http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/19-an-intolerant-society-hh-05


An intolerant society 
By Huma Yusuf 
Sunday, 07 Feb, 2010 

 
Women weep for relatives, who were killed in the attack on a bus travelling to 
a religious procession, during their funeral in Karachi February 6, 2010. - 
Photo by Reuters. 

Coming on the heels of the Ashura tragedy, the two blasts in Karachi on Friday 
are a reminder that sectarian violence poses one of the greatest threats to 
Pakistani society. Well over 4,000 people have been killed in the past two 
decades in sectarian - involving primarily Shias and Sunnis - violence.

Although no group has claimed responsibility for Friday's attacks, fingers are 
pointing at banned sectarian outfits such as Jundullah and Lashkar-i-Jhangvi. 
No doubt, radicalised militants are behind the kinds of anti-Shia attacks we 
saw on Dec 28, and again on Friday. But the time has come to put sectarian 
violence in a broader perspective. 

Such violence can no longer be denounced as the work of fringe elements, an 
accident of history or politics. Instead, it must be recognised as a symptom of 
an increasingly intolerant and divisive society. 

Indeed, intolerance is very much a characteristic of Pakistani society, a fact 
obvious to anyone who follows the media. Take, for instance, the highly 
sensationalised, racist jibe at Senator Babar Ghauri by Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf 
chief Imran Khan. Khan resorted to racism as a response to Ghauri's accusation 
that he had an illegitimate child. But the ease with which he opted for the 
race card - and the resounding applause that met his comment - indicates that 
intolerance is thriving here. 

Khan's one-off insult cannot, however, compare with the consistent intolerance 
preached by other prominent personalities. Pakistani bloggers have made much of 
self-proclaimed strategic analyst Zaid Hamid's Wake Up Pakistan campaign, which 
is explicitly anti-India. Although the campaign calls for an "ideological 
revolution" that restores the Muslim identity of the Pakistani state, Hamid's 
dream of Radio Pakistan broadcasting from New Delhi has come to symbolise the 
no-compromises attitude of this particular movement. 

Meanwhile, Pakistani grievances against US government policies such as 
escalating drone attacks and the use of private security firms may be 
justified. But anti-Americanism is slowly becoming conflated with anti-white 
sentiments: local websites, for example, publish photographs of any white 
person spotted here, identifying them as Blackwater or CIA agents. 

Similarly, in the last year or so, public disdain for the Taliban has been 
expressed through discriminatory attitudes towards all Pushto-speaking people, 
who are being pushed out of jobs and increasingly find themselves the victims 
of arbitrary arrests and harassment. 

Returning to a religious context, there is no shortage of examples of 
intolerance. Sunni-Shia sectarian violence seems to be on the rise in Karachi. 
Religious parties and the opposition PML-N hushed up calls for the repeal of 
the controversial blasphemy laws - long identified as anti-minority - after 
eight Christians were killed in Gojra last year. In September 2008, popular 
televangelist Aamir Liaquat declared that Islam sanctioned the murder of 
Ahmadis. Subsequently, at least two Ahmadis were murdered in cold blood. Need 
one go on? 

The government has fuelled this widespread intolerance by employing vague 
terminology and heaping all the country's problems on 'non-state actors' and 
'foreign elements'. This language has perpetuated a belief in an amorphous, 
elusive enemy that is defined by one characteristic alone: not being Pakistani. 
This allows anyone who believes they can define the traits of a Pakistani 
(increasingly synonymous with Sunni Muslim) to fill in the vague outline of the 
enemy with that which is considered the 'other': Hindu, American, Israeli, 
Shia, Ahmadi, Christian, Sikh. 

And this practice is no longer confined to political, extremist or media 
circles: the trend is proliferating among Pakistan's urban, educated middle 
classes. Just this week, I heard of two incidents that betray the extent of 
xenophobia and religious intolerance in our society. After an intense medical 
examination, a friend was using yogic breathing to compose herself when another 
patient in the waiting room asked her contemptuously if she were Hindu. 

Across town, incidentally in another hospital waiting room, an aunt decided to 
say her prayers. When she was done, a woman spitefully asked her if she 
belonged to the Ahmadi community. When she responded that she was not, the 
woman asked, "how can you not be, if you pray with nail polish on?"

In other words, we now live in a society in which any evidence of divergent 
beliefs or differing practices invites judgment. Rather than embrace diversity 
and pluralism, or respect people's personal choices, we are becoming a people 
who label, despise and even attack that which is deemed to be variant.

A 2005 International Crisis Group report concluded "sectarian conflict in 
Pakistan is the direct consequence of state policies of Islamisation and 
marginalisation of secular democratic forces". But, as the above examples 
suggest, sectarianism and other forms of intolerance have gone well beyond the 
political realm, and are now in danger of becoming social norms. 

Indeed, a January 2010 report by the Legatum Institute, a London-based think 
tank, argues that Pakistani society will become more Islamist in the coming 
years. The report says that religious parties will not win more votes, but will 
exercise more 'soft power' through participation in political coalitions. This 
power will manifest itself in a move towards 'Islamic values', which will be 
articulated in increasingly conservative and intolerant legislatures; for 
example, Sharia-compliant laws to govern the banking system, limited women's 
participation in the public sphere, public displays of piety, and the further 
marginalisation of minorities. 

This means that the horrors Karachi saw on Friday, and that the country has 
grappled with for decades, will no longer be the extreme activities of militant 
groups - they will be an expression of public sentiment. We can already see how 
incitement to hatred is a prerequisite for representing Pakistanis, while 
religiously, racially and ethnically motivated violence is becoming intertwined 
with nationalism.

If our politicians, public figures and media personalities do not make a 
concerted effort to preach and practise tolerance, Pakistan will continue to 
head down an explosive path.

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