Of Sialkot and Civility: The Violence We Condone Breeds The Violence We Condemn

Posted on August 23, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Society
109 Comments
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Adil Najam

Stop the violence in Pakistan pleaseFor nearly a week now Pakistan has watched, in stunned horror,  yet another episode of vigilante justice. This one unfolding on our television screens in all its gory detail. The savage murder of two young brothers – Mughees and Muneeb – in Sialkot as people, including police, look on has rightly incensed our sensibilities.

The news itself is clearly horrific, horrible, and horrifying. But the newness in the news is that this time people, including the media and official authorities, are moved enough to unleash an outcry. That is new. And that is news.

What happened in Sialkot was ghastly in its detail, inhuman in its execution, and numbing in the reaction of those who stood by to just view (and film) it. But even if the magnitude was off all scale, the action itself – that is, vigilante justice – was not new: More than what happened in Sialkot, what is new is the larger national reaction to what happened at Sialkot.

The media has begun asking some important questions (even though parts of the media still seems mostly interested in the voyeuristic elements of violence in action). Government officials, starting with the Sialkot Administrator but later also the police chief and the provincial and national authorities, including the Supreme Court, have moved not just to condemn but to take action. More action and better implementation is required, but public outcry has clearly worked in this case to move the authorities into action.

All of this is exactly how functioning polities should deal with incidents of extremism and vigilantelism. But mostly importantly, all of this is news precisely because this is not how things like this have often been dealt with in the past. The opportunity in this truly horrible event is to turn this into a moment of true introspection about ourselves and the attitudes about violence of the many in society, rather than another voyeuristic titillation about the brutality of the few.

Supreme court or not, the jury is still out on whether we will be able to do so or not.

By now everyone knows the details and many have seen the gut-wrenching video of the savagery unfolding in front of their eyes. The video ghastly indeed; not just because of what is being done to the two young brothers but also what is not being done by all the people watching it. Like tamashbeen they watch the orgy of violence in front of them seemingly not moved; indeed sometimes they seem to be cheering on; flashes, cameras, mobile phones keep flashing on the screen as if these were spectators at a sporting event; and these are ordinary people: including the police, traders going about their regular business, ordinary citizens, and even children. The video sends a cold shiver up ones spine. As it should.

We will  not put ourselves or you through the goriness of this spectacle again. But let us, instead, remember anotehr very similar brutality when we – and by ‘we’, I do not mean the government or authorities, I mean ‘we’: as in me and you – were not similarly incensed, even though we should have been. Indeed, when too many of ‘us’ seemed to be cheering on those taking the law into their own hands:

  • Please revisit the May 2008 post at ATP titled “Vigilante Justice: Horrible, Horrifying, Horrendous.”
  • The post is from Karachi: two guys commit a robbery, people from the neighborhood runs after them, catches them, and then sets them on fire (alert: the post has some horrible pictures of the robbers on fire; reader discretion advised).
  • More importantly than the post, please read the comments. See how many readers even of this blog actually think what happened there was ‘OK’ and maybe even a good thing.

The point here is an unpopular one to make. But is an important one. You cannot create a society where you encourage and accept some forms of violence, and then act all surprised and outraged when that same violence gets out of hand. The Violence we condone will breed the violence we condemn.

Let me be clear. I have no sympathy for over-dramatic analyses which suggest that the murderers of Sialkot represent the entirety of Pakistan’s 175 million people. They do not. They are the exception and they are the extreme. Exceptions and extremes exist in every society.

But the people who are watching on as the murders happen cannot be exceptions and extremes. They are, indeed, the faces of everyday Pakistan. And that, I think, is what is sending the cold shiver down our spine. The validation of violence that we see in their faces, is a validation of violence we have seen too many times ourselves. No society must ever be judged by the extreme and the fanatic amongst it. But every society should be held responsible for how it deals with and reacts to those extreme and fanatic acts. It is entirely right, therefore, to be asking some very tough questions of ourselves and our own relationship to the violence around us.

It is indeed solace that there is outrage and widespread outrage. Maybe because it was on video the reaction was wall-to-wall and swift. Maybe, and one hopes this is true, people have also begun to speak up more against obvious injustices – as we saw, for example, in the recent Prem Chand case. But it is also true, and maybe even more true, that the voyeuristic element still dominates the discourse. Most true of all is the fact that those who were at the scene seemed not much outraged at all. The outrage of the rest of us, rightly placed as it may be, comes way too late to be of much use to Mughees and Muneeb.

On this blog we have had to write too often about how society is slipping into an increasing acceptance, even justification, of violence. Syed Abbas Raza recently wrote about the shrinking civility in society and we actually declared 2007 as a year of ‘angst and anger.’ Indeed, we struggle with the tantrums of anger in our comment pages every day. Too many people seem too angry, at too many things, too much of the time. Angry enough to attack each other’s integrity. It is not enough to say that we disagree with someone, it seems necessary to inflict pain on those we disagree with – if not physical violence, then the emotional violence of words purposefully constructed to hurt. That, of course, is a small matter. But at the base of this small matter is a big big problem. The problem of anger in society. And anger when mixed with a validation of violence and a disregard, disrespect and distrust of all institutions of state, becomes a really deadly cocktail.

Maybe as we angrily express outrage over what happened in Sialkot – as we rightly should – we should also take a moment to think about how we – and, again, by ‘we’, I do not mean the government or authorities, I mean ‘we’: as in me and you – have become such a violence prone society: violence in the name of religious difference, violence in the name of politics, violence in the name of ideology, and violence even in the name of justice!

109 responses to “Of Sialkot and Civility: The Violence We Condone Breeds The Violence We Condemn”

  1. teena says:

    very well said Mishal

    I have read comments where ppl are saying, it was so wrong cause the brothers were not guilty, were hafiz-quran, and were fasting.
    My question is
    so what if they were guilty?
    so what if they were not fasting?
    so what if they were of any other religion?

    this incident is not wrong because they met our standards of good muslim kids. this incident is wrong because they were two human beings

    Mishal you are right, I have seen sane people in religious fervor condoning stoning, and proudly espousing and enacting values that justifies mistreating women cause they “deserve” it, killing qadyanees, justifying killing for blasphemy, and the list goes on

    if you watch this american program “what would you do” on you tube, you will see how there are always people in USA who will stand up for right and stop the oppression on the streets.

    i am sure in our version of what would you do, we will have heartless crowds cheering the oppressors. The problem is the voice of sensibility is no where to be heard. we are a nation breeding our values in a complex and gruesome mixture of fundamentalist islam + vadeera system + mushreqi “ghariat aka baigharat

    in short our values are a vibrant mix of cruel, bad, and ugly

    insaaniyat ka dur dur tuk naam o nishaan naheen. ager kuch hai tu bus jhotee iqdaar, jhotee rawayaat, and now thanks to saudi arabia and egypt the draconic version of islam

    some ppl died in bomb blasts, some in drone attacks, some in floods, and some in vigilnatee violence. The rest is either a crazy mob or silent cheerers.

    In west at least there is compassion for their own people. We have no compassion for even our own selves. But yet we have to blame the rest of the world for our issues.

    It is high time that we smell the stink of spetic tank that we are living in and start rethinking our values.

    if we want justice and fairness we will have to offer it everyone irrespective of race, color, social status, and religion.

  2. farawaypaki says:

    It is a very sad incident.
    It happened on 15th and now it is in media after 3 days, so if there was no video nobody would have known.
    What would have gone over the hearts of there parents.
    The title of article is wrong, it should say the “barbaric pakistanis at there best”
    We all know what will happen to arrested people they will somehow released on certain fractured evidences and nobody will care after few days when politicians find a new incident for photo ops.
    I wonder where are those champions of Islam mullah who only thinks that islam is labeling kafir and killing people.

  3. Mus says:

    What a shame someone has actually tried to blame Jamaat-e-Islami for this barbaric act.How can you steep so low?

    What about women burnt to death with acid,fire?What party did they belong to?
    A linguistic party based in Karachi has committed numerous such acts,in the days when there was a single TV channel,hence no one knows.

  4. Yahya says:

    I can only assume that people commenting here have not actually read the post they are commenting on. As Adil said, they are themselves indulging in the same behavior of violence through words and spreading anger and hate that they are supposedly condemning.

  5. Obaid1 says:

    Could this event be a divine message to Jamaat Islami? ‘As you sow so shall you reap’? After all it’s the Jamaatis who started and are experts in this sort of lynching. Chickens coming home to roost?

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