http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\10\26\story_26-10-2012_pg3_6

Friday, October 26, 2012

VIEW : Taliban and their problem with Malala/women — Syed Kamran Hashmi

 To an extent, our repeated and consistent capitulation to the Taliban’s 
intolerance has actually become our real tragedy that is not limited to the 
assault on a young girl

After a brief moment of 
solidarity and a genuine outrage on Malala’s shooting incident, Pakistanis have 
once again succumbed to conspiracy theories, disinclined to take the bull by 
its horns. We have leaned towards appeasement instead of confronting the 
Taliban for their atrocities. Just after two weeks of the attack, as we have 
witnessed, we became a nation desperate to avoid a conflict with the 
perpetrators, deeply fragmented and despairingly confused, failing miserably to 
yield a coherent response against their shameful act. To an extent, our 
repeated and consistent capitulation to the Taliban’s intolerance has actually 
become our real tragedy that is not limited to the assault on a young girl. And 
our cowardice to confront them has only made us more vulnerable to be attacked 
again and again, as if we were one herd of sheep, assembled in front of the 
slaughter house, shivering under our skins, waiting quietly to be butchered by 
the Taliban, one by one.

Logically speaking, the first attempt of this confusion was made when a 
deliberate Red Herring of drone attacks was inserted in the debate out of 
nowhere. A parallel with the victims of the North Waziristan was then 
deliberately drawn by the right leaning leadership of the country to obfuscate 
the real issue. Multiple pictures of the dead bodies of women with their 
children who had allegedly lost their lives in the missile attacks were put up 
in the social media; and through them common people were criticised for not 
being sympathetic enough towards the suffering of the tribal people. Although, 
we clearly understand that these techniques are logically fallacious at 
multiple levels from appeal to pity (argumentum ad misericordiam) to accuse 
everyone of supporting the American Agenda (reductio ad Hitlerum). 
Nevertheless, it is still not my intention to bring the dry and boring rules of 
philosophy regarding the informal logical fallacies into this discussion when 
the real question is much deeper and fundamental than the current attack on 
Malala Yousafzai. The question is purely ideological; it is about women’s 
empowerment and their defined role in society. It is also about how to handle 
the courageous, independent and assertive females who do not necessarily agree 
with the Taliban-like interpretation of Islam. The answer can be understood 
easily if we agree on one basic fact that the Taliban mindset has a problem 
with women living independently, fiercely guarding their rights as equal 
partners to contribute in the welfare of society at large.

As a matter of fact I believe that this problem originates outside of Pakistan 
and in reality, resides in Saudi Arabia. That country provides the spiritual 
inspiration for many Taliban-like groups to cage their women in their homes, 
not allowing them to drive, travel or work (at most places) freely; and to even 
proscribe them to vote or participate in the democratic process. In addition, 
women’s right to get comparable level of professional and technical education 
as men is only accepted by the ‘moderates’ among them, but their hardcore 
colleagues only want to provide basic religious curriculum to their female 
counterparts. To a certain level, this is the living truth in the Kingdom of 
Saudi Arabia, and the ‘old great’ Taliban of Afghanistan had practised the same 
code of ethics when they were in power. If we remember their ‘golden’ era 
before 9/11, they were (in) famous for their (mal) treatment of women 
throughout the world. Even in Swat, Maulana Sufi Muhammad had announced 
unequivocally that women had no business to go out and that they had to stay 
home all their lives subordinating their will to please their men.

In Lahore, a crude yet similar mindset is displayed by Islami Jamiat Talaba 
(IJT) --- the student wing of Jamaat-e-Islami (although denied) and the younger 
sibling of Taliban — in the Punjab university. There the boys and the girls are 
beaten up or threatened respectively by the members of IJT if they are just 
found talking to each other in the university campus.

Our society, on the other hand, is predominantly moderate: it is not western 
and is definitely not Saudi Arabian at all; we have always enjoyed a middle of 
the road approach. We were happy to be led by Fatima Jinnah — the mother of the 
nation — 50 years ago in an election rigged by a general. We elected Benazir 
Bhutto as our first female prime minister after her father was murdered. We are 
content with the current woman speaker of the National Assembly and we take 
pride in our female foreign minister. In short, there is a traditional 
realisation of the importance of their education and respect for their 
interaction with the opposite gender. We also encourage them to boost their 
confidence in order to take on the challenges of the real world through our 
mixed education programmes at the professional and the university levels.

In this situation, while most Pakistanis thought of Gul Makai as a 
lion-hearted, confident and innocent child with a zeal for education, the 
Taliban mindset considered her as a threat to their ideology and their whole 
definition of a subservient female. Intimidated by her intelligence, they could 
not have let their faith be over-run by an amateur young girl; she was too 
dangerous, and she had to be taken out.

The writer is a US-based freelance columnist and can be reached at 
[email protected]


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