Adil Najam
I must confess that after our recent posts on the vigilantism by folks at Jamia Hafsa and the Lal Masjid I had hoped not to write about this issue yet again so soon.
This is not because I shun controversy or duck issues. It is merely because discussions on this issue tend to be prone to slogan-mongering from those holding extreme positions on all sides, they tend to drown out the more serious and more thoughtful deliberations that are so needed, and they quickly turn into mud-slinging matches which take up too much of our time in cleaning up the mess made by those who routinely ignore or are incapable of understanding and following our comment policy. Having said all that, let me also say that it is intellectually dishonest to simply ignore events and trends that are tearing apart the fabric of society.
With that rather long preamble, what has really prompted this post are two things I saw in today’s Dawn. The first is a set of two ads on behalf of ‘The Citizens of Karachi’ (clicking on the images will take you to larger and more readable versions). The first starts off with:
“Are You Ready? Do you want danda bardar and klashnikov shariat?
IF NOT THEN… come to attend the rally in lage number and show your solidarity against the danda bardar and klashnikov shariat.”
I found these ads to be yet more evidence of a polarized society. More than that, I wonder who put these ads? Any clues, readers? I also wonder how many – and who – will show up on the 15th at this rally (starting 2:00PM near the Mausoleum of Quaid-i-Azam)?
The second item appears on the back page of Dawn (and most other papers) and is much more disturbing. Here is the story in full:
Militants Beat up Dancers
LAKKI MARWAT, April 12: Clashes between militants and villagers in the Dhoda-Shah Hasankhel area on Thursday morning left two people injured. About a dozen people were taken hostage by the militants.
Sources said a group of Taliban militants had beaten up some transvestite dancers, shaved their heads and broken their musical instruments near Abdulkhel as they were going to the Dhoda village to perform at a wedding on Wednesday night.
Villagers decided to take revenge by raising a Lashkar against the Taliban, the sources said. Light and heavy weapons were used and the Taliban also fired rockets during the clash which lasted for several hours. The Taliban took 12 villagers hostage. Five of them were later freed while the others were in the custody of the Taliban till late evening, according to the administrator of a seminary, Hafiz Amanullah Khan.
A heavy contingent of police and Frontier Constabulary personnel reached the area. A ceasefire was brokered by some local ulema who held talks with village elders and the Taliban. The sources said the situation was tense and additional contingents of the FC had been summoned.
What is common between both stories is that the battle lines in a divided society are being drawn. The only possible good that could come out of this is for the mainstream of the country to recognize the difference between being ‘religious’ and ‘religious extremism.’ Maybe it will take such actions to remind people that we can be religious without being religious extremists; that faith should help flourish a culture of caring, not of violence.
[quote comment=”44215″]Sorry I missed the link
http://kashifhafeez.com/mazameen.php%5B/quote%5D
Abduallah, with all due respect can you even think for yourself instead of giving references to other sites all the time? I have answered your last link and also posed other questions and you haven to been able to answer any. While someone else may say you have run away I would very politely (purely out of respect for ATP) say you have avoided the questions. Once again..Which one is a bigger sin; a) naach gaan or b) mullah induced murder of the innocent such as those via suicide bombings? What about fasaad which is even bigger sin than murder? Do you ever condemn Mullahs for their wrong doings and much bigger crimes than naach gaana? If not what does that make you? Certainly not an honest person.
[quote] “if we had to promote Dance culture in Pakistan then does it not sound stupid that Jinnah and his other chaps made too many efforts to get a separate land? I think we had more rich dance culture in India than Pakistan.[/quote]
Adnan Siddiqui,
It is silly argument, but let me turn around the same argument on its head and ask you this question: If our objective was just to be able to pray, fast and grow beards freely, couldn’t we do that in India? Why did we have to have a separate country?
bay-chara Quaid i Azam, bewaqoofoun ki behas mein phir phas gaya. pashtata ho ga, mulk bana kar!
The battle is really on.
Saw this in Daily Times today:
“Students of a Madrassa near Kasur detained three Geo television employees on Friday when they were spotted filming the madrassa following complaints of two missing students. The detainees were later released at the intervention of police, Geo television reported. The channel reported that Shaharyar and cameraman Irfan were filming the Jamia Rahimia in Jhamabar for a story involving two missing girl students from the madrassa. Male students, seeing the reporter, came outside and snatched the camera from Rasheed. They forced the two and their driver into the madrassa and tortured them. The channel contacted police who obtained their release and directed the channel to obtain police protection before filming madrassas”
Maulana Pakistani, Don’t use the title for ur own perception, its just the insulting. self centered supremecy approach. Read,
“ÛŒÛ