Will they ever feel ashamed of their hypocrisy?
Sheeba Aslam Fehmi
If you ask any common criminal—be he a murderer or just an ordinary liar—how he 
should be dealt with, one can expect him to express some remorse, but in the 
case of a half-baked mullah you can surely expect him to say, ‘We are blessings 
sent by Allah for the sake of humankind, and so we ought to be treated in the 
same way as divine avatars are treated.’
 
In other words, you can expect the mullahs to say, ‘We will openly and without 
any restraint mock others’ beliefs and faith. Using all sorts of arguments, we 
will claim our own beliefs to be “scientific” and that of others false. We will 
prove our religious book to be divine and that of others wrong. We will 
announce that our prophet is the last and most beloved of God, and that the 
religious figures of others are inferior to him. We will term our violence as 
“jihad” but will term the violence of others as terrorism or brutality. We will 
camouflage our hypocrisy as ‘taqiyya’ or pious dissimulation. All these things 
we will do, and, in this way, we will assert ourselves over others, but we will 
never allow others to do the same thing with us. If they dare try to do so, we 
will loudly declaiming against it, and will opportunistically invoke human 
rights, democratic values, Constitutional rights, justice, equality, freedom, 
and, above all,
secularism—values that we do not believe in when we are in the majority—in our 
defence.’
 
The mullahs will rail and rant in the media against France for its ban on 
burqas, branding this as an attack on ‘democracy’ and ‘freedom of choice’. But 
they have absolutely no shame, for in the same breath as they insist that 
forcibly banning the burqa is wrong and a violation of freedom of choice, they 
resolutely praise countries like Saudi Arabia and Iran for forcing women to 
veil. They do not regard this as a violation of freedom of choice. Rather, they 
idealize it. Strange is their logic, and wholly inconsistent, too.
 
The mullahs will insist that their prophet is the last of the prophets, but 
when Jews and Christians declare their own prophets to be the last prophet, the 
mullahs will declare them guilty of blasphemy, and will even announce hefty 
financial rewards for their murderers. They will treat non-Muslim minorities in 
the way that the hapless Pakistani Christian woman Asiya Bibi, hounded for 
alleged blasphemy, is being treated, and yet, in the same breath, will claim 
that they stand for justice and equality. They will call upon their followers 
to destroy the places of worship of other communities, declaring this to be an 
act of ‘great bravery’ in their books. But if others destroy their places of 
worship, they will declare this to be ‘the murder of democracy’ and ‘violation 
of minority rights’. They do not understand that the conquest of other peoples 
and the destruction of their places of worship that they glorify in their 
madrasas as ‘great
victories’ is a much older story than that of others’ destroying their places 
of worship, and certainly far predates the destruction of the Babri Masjid. If 
they refuse to consider their destruction of others’ places of worship as 
wrong, how can they claim the destruction of the Babri Masjid was wrong?
 
The mullahs will lead delegations of their followers to engage in what they 
call tabligh to far-flung countries, to America, Europe and so on, where they 
will tell the Christians they meet, ‘Jesus is not the last prophet. Muhammad is 
the last prophet.’ But if any Christian in their own countries believes that 
Jesus is the highest and publicly announces it, he easily runs the risk of 
being charged under the offense of blasphemy and being killed. These folks 
simply do not seem to understand that a Christian will naturally regard Jesus 
as supreme and will not praise the Prophet Muhammad. He will naturally consider 
his own religion and religious personages to be better. The way the half-baked 
mullahs treat the non-Muslim minorities living in their midst, persecuting and 
even killing them for their religious views, only shows that they believe that 
in countries where Muslims rule, non-Muslims do not deserve freedom of religion.
 
The intolerance of the mullahs is not limited to their relations with people of 
other faiths. They will never cease to fight even among themselves as to the 
‘real’ Islam. Each of them considers his own sectarian interpretation of Islam 
to be the  sole true one, and so Sunnis, Shias, Aga Khanis, Bohras, Ahl-e 
Hadith, Deobandis, Wahhabis, Barelvis, Salafis etc will never give up fighting 
among themselves and breaking each others’ heads, each claiming to be right. 
And if one of these sects manages to establish control over a country, it will 
seek to forcibly impose its interpretation of laws on the whole of the country, 
including on those who are associated with rival sects. This, in turn, is a 
perfect recipe for never-ending conflict, and sometimes even civil war. And in 
such a dispensation, groups like Qadianis, Bahais, Hindus, Sikhs, Parsis, 
Christians and so on will have to live completely ghettoised lives and cannot 
publicly express their
religion, for if they do so they can easily be targeted under blasphemy laws 
and slain. 
 
This is precisely what is happening in Pakistan now, the only country in the 
world that was created in the name of Islam in recent times.  In many other 
Muslim countries like Pakistan, non-Muslims have no freedom of religion worth 
the name. And while the mullahs and their followers will lament the state of 
Muslim minorities in non-Muslim countries, they will never utter a word to 
commiserate with the plight of non-Muslim minorities in Muslim lands.
 
The notorious blasphemy law in Pakistan, which claims to protect the honour of 
the name of the Prophet Muhammad, is so flawed that any non-Muslim can, simply 
on account of his religious beliefs, be prosecuted under it—and then killed. 
The law does not even properly explain what ‘blasphemy’ is.  Even if a person 
is acquitted of blasphemy charges, the bigoted mullahs and their hordes of 
followers will not let such a person survive—they will kill him inside the 
courtroom itself or when he is on the way out, as has happened in several 
cases. Such is the immense hold and tyranny of this bigotry. Once a person is 
accused under this law, even if he is proven innocent his life is completely 
destroyed, and sooner or later he will be killed by angry mobs.
 
If a person accused of blasphemy is a ‘non-Muslim’, then hordes of ‘Muslims’ 
will descend on his locality and loot it and set it on fire. This, for 
instance, is precisely what happened in Gojra, in Pakistan, in 2010, where, 
according to the Pakistan Human Rights Commission, announcements were made from 
the mosque calling on ‘Muslims’ to ‘make mincemeat’ of the local Christians. 
Scores of innocent Christians were slain by the Muslim mob, who also set fire 
to their homes, fondly imagining that in doing so they were serving God. Why 
did this happen? All because of a completely false allegation that a Christian 
had insulted the Quran. So the modus operandi is: falsely charge a member of a 
religious minority with blasphemy falsely, and then do not give the accused any 
opportunity to prove his innocence. 
 
I fail to understand why, in countries like Pakistan, where the followers of a 
certain religion form the overwhelming majority of the population and religious 
minorities are miniscule in numbers, the majority needs a law to protect its 
religion. Is this not an argument to actually defend the oppressor and to 
punish the oppressed? And is it not strange that ever since this blasphemy law 
was imposed, in 1986 by the mullah military dictator of Pakistan, Zia ul-Haq, 
there has been a massive upsurge in reported or alleged cases of blasphemy in 
that country? One needs ask these bigots if such a law helps check the crime or 
does it, in fact, work to increase it. In the Pakistani case, it seems to be 
the latter.
 
Why this is so is easily explainable. Most of these cases of alleged blasphemy 
actually are a cover-up for other issues, for property disputes, for settling 
personal scores, for eying other peoples’s lands and so on. Concocting 
blasphemy charges against one’s personal rivals has thus become the most 
convenient trick to get them into trouble—and to even have them ‘legally’ 
killed! 
 
Salman Taseer, the late governor of the Pakistani Punjab who was slain for his 
defence of a hapless Pakistani Christian woman unfairly accused of blaspheming 
Islam, wrote shortly before (December 24th, 2010) his death: “My observation on 
minorities: A man/nation is judged by how he/it supports those who are weaker 
rather than how he/it leans on the stronger.” The despicable way in which the 
hapless minorities of Pakistan are being treated by the mullahs and their 
supporters, including being hounded in the name of countering blasphemy, 
clearly shows that the mullahs and their men have absolutely no qualms at all 
in engaging in the most brutal forms of inhumanity, all in the name of their 
religion. And the Pakistani state has fallen completely prostrate before such 
despicable characters. And that is why Pakistan is now in the grips of a vast 
number of mullah-style ‘Islamic’ outfits that are driving the country into the 
throes of darkness.
 
Non-Muslims generally place no hurdles in the path of Muslim minorities in 
their midst leading their lives the way they want and following their religion, 
provided they stick to the rules of decency. I fail to understand why Muslims 
living in Muslim majority countries cannot do the same with regard to their 
minorities. The brutality of what is being done in Pakistan in the name of 
Islam has terrible consequences for Muslims all over the world, especially 
those who live in countries where, like in India, they are in a minority but 
are left free to follow their religion and live as they please. In this regard, 
it becomes incumbent on the Indian Muslims, especially their religious 
scholars, to openly condemn as anti-Islamic the heinous actions of the 
half-baked mullahs in Pakistan which they are undertaking in the name of Islam. 
They must also condemn the misuse of the blasphemy law in that benighted 
country,  for it is itself giving Islam a bad name the
world over, ironically while claiming to ‘protect’ its image.
 
It is no longer possible to remain quiet on such issues. We can no longer 
opportunistically choose to remain mum on these matters. To condemn what is 
happening to minorities in countries like Pakistan is a duty incumbent on all 
Muslims who live in non-Muslim majority countries, where they enjoy the same 
rights and freedoms as others. If Indian Muslims and their religious ‘leaders’ 
and their organisations remain silent on this naked oppression, then they must 
also remain silent and stop speaking about the Babri Masjid, about the Sachar 
Report, about the Ranganath Mishra report, and about violations of freedom, 
democracy, secularism, the rule of law and minority rights in India. The Indian 
Muslim clerics must try to promote tolerant understandings of Islam in Pakistan 
in any which way they can.  They themselves never tire of insisting that Islam 
stands for peace, love and tolerance—this is what they tell the Hindus, the 
media, the government and so
on. So, then, let them try and prevail upon their Pakistani counterparts to 
practice Islam in what they say is its true spirit. Let them openly denounce 
the terror being engaged in the name of Islam in Pakistan as anti-Islamic. If 
they do not do this, they would be guilty of sheer hypocrisy, for secularism 
does not mean that you preach love and tolerance in countries where you are in 
a minority but act in precisely the opposite way with other communities where 
you are in a majority. I would regard this as the opportune moment for the 
Indian Muslims and their religious leaders to prove their claims of their 
religion indeed being tolerant and just by speaking out against the terror 
being inflicted on the minorities in Pakistan in the name of Islam.
 

-- 
Sheeba Aslam
Research Scholar (PhD), 
Centre for Political Studies, 
School of Social Sciences
Jawaharlal Nehru University, 
New Delhi-110067. 0-9871683654 

-- 
Hatred does not cease by hatred, but only by love; this is the eternal rule. 

--The Buddha

-- 
Hatred does not cease by hatred, but only by love; this is the eternal rule. 

--The Buddha

-- 
Hatred does not cease by hatred, but only by love; this is the eternal rule. 

--The Buddha

-- 
Hatred does not cease by hatred, but only by love; this is the eternal rule. 

--The Buddha






[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, 
[email protected].
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[email protected]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: [email protected]
  Subscribe:    [email protected]
  Unsubscribe:  [email protected]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtmlYahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to