>From Mohd. Hanif's excellent book  (He was trained in Pak Air Force Academy
but left PAF to work as a Journalist..

General Zia had married when he was a captain in the armoured division. He
was also a virgin. One of his maternal uncles took him into a corner on his
wedding night and whispered an old Persian proverb in his ear: "Kill the
cat on the first day."

Uncle squeezed his shoulder, laughed a vulgar laugh and pushed him into the
room where the future First Lady waited on a bed, a bundle of red silk. Zia
didn't know any Persian and found no cat to kill that night.

"Would you like to change into something more comfortable?" General Zia had
asked, twirling the embroidered hem of her red silk shirt. "This is
comfortable enough," she had answered, snatching the hem away from his hands.
She turned her back to him and went to sleep.

The fumbling failure of that first night, he knew, had resulted in a
marriage in which his authority was never fully established.

Twenty-three years later, the morning after his midnight coup, he knew the
meaning of the proverb. He intended to kill the cat, bury it and hoist his
flag over its grave.

He just wasn't quite sure how he would go about it. Allah will help me, he
thought, before entering the conference
room.

In the first meeting after General Zia's coup, eight generals, including
the heads of the navy and the air force, sat around a table in the
conference room of General Headquarters.

Keeping in mind the historic nature of the session, the orderlies had
sprayed rose-scented air freshener generously and the room smelled like a
freshly sealed coffin. The Adjutant General, General Beg--a two-star
general given to unpredictable fits of sneezing--sat in a corner with a
white handkerchief over his nose, ready to record every word that was
uttered in the conference. A copy of the agenda lay before each of them in
a green leather folder embossed with golden crossed swords cradling a thin,
new moon. General Zia noticed that although all eight of them stood up
and saluted,
they all sat down without waiting for him to take his chair first. They
shifted in their seats and before he could declare the meeting open the
Naval Chief said, "I want to bring it on the record that I was informed
about the coup when it was already under way..."

The Adjutant General's suppressed sneeze distracted everyone for a moment
and General Zia found the opening he badly needed. He fixed the Naval Chief
with a benevolent stare and spoke in a pleading voice. "Of course we'll
hear your protest and of course we'll need your guidance in what your
protest and of course we'll need your guidance in what we have set out to
do. But since we are all meeting for the first time after we were able to
save our country without spilling a single drop of blood, should we not
start the meeting with a recitation from the Quran? May Allah guide us in
all our endeavours."

They shifted in their seats, not knowing how to deal with this. They were
all Muslims and they all knew that the Chief had a religious bent. Some of
them even called him 'the mullah' when talking on secure telephone lines.
But a meeting was a meeting and mixing religion with the business of running
the country was a concept not comprehensible to them. A quarter of a
century of military training had prepared them for many tasks; they could
make toasts in five different languages, they could march in step and hold
joint military exercises with the best armies in the world. If they chose
to shed their uniforms they could take up diplomatic careers or run
universities. But all their staff-and-command courses and all their
survival skills were not enough. They didn't know how to say no to an offer
of a recitation from the Quran from their own Chief. They shifted some more
in their seats. They breathed in some more rose-scented air.

General Zia took out a slim, magenta-coloured copy of the Quran from his
folder, put on his reading glasses and started to recite. All the
commanders looked down respectfully and listened in silence; some put their
hands in their laps, wondering whether the time had come for them to face
the consequences of their godless ways.
The recitation didn't last more than three minutes. General Zia's voice was
croaky but something about reading the Quran aloud makes even the most
toneless voice sound bearable. He finished the recitation and handed the
Quran to the General on his left.

"Since General Akhtar speaks very good English, I'll ask him to read out
the translation for those of us who don't him to read out the translation
for those of us who don't understand Arabic."

Utter nonsense, the Naval Chief thought. None of us understands Arabic.

General Akhtar started reading haltingly: "'I begin in the name of God, the
holiest, the most merciful.'" General Zia stared at him without blinking as
the translation was read out.

As soon as he finished General Zia grabbed the copy from him and held it up
to his generals.
"What do you think it says here in this part that I just recited?" There
was a moment's silence. General Beg snivelled behind his handkerchief.
"Come on, speak up."

General Zia raised his voice. Then he obeyed his own command: "In Arabic it
says 'In the name of Allah'. It doesn't say in the name of God, it doesn't
say in the name of gods, it doesn't say in the name of some nameless deity.
It says: 'In the name of Allah'." He left a dramatic pause. "Let me remind my
brothers here that the very first thing that a non-Muslim has to say to
become a Muslim, the very first article of faith that every believer has to
profess is: There is no God but..." He paused again and looked around the
table expecting them to complete the first *katima*. No one spoke up. He
repeated. "There is no God BUT..."

"Allah," they all murmured, like schoolchildren unsure if they were being
asked a trick question.
"Yes." General Zia brought down his fist on the table. "My dear generals,
let's get one thing clear before we hear your protests and your
suggestions: There is no God but Allah. And since Allah Himself says there
is no God, let's abolish the word. Let's stop pretending God *is *Allah.
It's a Western construct, an easy way to confuse who is the creator and who the
destroyer. We respect all religions, especially the religions of
Christianity and Judaism. But do we want to become like them? Christians
call Jesus the son of God. Are we to understand that some god came down
while Mary was fast asleep and..." Here he made a circle with the
thumb and forefinger
of his left hand and poked at it with the middle finger of his right hand.
"Jews are pretty close to calling Moses their God. You might think that
it's all the same to our people, God, Allah, same difference?" He mimicked
the clipped English accent many of his generals preferred. "But who should
be telling them that we believe in Allah and not in any other god? Didn't
Allah choose us to clear up this confusion?"

Then as an afterthought he appealed to the patriotism of his fellow generals.
"Even Hindus call their six-armed monsters their gods. Isn't that a reason
enough to stay away from this word?

And if any of you have any concerns that people will not appreciate the
difference between God and Allah, I suggest we leave it to Allah."

The complete silence that followed his short speech satisfied General Zia.

"Can' we now hear the Naval Chief's protest?"

The Naval Chief, still reeling from the lecture about God's nomenclature,
suddenly felt very small. He was worrying about a breach in protocol when
the whole nation was calling God by all sorts of wrong names.

The generals who had called Zia a mullah behind his back felt ashamed at
having underestimated him: not only was he a mullah, he was a mullah whose
understanding of religion didn't go beyond parroting what he had heard from
the next mullah.

A mullah without a beard, a mullah in a four-star general's uniform, a
mullah with the instincts of a corrupt tax inspector. The others sat
stunned around the table, still trying to comprehend what they had just
heard. If General Zia could have read their minds this is what he would
have read:

*What did they teach him at Sandhurst?*

*A country that thinks it was created by God has finally  **found what it
deserves: a blabbering idiot who thinks he has been  **chosen by Allah to
clear his name.*

*He really makes sense. How come I didn't think of it **before?*
*Who is he going to appoint as his deputy? *
*Am I in an army commanders' meeting or a village **mosque?*
*I am going to prohibit the word God at home*.
*Who would have thought there was a theocratic genius in **that uniform?*

*Can we get on with the agenda? We have just toppled an **elected bloody
government, how the hell are we going to run **this country? Is Allah going
to come down and patrol the **bloody streets?*

The only person who voiced his thoughts was General Akhtar, a former
middleweight boxer, a clean-shaven man of tribal origin who was packed with
so much soldierly dignity that he could have been born in any country on
any of the five continents and he still would have become a general.
His ability
to carry himself with martial grace and his talent for sucking up to his
superiors was so legendary that according to a joke popular in the
trenches, he could wipe out a whole enemy unit by kissing their asses.

The other generals stopped thinking and moved forward in their chairs to
listen to General Akhtar. "By Allah's grace you have brought this country
back from the edge of destruction, by Allah's mercy you have saved this
country when the politicians were about to push it over the edge of a
precipice. I want to thank--" He stopped himself as he was about to thank God.
He folded his boxer's hands respectfully on the green folder. "I want to
thank Allah and our visionary Chief of Staff to whom Allah has given the
wisdom to take the right decision at the right time." He looked around the
table before continuing.

"I also want to thank our very professional commanders sitting around this
table who carried out the coup on the orders of our Chief in such an
orderly manner that not a single bullet had to be fired, not a single drop
of blood had to be shed."

The power balance in the room suddenly shifted and the eight men, despite
their different levels of affiliation to religion, diverse tastes in whisky
and women, and various English accents, reached the same conclusion:
General Akhtar had beaten them to it. They should have spoken these words.
The rose-scented air in the meeting room suddenly felt stale.  General Beg
wiped his nose and put his handkerchief back in his pocket.
------------------------------

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