http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\06\05\story_5-6-2010_pg3_3

 Saturday, June 05, 2010 

VIEW: Stop making excuses for the clergy -Aisha Sarwari



Shackled by obscurantism dogging the masses with religious war and decrees, 
Pakistan is taking a sad turn away from its manifest destiny



Historically, the latter-day self-styled champions of Islamic ideology in our 
country were almost entirely opposed to the creation of Pakistan. Yet so 
entrenched is the state indoctrination of the Pakistani mind that it is unable 
to break free from the idea that Pakistan was created for faith. Shahid Ilyas - 
who hails from Waziristan - makes a similar mistake in his piece 'Stop blaming 
the West' (Daily Times, June 2, 2010). Indeed it is erroneously titled. It 
should have been titled, 'Stop blaming the Islamic parties and Afghan jihad'. 
That is what the writer is asking us to do. I, for one, did not understand how 
the title of the article corresponded with its contents.

His claim is that Pakistan took the trajectory it did because it was founded in 
the name of Islam. The truth is that Muhammad Ali Jinnah was neither the 
proponent of an exclusivist ideology nor a promoter of any religious cause. His 
creation, Pakistan, emerged from an epic struggle; a democratic, plural and 
fair fight for the Muslims of the Indian subcontinent, after a union had been 
marked out as an option by the majority party. 

Jinnah was a proponent of the separation of religion and state, and had a deep 
sense of fair play for all citizens. Look at his cabinet when his party formed 
the first government of Pakistan: a Hindu for the post of law minister and an 
Ahmedi, Sir Zafrullah Khan, at the post of foreign minister.

The essence of the League's struggle was economic and political. The Muslim 
League comprised the petit bourgeoisie from Punjab to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh 
and Balochistan, Muslim minority areas in undivided India, and Bengal. In the 
Muslim League's camp were Ismailis, Ahmedis, Shias, Sunnis and other heterodox 
elements of Muslimdom. The Indian Congress Party, on the other hand, 
consciously promoted an orthodoxy amongst its Muslim members by and large. The 
maulanas of Deoband and other doctors of religion were firmly in their camp. It 
goes without saying that every Islamising impulse in Pakistan has come from 
groups opposed to the creation of Pakistan. This is a fact of history 
deliberately being swept under the rug.

This divide was a fact greater than the gentlemanly conduct of a seasoned 
lawyer and politician who was secular to the core. And this divide had less to 
do with the irreconcilable differences in religion than it had to do with a 
system of egalitarian division of resources in the region and the deep 
historical sense of disenfranchisement in both communities. 

Jinnah never stated that Pakistan was to be a theocracy; in fact he laid it out 
in plain words: "Pakistan is not to be a theocracy to be ruled by priests with 
a divine mission." Jinnah was a man who parroted no one in the religious frenzy 
worked up by Gandhi during the Khilafat Movement. Jinnah opposed the Khilafat 
Movement for fear that such politicisation of Islam would lead to a mob 
hysteria that would not be contained in the call for independence, shadowing it 
with violence. Jinnah, after the creation of Pakistan, left no doubt as to the 
ethos of the state in his address to the Constituent Assembly in 1947 - "You 
are free, you are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your 
mosques or any other places of worship in this state of Pakistan, you may 
belong to any caste or creed, that has nothing to do with the business of the 
state." 

Jinnah abhorred prejudice, intolerance or presumptuousness in the company he 
kept - a friend of Sarojini Naidu, a disciple of Tilak, an admirer of Gokhale, 
a follower of Ambedkar and a husband to a feisty independent Parsi girl, Ruttie 
Jinnah. He dined with the British, refused a bribe-coated bone from Gandhi to 
run the prime ministership of United India and struggled with himself as he 
returned to England in self-exile in the 1930s in disgust with Indian politics. 
No matter what page you find yourself reading from his life, Jinnah comes out 
"incorruptible", as defined by his political rival Nehru.

The turning point, as historians call it, was when Jinnah hit a wall with the 
Congress Party leadership, which he broke away from and joined the Muslim 
League. The conflict was simple: give the minority community safeguards from a 
tyrannical majority, address their political and economic insecurities and let 
us work together for a greater India. This demand was rejected by the 
ever-centralising Congress Party, now aptly drawn out in Jaswant Singh's new 
book. Providing a group their rightful safeguards was a just demand, and its 
rejection clarified to Jinnah the conceited unwillingness on the part of the 
Hindu leadership riding the high wave of Gandhi's Hindu revivalism. No 
principled politician could be expected to stand by and watch. Jinnah's astute 
legal brilliance made him take the demand to its logical course, for not a 
vindication but a fair playing field for a people who were different in that 
terrain. Jinnah stood for the rights of a minority community. 

Had the leadership of Pakistan that followed Jinnah respected his wishes, 
Pakistan would now be far ahead in world politics and economics. Shackled by 
obscurantism dogging the masses with religious war and decrees, Pakistan is 
taking a sad turn away from its manifest destiny. Driving down Jinnah will only 
strengthen obscurantism and nothing else.

My suggestion to Shahid Ilyas is to stop making excuses for the clergy by 
trying to create a link between sectarian terror and the principles on which 
Pakistan was founded. Pakistan was founded on the principle of justice, fair 
play and equality for all citizens of Pakistan and this is what we need to get 
back to. 

Aisha Sarwari is a writer based in Lahore. She can be reached at 
[email protected]


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