What's new

Bomb Blast in Crowded Daata Darbar (Shrine), Lahore

A talent for deception

Thursday, July 08, 2010
Kamila Hyat

The writer is a freelance columnist and former
newspaper editor

The blasts at Data Darbar have forced people to think. Many with ambiguous feelings about the militants are now clearer in their ideas about extremism and what it intends to achieve.

The bombings were not only an attempt to spread panic and create fear – the main purpose of terrorism of every kind — but also to stifle thoughts, ideas and schools of belief. The series of attacks since 2008 on Sufi shrines in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa forms a part of the pattern.

The militants wish to impose a uniform manner of thinking and replace the relaxed system of religious practice which has existed in the region for centuries with a far more orthodox creed. The attempt has been on since the early 1980s, when the late General Ziaul Haq encouraged groups following hard-line ideologies to set up seminaries and other centres across the country.

The rather naïve report from the Washington-based Brookings Institute think tank that madressahs that promote militancy are limited in number and as such not a “main problem” ignores the fact that even the institutes that do not preach violence encourage a mindset that builds support for the Taliban and other groups. Such views have permeated mainstream education too and seeped into many other places, changing quite markedly the nature of society.

The obsession with religion has grown rapidly as has the hypocrisy that often surrounds it. An astonishing number of people seem to believe it is somehow important to thrust belief on others or to challenge views that vary from their own.

This appears to have been a factor in the illogical conspiracy theories we continue to hear everywhere. Leaders who should know better, such as those associated with the Jamaat-e-Islami, hold the Data Darbar bombings were carried out by ‘anti-Islam’ forces, an attempt to point the finger towards the US, its allies or India.

People whose names are followed by a string of letters marking their educational qualifications hold that the 9/11 attacks may have been perpetuated by Washington and its agencies, using ground-based technology that forced planes to crash into buildings. Some still insist, presumably out of habit, that ‘no Muslim’ would have targeted the Darbar.

Most people now appear convinced that the militants we have encouraged to grow in our own backyard are indeed responsible and that it is senseless to deny this. The strikes and closure of shops in Lahore following the bombings signalled a true sense of horror and dismay over what had happened.

The Darbar, regarded as the most important of the Sufi shrines dotted across the country, holds a special place in the hearts of many – even those who do not regularly visit it. Many who have turned up at the venue following the blasts say they wish also to apologise to Hazrat Data Ganj Baksh, who died nearly a century ago, for the outrage that led to so many deaths at a place of peace where many seek solace from their woes.

In some ways at least the blasts have acted as a wake-up call. They have exposed the militants for what they are. They may also have helped to build realisation that we need to combat terrorism far more forcefully if it is to be defeated. It is now obvious the militants wish to eradicate the message of tolerance and acceptance that marked Sufism. The attempts to reclaim the philosophy as one integral to religious practice in the Subcontinent need to be stepped-up.

Doing so is vital to the effort to re-establish harmony that has been lost in our society creating fissures that play a part in promoting extremism and targeted killings of Shias which continue in Karachi. The sectarianism and violence we see has made almost all our major cities far more dangerous places to live in than at any previous time in history.

The unprecedented reaction to the bombings should also prompt the Punjab government to re-think its strategy. Visiting bereaved families, cuddling orphaned children on laps or handing out compensatory cheques as the chief minister has been doing is largely pointless. It has become essential to go after militant forces in the province.

The unfortunate battle that has been opened up on this front, with the central government and its allies quick to direct blame towards the set-up in Lahore after every act of terrorism, simply detracts from this effort.

We need unity, and an exhibition of maturity, to go after the militants, not the childish displays of petulance and ego we have so far been seeing from leaders.

A great deal of planning and resolve is needed to win the war. The significance of Pakistan’s failures on so many fronts should not be downplayed. The country’s literacy rate of 56 per cent is now the lowest outside sub-Saharan Africa and on tables that list other development attainments even the famine-ravaged states of Africa have fared better. These are statistics that must be considered carefully.

The lack of education and with it the lack of opportunity have played a big part in the growth of militancy and the desperation that drive young men into the hands of militants. Reports now emerging from Swat emphasise the extent to which the rise of militants in the area was fuelled by resentment against the rich and a deep sense of social injustice. Such feelings exist everywhere in the country and are already taking us steadily closer to chaos.

But even though we live in a kind of nightmare world, in which no life is safe and where death lurks everywhere, our political leaders continue to smile and offer up meaningless platitudes. The pretence that all is well, that we are in fact making progress and that the government is striving for the betterment of people is in its own way sickening. Few are taken in.

Most people recognise we are in a state of crisis and that a wide-ranging plan of action is needed to resolve it, so we can retrieve the society that has been lost beneath the debris left behind by bomb blasts.

Email: kamilahyat@hotmail.com
 
These all were happening because our founder Quaid e Azam failed to nurture his democratic successor while he was still alive . Then the military junta was becoming too strong after the death of Quaid. Pakistan in those days were very similar to these days now.
Well i would disagree - His democratic successor was Liaqat Ali Khan but he was assassinated.So technically we lost two very popular leaders after Independence of Pakistan.Qaid-E-Azam died just 1 year after partition due to health and Liaqat Ali Khan was assassinated.We had some other good politicians as well but they were sidelined by the powerful military and civil bureaucracy.
 
Well i would disagree - His democratic successor was Liaqat Ali Khan but he was assassinated.So technically we lost two very popular leaders after Independence of Pakistan.Qaid-E-Azam died just 1 year after partition due to health and Liaqat Ali Khan was assassinated.We had some other good politicians as well but they were sidelined by the powerful military and civil bureaucracy.

Bravo Sir... very well said. Some people clearly ignore history when making outspoken and illinformed statements. Thank you for the clarification.
 
Extending your logic then, does that make the attack on the Pentagon, Nadal Hassan's actions and the attack on the Indian parliament 'legitimate', since they were all government/military targets?

Yes I would have to consider them legitmate targets. But that does not mean that the countrys targeted cant take what ever action they consider necessary to defend themselves such as the USA is doing in Afghanstan or to even protect them selves from possible attacks.
 
Last edited:
Well i would disagree - His democratic successor was Liaqat Ali Khan but he was assassinated.So technically we lost two very popular leaders after Independence of Pakistan.Qaid-E-Azam died just 1 year after partition due to health and Liaqat Ali Khan was assassinated.We had some other good politicians as well but they were sidelined by the powerful military and civil bureaucracy.

This is not very different than what I said in my earlier post which you seem to have disagreed. Well , I did not mention names of too many dead people and who killed them. Today , we have a denial tendency about the extremists and we also had the same denial in the 50's about the monstrous interference from GHQ backed by urban middle class.
 
Last edited:
Originally Posted by Old School:
"This is not very different than what I said in my earlier post which you seem to have disagreed. Well , I did not mention names of too many dead people and who killed them. Today , we have a denial tendency about the extremists and we also had the same denial in the 50's about the monstrous interference from GHQ backed by urban middle class."

Though the following may seem to be drifting from the original thread:
It has always intrigued me that; the generation then had such great stalwarts in great numbers, people of great intellectual capacity, not to mention foresight. How could they connive/abet/even mutely accept such a subversion of an Institution? It astounds me that these people could work together with lofty aspirations and unbounded optimism for a great cause and then just let it wither away?
If they could be so somnolent (and that is the mildest expression that i can find) maybe the " Man wearing the Pagri" would have done a better job- or at least much less harm.

Please correct me if i am wrong- the 'much reviled' Gen. Yahya Khan allowed and organised the first General Elections based on Universal Adult Franchise. How many years after 1947 was that? Can we see some irony there.
 
Well Lahore High Court CJ has asked police to look into Blackwater..What can i say.The situation is helpless.
 
Pakistan was created under the name " Dominion of Pakistan" from which 'Federal Republic of Pakistan' would have been the proper transition. Unfortunately, we made a lot of mistakes in the 50's.

You have made a lot of mistakes since the 50s.

Really what Pakistan is, is a real mess. Pakistan has wasted its resouces on its military, and that along with the high cost of oil and lot of other things have bankrupted Pakistan. Pakistan has never had the resources to go toe to toe with India.

In the mean time a cancer has growen in the Afghanstan Pakistan Border Region untill it threatens the entire country of Pakistan.

As a nation, Pakistan uses 350,000 barrels of oil per day. Of this, 293,000 barrels per day are imported. Also, 1.1 million short tons of coal are imported each year. The combination of these two alone make up a huge part of the over one billion dollar trade deficit. These resources are used primarily for the generation of power.

Due to all of these sources of debt, half of government expenditures are dedicated to fulfilling debt repayment obligations. In order to finance these payments, additional grants and loans are required each year totaling approximately 25% of revenues. This prevents Pakistan from devoting significant resources to economic development and/or social improvements.

Education

61.2% of Pakistan illiterate 50.0% male illiteracy

75.6% female illiteracy

Limits opportunities of women

Women don't enter workforce Poorly educated about family planning No control of population

Perhaps the greatest loss comes in the area of education. Whether or not this is a direct result of Pakistan's economic problems, it is undoubtedly connected. With so many resources directed towards the aforementioned debt payment, educational improvements are given and inordinately low priority.. This is evident upon examination of Pakistan's overall literacy rate of 37.8% (50% for men and 24.4% for women). Literacy being defined as those over 15 who can read and write.

In terms of population, low literacy rates are often observed with high population growth. A poorly educated population is unlikely to participate in family planning or any other form of population control. Secondarily, a poorly educated populace makes Pakistan a poor choice for the foreign investors that it so desperately needs. Furthermore, the extremely low literacy rate among Pakistani women (24.4%) lends itself to a society where most women never enter the labor force, creating less incentives for them to limit the size of their families. This is best illustrated by the fact that only 38 million of Pakistan's 141 million people make up the entire labor force.

Poverty

Uneducated population unattractive to foreign business Difficult to recruit foreign businesses

Only 38 million of 142 million make up work force 7% unemployment, but 34% of people in poverty

No foreign investment Pakistan remains poor
Deeply linked to the massive debt and poorly educated people, is the large portion of Pakistan's population that lives in poverty. With an average of 2,000 dollars of GDP per person (adjusted for purchasing power parity), the average citizen is forced to live off very limited resources. This is reflected in the fact that 34% of the population lives below the poverty line, despite a mere 7% unemployment. Pakistan's lack of fiscal resources is yet another barrier against foreign investment. Without foreign investment, Pakistan lacks the resources to bring about positive economic development. Without positive economic development, Pakistan is unable to attract foreign investors. Without foreign investors... you get the point.

Talk about a pefect storm.
 
first of all he is not minister... Secondly who are we to declare them (The Afghan Taliban) Terrorits?? they are fighting against an invader...
When you fight against an INVADER than you should kill the INVADER not innocent people of Afganishtan. This is difference between a rebel group and a Terrorist group.
 
The Koran was written after Mohammed died, you do have a computer do search on the History of the Koran, then later a offical version was adopted and all the other versions were destroyed. A few have survived.

History of Quran: The origin and development of the Quran began with prophet Muhammad's PBUH receiving divine revelations in 610. Most of these revelations were either memorised or obscurely written down during the lifetime of Muhammad. These revelations were subsequently collected and were standardised in today's version by the caliph Uthman c. 653/654. Mohammed died in 634 so the Quran was written about 20 years after Mohammed died and about 40 years after he talked to that angle.


I have been a away and I just saw the above preposterous comments as they were addressed to me I shall answer them. First of all do not base your reasearch on newspaper cuttings Captain america it shows your complete lack of islamic Knowledge and history and blatantly copied from a Anti islamic missionary site when dumbfounded by Muslim answers resort to slander and white lies. First The Quran was written complete in the lifetime of the Holy prophet hence Upon the farewell pilgrimage the Prophet (sawws) said " I leave amongst you two things the Book of Allah and My itrah" acording to one report and "sunnah" acording to other". Muslim Historians and muhaditheen amply mention that The Prophet (sawws) had Many scribes FRom amongst his companions , al sayuti in his al iteqan fi ulum al Quran lists and names them , they were over 70. Each time a ayah was revealed the prophet would Instruct his scribes to place that ayah in which surah and what part of that surah.

The testimony of this fact is simple those that know arabic would unanimously admit that the Holy Book Has no comparison in Arabic rhetoric it is unbroken systematic ryhthmic melody even miss placing a single word breakes that rythym. That is one of the miracles of preservation showing that it cannot be tampered with. Secondly The Holy Book itself says how the recitel and jamah or collection was carried out in the lifetime of the prophet.

75:16] Move not thy tongue concerning the (Qur'an) to make haste therewith.

75:17] It is for Us to collect it and to promulgate it:

So whatever you wrote for daleel against a muslim has now been abseloutely demolished by the above ayah. Secondly every single muslim knows many chapters of the quran by heart , he /or she must in order to pray, this is contenious uninterupted chain of preservation from generation to generation, and we all have relatives that know every single letter and word by heart, these people number in tens of millions, also in every generation , people today are alive that have memrised it father to son right back to the Holy Prophet (sawws). NO BOOK OR FAITH ON THE FACE OF THE EARTH SHARES SUCH A FACT NOR BLISSFULL TRUTH. NOT a single letter difference, nor does any manuscript anywhere of the Quran have any ioata of a difference in any corner of the world, Unfortuntely for christians whose bible was compiled over 1500 years for the old testament and as for the new testament it is the result of the nicene council of rome who rejected many gospels and hand selected the current 4, over 250 years after christ.

The issue of uthman and the collection, First It is a gross misnterpretaion of facts, Uthman made a standerdised version of the arabic dialect not a version nor a collection. Arabic has many dialects, but the Quran was revealed in the most pure dialect, the Dialect of the Qureish, When Muslim lands expanded barely two years after the Prophet, like syria, yemen , and other countries, the muslims began reciting in there own dialects of arabic, and gathered a minute number of compilations in that dialect also, so to avoid the confusion Caliph abu bakr started the work not Uthman with Umar completed by uthman so 20 years after theory is false. The Quran was amongst the Muslims before the Prophet left them in this apparent Physical world, it was wriitten on all sorts of material, What Uthman did was to collect the few that were written in other dialects and offer the true version of arabic dialect to the masses, and distribute copies in all corners of the muslim world, and even shia muslims agree Upon this as stated in al bayan fi tafseer al Quran by grand ayatullah sayyid qasim al khoei in his great tafseer upon the compilation of The Holy Quran. So the Muslims have complete agreement upon this.

And for you information the other dialects version is in a museum in turkey, and every letter and word is exactly the same from Alif lam meem to wannas, not a dot difference unlike the bible which has 24000 manuscripts and no two are identical. Infact the acusation itself is so childish and laughable, in the face of ample ample facts.

17:81 And say: "Truth has (now) arrived, and Falsehood perished: for Falsehood is (by its nature) bound to perish."


wa salam
 

Back
Top Bottom