west. Conversely, countries such as Russia and some in Latin America are geographically in the west but cannot be called a western country as their citizens do not enjoy the social and political freedoms available to free people in the west. The organising principles of Indian polity and society are the same that define a western country: a multi-party system, individualism, liberty, a free press and rule of law. As in a western country, consensus about governance, politics and society is moderated by media and political parties and is derived from differences rather than similarities of religion and ideology as in Saudi Arabia or North Korea.

Early this year, Shahrukh Khan wrote a long article in which he discussed how “stereotyping and contextualizing” determine the way societies treat us as individuals as we interact with others. Khan narrated that he is loved as a Bollywood star in every country, but is also questioned by officials at US airports over links to terrorists, as his surname is shared by an unknown terrorist. Khan also observed: “There have been occasions when I have been accused of bearing allegiance to our neighbouring nation [Pakistan].” Hafiz Saeed reacted to this statement, suggesting that Khan, and presumably all Indian Muslims, should move to Pakistan. If Khan were to move to Pakistan, think of the images he would witness everyday: the genocide of Shia Muslims; the Taliban bombers shooting girls and namazis; Karachi up in flames and Pakistani businessmen leaving the country; plight of Hindus and Christians and lawlessness everywhere.

Saeed and his cohorts must bear in mind that terrorism that affects Muslims in India originates from Pakistan: the jihad in Kashmir through the 1990s or the attacks by Indian Mujahideen collaborating with their controllers in Pakistan. Like any country, India has its own share of extremist Hindus as well as Islamic and naxalite militants, but the courts are taking care of them.

Indian democracy is a model for all Islamic countries. It is the only country where Muslims have experienced democracy solidly for more than half a century; the other countries where Muslims have had some democratic experience are Indonesia and Turkey but their experiences have been limited to just a few decades. Democracies trust their citizens and are accountable to them. Democracies also bring freedom and economic prosperity for their people. In his book, Development as Freedom, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen demonstrated that famines have occurred only in countries governed under authoritarianism while freedom available to people in democracies has ensured economic welfare of their entire populations. Indian democracy has a large Muslim population, about the same as in Pakistan. As democracy matures and economy prospers, Muslims in India are beginning to benefit from a sea of economic and educational opportunities opening before them.

Islamic and authoritarian countries like Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and North Korea do not trust their own people. Islamic terrorists, jihadists like Hafiz Saeed and other Taliban-like Islamists think of defending their religions and ideologies rather than the interests and welfare of their people. It is due to such thinking that 180 million people of Pakistan are today literally buried under the weight of a failed education system, a rapidly collapsing Pakistani economy that is forcing business leaders to move their money to countries such Sri Lanka, lawlessness that makes common Pakistanis insecure in their own homes and a future that fails to offer hope. The Inter-Services Intelligence, a friend of Saeed that imagines itself as the ideological guardian of the Islamic state of Pakistan, could do a favour by trusting the Pakistani people and letting them decide their own course of life and governance.

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Pakistan’s cultural crisis

Pakistan’s cultural crisis:

Pakistan’s cultural crisis

We adopted a legacy where dogmas, beliefs and predetermined thought patterns replaced free thinking and scientific approach towards life. Aesthetically stale and intellectually bankrupt we are a society which aspires to dominate the world by adopting an abstract religious philosophy which nobody has so far been able to even define
From a diverse and tolerant culture of fertile lands which characterized dance and music on festive occasions like holi and basant we transitioned to a culture of vast deserts where blood flows to commemorate celebration. While performingsadqa or on the occasion of eid-ul-azha the victim is always a fellow creature. While associating with values of a different culture, romance and beauty of life was to be replaced by a stiff and sober attitude governed by pride superiority and self righteousness laced with intolerance with an exclusivist outlook towards the out-group. Pleasure and fun in this life was to be sacrificed for a luxurious life in the hereafter as the “real” life was supposed to begin after death. The society gradually became repressive and presently a large part thereof considers “pleasure seeking” a sin. During the New Year night when the entire world is having fun, the large majority in our society rejects the onset of the New Year. Our new year, as they say, begins with the first of Muharram with wailing and crying, an activity which then continues for the rest of the year. Basant used to be a festive occasion, which today is no more permissible under various pretexts. Pleasure- seeking is being restricted to mehfil-e-naat, participation in eid-e-milad or attending the tableeghi ijtamah. A few days back the goons of Jamaat-e-Islami threatened to attack a humorous poetry recitation session to be held on world population day i.e. July 11th. It was cancelled as the Punjab government backed out.
Presently another source of pleasure is discussing the destruction of the former Soviet Union, the US, India and Israel, while dreaming about the renaissance of Islam when Muslims would rule the world. Looking at models of missiles and mountains of Chaghi also gratifies our sensibilities. Some even advocate the use of nuclear weapons to annihilate the enemy while more than half the world is our enemy. We can also give them the choice of either embracing Islam, or observe complete submission and pay jazia or be prepared to die.
We also adopted a legacy where dogmas, beliefs and predetermined thought patterns replaced free thinking and scientific approach towards life. We often refer to Muslim scientists in history and their contributions but seldom mention as to what treatment was meted out to them by the state and society. Jabir Bin Hayan the chemist was placed under house arrest where he expired later. All books of al-Kindi the great philosopher were confiscated. Ibn-e-Haitham the great physicist had to pretend that he was a madman so that he could save his skin, while he was put under house arrest. Averros was banished and Avicenna kept moving from city to city to avoid persecution. A society progresses only when there is freedom to ask questions without any fear or restraint. Cultures where restrictions are imposed and you cannot say what you want to, the society stagnates. Today a large majority cannot even critically examine the blasphemy law which is man made. Perhaps it has also become difficult to call Mumtaz Qadri a murderer for he is hero to many. A large part of our intellectual discourse revolves around the question: Islam allows and Islam does not allow, Islam does not allow and Islam allows, so on and so forth. Ad hoc circular reasoning is applied to seek predetermined answers and to many this constitutes creation of knowledge. At the same time a large segment of the society considers worldly knowledge subservient to heavenly knowledge contained in one book which covers every conceivable aspect of life, except how to make polio vaccine.
Aesthetically stale and intellectually bankrupt we are a society which aspires to dominate the world by adopting an abstract religious philosophy which nobody has so far been able to even define. While part of a closed society which is averse to any new ideas we have steadily transitioned from a vibrant sub-continental culture to Kalashnikov culture to drug culture to thana culture and now jehadi culture. Manifestations of jehadi culture are visible in our streets where one frequently comes across posters signifying panjtan pak and char yaar, donations for Jamaat-ud-Dawa and jehad against the infidels.
On 16th of July 2011, the Sikh community in Lahore was barred from organizing a religious ceremony at a gurdwara after a religious group persuaded authorities that celebrating the Muslim holy day of “Shab-e-Barat” was more important than the Sikh festival. The musical equipment of the Sikhs was thrown out and their entry to the gurdwara barred due to the efforts of the Dawat-e-Islami, a Barelvi proselytizing group.
While heritage sites are fast disappearing in the land of the pure without leaving a trace, numerous monuments are in a state of total disrepair. The tangible and intangible aspects of our folk heritage are in complete disarray. Performing arts, which were once an integral part of our culture, are now controversial. The society today is deeply divided where liberals are significantly outnumbered by the forces of conservatism which apparently are poised to take over the entire civil society. What kind of culture and life is envisaged by these proponents of Islamic renaissance can be gauged by one of their leader’s lifestyle who expired recently in a fortified house in the garrison town of Abbotabad.
Osama Bin Laden was living with his four wives in a 6.7 kanal compound with 13 children who perhaps never went to school, more than 100 chickens, 2 cows, some rabbits and may be some other domesticated animals. It appeared that since he never left the premises during his five-year stay and with probably no other productive activity, he was deeply involved in his libidinous activities, while rabbit meat would act as a strong aphrodisiac.
We have also seen some footage of the interior of the compound. It was filthy and rotten to the core. It was also learned that the family would burn the trash at an open place rather than dispose it off in a proper way, causing hazardous pollution in and around the surrounding areas.
There were no telephones, internet etc to link up with the rest of the world. However AK-47's and ammunition was found in sufficient quantity. The house was isolated from the rest of the locality and had a grotesque architecture so that nobody from outside could have a glimpse of who lived inside.
A weird house with a man who constantly thought of violence, death and destruction, with four illiterate yet young wives to have sex with, plus 13 children, littered with animal waste, and polluted with burnt out trash, without any modern gadgetry but guns, perhaps no books on modern knowledge barring some on  "methods of making explosives with household items" isolated from the rest of the world, gives us a picture of  the culture Osama and thereafter his followers have envisioned to enforce in the entire world.
Waseem Altaf is a human rights activist.                                                                                                       

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