Questions for Hafiz Saeed
MJ Akbar in the Sunday Times Pune edition
03 February 2013, 05:29 AM
IST
A
question for the internationally recognized terrorist, ideologue and
mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attack, Hafiz Saeed, resident of Lahore,
who has just offered sanctuary in Pakistan to our superstar Shah Rukh
Khan. Pakistan was carved out in 1947 to ensure security for this
subcontinent's Muslims in a separate homeland. Why, six decades later,
has Pakistan become the most insecure place for Muslims in the world?
Why are more Muslims being killed each day, on an average, in Pakistan
than in the rest of the Muslim world put together?
This
continual mass murder is not being done by Hindus and Sikhs, who were
once proud residents of Punjab and Sindh but are now merely a
near-invisible trace. Some Pakistan leaders even express pride in the
fact that non-Muslims , who constituted around 20 per cent of the
population in 1947, have been reduced to less than 2 per cent. In
contrast, the percentage of Muslims in secular India has increased since
independence. Hindus and Sikhs are not killing Muslims in Pakistan;
Muslims are murdering Muslims, and on a scale unprecedented in the
history of Punjab, the North West Frontier and Sindh. Why?
There
have been riots in India, some of them horrendous. But the graph is one
of ebb from the peak of 1947. When a riot does occur, as in Maharashtra
recently, civil society and media stand up to demand accountability,
and the ground pressure of a secular democracy forces even reluctant
governments to cooperate in punishment of the guilty. When Shias, or
other sectarians, are mass-murdered in Pakistan on a regular basis, the
killers celebrate a "duty" well done.
History's
paradox is evident: Muslims today are safer in India than in Pakistan.
The "muhajirs" who left the cities of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in 1947
would have been far safer in Lucknow, Patna and dozens of cities in
their original land than they are now in the tense streets and by-lanes
of Karachi.
Could
Shah Rukh Khan have become an international heart throb if his parents
had joined the emigration in 1947? Since he is talented he would have
gained some recognition on the fringes of elite society, but he could
not have become a central presence of a popular culture that has seeped
and spread to every tehsil and village. Nor is Shah Rukh the only Muslim
superstar in Mumbai's film world; Salman Khan is bigger than him. Shah
Rukh and Salman and Amir Khan do not hide their identity through an
alias; their birth name is their public persona.
The
television set in my office serves two main purposes: it shows cricket
and offers access to an FM radio station which plays old film songs. A
song by Muhammad Rafi was on the air while the previous paragraph was
being written: Man re tu kahe na dheer dhare. It is a beautiful classic,
written by Sahir Ludhianvi. Rafi, as his name confirms, was a Muslim.
He was born in 1924 in western Punjab and came to Mumbai as a very young
man in search of dreams. Those dreams had not come true by 1947. Rafi
had the option of returning to Lahore. He chose to remain in Mumbai, and
brought his family in what might be called the reverse direction. It
was a wise choice. Mumbai made Rafi's voice immortal. Rafi, like India,
was the distillation of many inspirations.
Hafiz
Saeed and his ilk possess cramped, virulent minds which condemn the
ragas upon which our subcontinent's music, both classic and popular, is
based, as inimical. They want to destroy a shared Hindu-Muslim cultural
heritage in which Muslim maestros took classical music to splendid
heights under the patronage of padishahs, rajahs and nawabs . Instead of
art, they possess vitriol, even as the violence they spawn turns
Pakistan into a laboratory of chaos. They call themselves guardians of
their nation, but they are in fact regressive theocrats who are
shredding the Pakistan that Jinnah imagined.
There
is an answer to the opening question. Extremists who reduce faith to a
fortress do not understand a simple truth: faith cannot be partitioned.
Islam was a revelation for mankind; it cannot be usurped by a minor
tract of geography. Nations are created by and for men, within
boundaries of language or culture or tribe. Religion comes from God; it
is not a political tool for human ambition. Those who equate religion
with nation distort the first and destroy the second. Pakistan has
become a battlefield for dysfunctional forces because theocrats will not
permit it to become a rational state.
Logic
suggests a reciprocal offer: Pakistani Muslims would be safer in India.
But that offer cannot extend to Hafiz Saeed. His mission is to be
India's adversary. What he does not understand is that he is really
Pakistan's enemy.
And the author of this piece is also a Muslim.
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