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Is The Taj Mahal Pakistani ?

For example...... someone building a temple on Barbari Mosque....... or you claiming that Minar-e-Pakistan is in fact Indian..... that would definitely create a stir..... :D

Hmm...true..people are far too detached wrt this topic..we need something REAL egregious.
 
For example...... someone building a temple on Barbari Mosque....... or you claiming that Minar-e-Pakistan is in fact Indian..... that would definitely create a stir..... :D

No that would just get the fundoos screaming, we need something that will even rile up the common and seemingly sane posters.
 
Anyways going back to Taj Mahal, i think its over rated.

We have more beautiful architecture in our country


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Maybe its actually the story associated with Taj Mahal that makes it one of the wonders of the world rather than its architecture. India has many more jaw dropping historic architectural master pieces which make Taj look like any another ordinary monument.
 
Achha yaar.. Le jaao Pakistan mein and jaa kar Karachi mein laga dena meri balaan se..
 
These books are for young Pakistani children. What else remained to be explained?
But the OP say's 'Undergraduates of a Top Pakistani University' debated about Taj being Pakistani. Its not some school kids from a remote place..
 
What does it mean by Pakistani Taj Mahal?
At times I wonder how much stupid people can be.
It can be called as an Islamic structure but Pakistani structure. People better not make a fool and laughing stock of themselves by making these comments!!

On the whole topic! Unlucky students, God bless them!!
 
Remember when the nuke was dropped on USA by Japan?
yeah.. whats your point?

Are you equating Pakistan's confusion of national identity with a typo in provincial school textbook in India?
 
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Taj Mahal either belongs to all South Asians or it belongs to none of us (meaning only Turko-Mongol Chagtais which are extinct can claim it in their graves).

The problem with modern national boundaries and extrapolating that to claims over four to five thousand year old civilizations is, that its very hard to tell who are the real natives amongst inhabitants today, unaffected or least affected by outside admixture. If science is to be followed, which I suggest over jingoism, then we can only be sure that australoid tribes and proto-dravidians were the original inhabitants of the geographical subcontinent (east of suleiman range/hindu kush, and west of arrakan range near burma). This, mind you, was approximately 10,000-15,000 ybp, possibly earlier, as they are postulated to have split off from settlers that arrived either in the first wave of migration from Africa (60kya) by sea or the second wave (roughly 30-25kya) across the Arabian peninsula, along the coast to malabar region.

The confirmed ethnolinguistic groups which came to the subcontinent later, apart from the Northeastern mongoloids from present-day Burma, Yunnan and Tibet, include Pashtuns that arrived to khyber/hindu kush region approximately 1st to 6th century A.D. during the mixed Turkic/Iranic Hephthalites' migrations (or invasions), and Baloch who by their own traditions migrated from Aleppo or the Arabian peninsula around 1500 years ago, though the former is more likely evidenced by their language being part of the northwest Iranic branch.

Now of Punjabis and Sindhis who claim native origins as opposed to those of Gilan, Shiraz, Quraysh/Hashemite tribes, etc. there is contention in the scientific domain. But the two most debated and plausible explanations are, them being an admixture of an Indo-Aryan migration and earlier native proto-dravidians, or that the proto-dravidians about 15,000 years ago moved to the northern plains, diverging from southern populations over time in language, traditions and to a small extent, appearance. The age of ANI markers, coupled with their posited migratory timeframes, suggests that it does not predate the decline period of IVC, whereas the ASI markers obviously are more that 20,000 years old (at least). This should give a hint as to the possible and likely genetic composition of IVC inhabitants before the civilization's decline, caused by *unestablished event*, made them migrate eastwards to other fertile plains and rivers.

Which explanation you prefer is up to you, but it is still quite vague and contended, apart from a more general consensus that these are the two likeliest possibilities compared to any others. As I've said before, this is an area best appreciated with an open mind, and where petty racism/nationalism brings nothing but an egg on the face when confronted by science.
Very informative sir, thanks!
 
And you take these text books seriously?
Most of you guys do as is evident from the ideas and issues presented on this forum!

The history book prescribed for higher secondary students makes no mention of the uprising in East Pakistan in 1971 or the surrender by more than 90,000 Pakistani soldiers. Instead, it claims, "In the 1971 India-Pakistan war, the Pakistan armed forces created new records of bravery and the Indian forces were defeated everywhere."

Similarly it says that Pakistan won all the wars with India since 1947 and the Hindus were defeated!!

Really? Then the students should ask a simple question: How come that Kashmir is still with India if all the wars had been won? :azn:
 
if we tend to be neutral, then every histroy of pre partion India should be shared by both India and Pakistan...

Is the Taj Mahal Pakistani? - DAWN.COM

OF COURSE, this is an absurd question. How on earth could the Taj Mahal ‘be Pakistani’ and claim a nationality which was only imagined 400 years after the mausoleum was constructed, and one hopes that no one in their senses would ask such a preposterous question.

Yet, in a class of undergraduate students at one of Pakistan’s best universities, precisely this question was animatedly debated during a session on Pakistan’s history, with some students stating that the Taj was part of Pakistan’s history, and others implying that it was ‘Pakistani’.

These students had all taken a course in Pakistan Studies prior to starting their undergraduate degree. Clearly, the highly controversial and contested nature of how history is constructed in Pakistan, given the numerous possibilities of framing a history of Pakistan, allows for multiple competing narratives, including a claim to the Taj ‘being’ Pakistani.

Pakistani history has been a contentious topic where different sets of narratives give differing accounts of what Pakistani history is and, hence, how one imagines Pakistan.

Given the eventual partition of British India and the creation of Pakistan, some historians have claimed that Pakistan was ‘created’ in 712 AD when an Arab invader came to what is now part of Pakistan.

This is incorrectly called the beginning of Muslim contact with what is now referred to as South Asia, yet it supports one of the many official narratives of when Muslim ‘consciousness’ and identity were created in this region.

Other competing narratives look to the Delhi Sultanate, or the Mughal Empire, or events in the 19th century and 1857, crystallising into a separate Muslim identity which, inevitably led to Muslim ‘separatism’ and to the creation of Pakistan.

The question, when was Pakistan ‘created’, is one which simply works around a Muslims-are-different-from-Hindus discourse, culminating in a separate homeland.

Hence, if the history of Pakistan is the history of Muslims in India, and just as Mohammad bin Qasim can become part of a certain legacy and heritage and can be caricatured as the ‘first Pakistani’, so too can the Taj as ‘being’ Pakistani. Pakistani history and a history of Pakistan’s people and their land, become two conflicting narratives.

As a consequence, ‘Pakistani’ history, ignores the history of the people who live in what was Pakistan (West and East) and what is left of it. Mohenjodaro, Harappa, and the history of the people of Pakistan is dominated by a north Indian (largely Hindustani) Muslim history, and that too only of kings and their courts.

The Pakistan ‘freedom movement’ of course — and not the movement for independence from British colonialism for all Indian peoples — shapes this discourse more teleologically, once politics dominate undivided India in the 20th century.

The little writing that has taken place about Pakistani history is largely hagiographic and hyperbolic, where the project Pakistan with Muslims as a driving force is required to explain processes which led to the culmination of the events leading to August 1947.

The actors, or at least the heroes are almost always Muslim, and students seldom hear about the role Nehru, Gandhi, Ambedkar, Patel and Bose played in bringing about freedom for the 300 million Indians under colonialism.

One only hears of a handful of Muslim men who brought about freedom for Muslims from a Hindu majority. The British imperialists are inconsequential in this narrative, and are only responsible for making a mess of partition by not giving Pakistan many of the districts which are claimed on the basis of them being Muslim-majority areas.

In the most ingenious and creative recent book to be published on Pakistan’s emergence as a political idea, historian Faisal Devji in his Muslim Zion raises some fascinating and sophisticated arguments which complicate any simplistic notion of what passes as Pakistani history.

His book is a highly nuanced and multilayered understanding of the ideas which led to the justification and creation of Pakistan, and while many of Devji’s conceptualisations need to be contested, for our purposes his statement that Pakistan’s history lies outside its borders, gives rise to some of the problems of imagining a history of Pakistan described here, and allows some to claim the Taj Mahal as ‘Pakistani’.

Moreover, if this claim that Pakistan’s history lies ‘outside its borders’ is valid, and indeed in many critical ways this is certainly the case, it also implies, that the country which came into being called Pakistan, in this hegemonic notion of history, really has no history of its own. The so-called ‘freedom movement’ was fought in a foreign land, the land of the Taj Mahal, not the land of the people who inherited a country called Pakistan where their ancestors had lived for millennia.

Ascribing a status of nationality to brick and mortar — even the Taj Mahal — poses numerous challenging epistemological questions, yet the question of what Pakistani history is, remains unaddressed in a land still searching for understanding. Depending on how one answers this question, one is led through many ideological labyrinths and some geographical ones as well.

If Pakistan is imagined ideologically, then all one has to do is determine when Pakistan came in to being, clearly no easy task, and limiting oneself to a history of the Muslims in India, or a history of Islam in South Asia. If Pakistan is imagined geographically, the connotations of how the history of the peoples and lands of Pakistan is taught and understood, varies hugely.

The writer is a political economist.
 
Our textbooks and the lies they teach
By Raza Rumi
Published: April 14, 2011
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The writer is consulting editor, The Friday Times

Due to the 18th Amendment, a momentous shift in Pakistan’s governance arrangements is taking place through a politically mediated and largely consensual manner. The federal government is being trimmed and 10 ministries have already been devolved to the provinces. A key development pertains to the devolution of education — lock, stock and barrel — to the provinces. Most notably, the odious era of setting poisonous, centralised curricula in the name of a ‘martial’ nationalism is finally over. Whether the past practices of turning Pakistan into a jihad project will end is uncertain, unless the provinces take the initiative and reverse the regrettable trajectory of the past.

Pakistani textbooks have preached falsehoods, hatred and bigotry. They have constructed most non-Muslims, especially Hindus, as evil and primordial enemies, glorified military dictatorships and omitted references to our great betrayal of the Bengali brothers and sisters who were the founders and owners of the Pakistan movement. It is time to correct these wrongs.

However, this shift will be daunting for many reasons. The provinces are not well-prepared and would need to build capacities at their end. Similarly, generations of pseudo-historians, inspired by state narratives, exist who are willing to perpetuate the culture of weaving lies. Other than the ideological issues, bureaucratic slovenliness has also marred past performance. While the Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa textbook boards have been updating curricula, those in Sindh and Balochistan have not done so for nearly a decade.

So it is heartening to note that the Sindh government has finally made some headway now on the issue. The education department is working to update and align textbooks with the 2006 guidelines agreed to by all provinces. In addition, efforts are underway with the expertise of civil society to introduce critical modes of teaching, with supplementary learning material for both teachers and students.

The Sindh education department and the textbook board under the 2006 policy will be following a transparent process, inviting private publishers to submit books for subjects such as English, Mathematics, General Knowledge and Social Studies. For the first time, private publishers will be submitting transcripts for approval. The draft textbooks will then be reviewed by a committee comprising government and private experts and will finally be published in time for the April 2012 academic year.

What are the chances of this brilliant idea being implemented? Despite the odds, there is a strong likelihood that it may work. Largely, because the ruling coalition has an agreement over this issue and the 18th Amendment give full powers to the province. It is critical that other provinces also take note of Sindh’s initiative and set up similar reform committees.

Extremism in Pakistan has grown beyond belief and radicalisation of the young minds is a great challenge for Pakistan’s future. The provinces need to move quickly and undo the wrong committed by central authorities in the past.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 15th, 2011.

Distortion of History in Pakistan
June 3, 2010 by KashifHKhan

There is no question that the systematic distortion of history by Pakistan’s ruling elite and its promulgation via officially sanctioned text books and state propaganda is the root cause of the country’s myriad problems.

False history not only hides the “truth” from an academic point of view, it creates false perceptions, opinions, and expectations in the populace. And if this is done over a sufficiently long period of time – as it has been in Pakistan over six long decades – it results in a major national disconnect from reality. People are simply not willing to accept the truth regarding what ails them and are equally incapable of looking at their situation objectively to identify the causes of their misery. To use a computer analogy, once peoples brains become hardwired the wrong way – on account of systematic and extensive brainwashing – they cease to function normally and rationally.

The article quoted below superbly describes Pak Establishment’s brainwashing and its national impact.

[It is us; DAWN; Nadeem F. Paracha; 20 Dec, 2009; Copy and Paste]

Across Pakistan’s historya number of politicians, lawyers, journalists, student leaders and party workers have bravely wrestled with the establishments civil, military and economic arms. These arms have played every dirty trick in the book of destructive Machiavellian politics set into motion against democrats so the establishment can retain a stagnant and largely reactionary political and economic status-quo; a status-quo that fears the pluralistic and levelling qualities of democracy.

Many from the higher echelons of society have prospered from this status-quo. They are always ready to ward off democracy through a synthetic brand of “patriotism” concocted from overt displays of nationalistic chauvinism and politicised Islam. Though they are quick to blame the masses for falling so easily for democratic parties empty promises, the truth is, the same masses have been more susceptible to whatever hate-spewing gibberish and mythical brew these magicians have been feeding the peoplefor decades in the name of history, Islam and patriotism. This brew, present in the history books our children are taught, has been gradually turning the average Pakistani into a paranoid and pessimistic android who, as if instinctively, lets out his frustrations by pounding the democrats with cynical blows, also swinging wildly at Pakistans many enemies he is told are lurking within and outside its borders.

In this mangled discourse, the documented horrors of the long military dictatorships that this republic has suffered are conveniently forgotten; sometimes even by those in the political and journalistic circles who had struggled hard for a democratic setup; they suddenly seem to lose all their painfully cultivated tolerance andpatience, once that democratic setup is revived. No wonder, in this day and age, we are still debating whether democracy is right for Pakistan, and/or is it compatible with Islam. It is not surprising that such debates crop up in a nation constantly injected with a heavy dose of dubious history which begins not five thousand years ago with the Indus Valley Civilisation, but many centuries later with Muhammad Bin Qasim’s conquest of Sindh. In fact, some textbooks have had no qualms of completely bypassing logic by claiming that Qasim was actually the first Pakistani!

Thishistory then cleverly ignores the many terrible intrigues and murders that were committed by a series of Muslim rulers against their own comrades and kin, sometimes in a fit of jealously and sometimes owing to pure power play. This historical narrative goes to work right away when we are quick to present ourselves as noble people who are incapable of murder, genocide and intrigue, and assert that it is actually other races and religions who have been targeting us. We forget West Pakistan’s controversial role and the bloodbath that followed in the former East Pakistan. We forget how the founder of Pakistan was treated while on his death bed, as he lay lamenting how some of his closest colleagues couldn’t wait to see him die. We forget how a wily general calling himself a pious Muslim sent a popularly elected prime minister to the gallows on the feeblest of evidences.

We forget how an Islamic party being led by a renowned Islamic scholar was behind two of the most shameful acts of mass rioting against the Ahmadiya community. We forget how, long before Hindu fanatics tore down the Barbri Masjid in India, varied Islamic sects and sub-sects were busy going to war against one another in the streets of Lucknow (Muharram processions are banned in that city for over a decade now owing to Sunni-Shia and not Hindu-Muslim rivalry). We forget the terrible sounds of the armys tanks rollinginto Balochistan (1962, 1973); and then in Sindh (1983), slaughtering a number of young Baloch and Sindhis, accusing them of treason, when all they wanted were their democratic rights. We forget the terrible decade-long armed action by the state against Muhajirs in Karachi, in which whole families were wiped out.

We forget how our intelligence agencies schemed the downfall of one democratic government after another in the 1990s, all the while fattening scores of holy monsters many of whom are now blowing up our markets and mosques. There are many more of these horrid episodes in which Pakistanis killed Pakistanis and Muslims slaughtered Muslims. Why is it so difficult then for us to understand that the mayhem rained on us today is by monsters like the home-grown Taliban? It cant be us. It cant be Muslims, we say. Back in 1971, very few Pakistanis were willing to advise Yahya Khan to get intoa dialogue with rebelling Bengalis. But today, after years of unprecedented violence perpetrated by the Taliban, we have many politicians, TV hosts, and journalists suggesting a dialogue with men who one cant even be described as human.

These people’s minds and those of their followers have been influenced by all the concocted and mythical moments of glory, and of justified hatred in the nameof religion and patriotism present in our historical discourse and the false memories that it has created in us. Unfortunately such demagogic claptrap still manages to pass as being Pakistan and Muslim history in the textbooks and on popular TV.
 
if we tend to be neutral, then every histroy of pre partion India should be shared by both India and Pakistan...

Theoretically yes.

However, Pakistan chose to define itself in terms of being "not India". It was a negative identity.

The two nation theory and the subsequent direction of Pakistan precluded what could have been a very different relationship.

The theory is just based on the assertion that as soon as you become a Muslim, you become a "different nation" and start sharing more with random and remote Arabs/Turks/Persians/Somalians than the person next door who may share the same surname.

It is not limited to religion or how one chooses to reach the divine, it extends to their supposed history and idea of their self and ancestors.

The non Muslim history become jahiliyah, to be discarded and the invaders eulogized for delivering them from the jahiliyas (however brutal, uncivilized and inhuman they may have been towards their own ancestors) and their own non Muslims ancestors become jahils. More often you deny being native of the land altogether and claim to be descended from "pure invader lineage".

That makes your proposition a tad difficult to practice.
 
Distorted history
By Farhan Ahmed Shah
Published: November 10, 2011
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The writer works on a USAID-funded economic project called FIRMS and holds a master’s degree from the University of Warwick, UK

Recently, I wrote an opinion piece on why our history books should include Ranjeet Singh. The name Maharaja Ranjeet Singh was symbolic and used as an example to point out the need to look at our history objectively.

For the critics who just could not shed their keyhole vision of looking at history through a religious lens, I would ask them a question. When Pakistan plays a cricket match with India, why do we support Danesh Kaneria, a Pakistani Hindu cricketer, over Irfan Pathan, an Indian Muslim cricketer? We support Kaneria for the simple reason that we associate his spirit of nationalism with the geographic confines that he represents, not the religion he follows. Going by the same logic, shouldn’t our hero be Raja Jaipal instead of Mahmood Ghaznavi? And if Ghaznavi being a fellow Muslim is enough for us to overlook his devastation in India, then we should also gleefully accept Taliban suicide bombings in Pakistan.

One has no problems with Muslim rulers being covered in history books. I do have a problem, however, when certain rulers are glorified at the expense of others on the basis of religion, regardless of who the aggressor was. I do have a problem when the names of non-Muslim rulers are conveniently skipped as if they never existed. I have a bigger problem when the mission of spreading Islam is attributed to the invasions of Muslim rulers. Because when the true motive behind their attacks is revealed, it’s Islam that gets maligned not them.

Even if I were to believe that these rulers attacked out of a genuine wish to spread Islam, who authorised them to do so by the use of the sword? Even the battles fought by the Holy Prophet (pbuh) were actually a punishment of Allah for the disbelievers because the disbelievers persisted in denying Allah’s message. It was only when Allah ordered: “Fight them so that Allah may punish them at your hands” (9:14); that the Holy Prophet (pbuh) waged war. I would like to know who gave these rulers the authority to decide which disbelievers deserved to be punished and which people had reached the level of purity to be left alone? If spreading Islam was their intent, they could have just preached it. If anything, they should be discredited for contributing to Islam’s wrong image as a violent religion.

I wonder why we are so quick to assume the role of a Muslim apologist. May I remind all such people how Mahmood Ghaznavi killed the locals of Lahore ruthlessly when he attacked and burnt the entire city? May I remind them of Nadir Shah who in matter of a day killed thousands of Muslims when he marched on to Delhi to snatch the throne from Mohammed Shah, one of the last Mughal kings of India and yet another Muslim? Or Ahmed Shah Durrani, who ravaged the Muslim population of Gujrat while fighting the Sikhs? What about the Delhi Sultanate which, over a period of 300 years from 1206 to 1526, saw five Muslim dynasties namely Slave, Khilji, Tughlaq, Syed and Lodhi dynasties, indulge in intrigues and murders of each other to capture the throne. Did any of these rulers care about Muslims that we are so religiously guarding them? Do we all know that Maharaja Ranjeet Singh was requested by prominent Muslims of Lahore to come and capture the city?

All the rulers of the subcontinent, Muslims or non-Muslims, locals or invaders, were interested in ruling this land purely for political and economic reasons. Why bring in the religious angle or deprive ourselves of our multicultural history? Not only does this fuel religious bigotry and intolerance, it also plants a false sense of invincibility in our minds that allows us to deflect the blame of our failures on others.

And those who think distorting history is a strategic tool need to wake up to the detrimental effects of this policy. Not only has it fanned intolerance by making us believe we are victims of some nefarious and well-coordinated chicanery, it has also instilled a misguided and one-sided sense of Muslim brotherhood in us. I was appalled to hear a member of the National Assembly a few days ago declaring that we should come to the aid of our Afghan brothers. How did a country that has for 800 years attacked the subcontinent suddenly become our brother is devoid of any logic. Let alone the fact that the only country to oppose Pakistan’s entry into the United Nations was Afghanistan. What about Egypt, which provided supplies to India during the 1965 war? How about Iran, which refused to sign the gas pipeline project to protect India’s concerns? So why embark upon this one-way road?

In the end, I’ll mention an incident, found in one of Manto’s stories, which is the perfect manifestation of the prejudice we have come to espouse. The incident is about the religious riots in Lahore during Partition when a group of Muslims is attacking the statue of Sir Ganga Ram, an honourable son of Lahore, which once adorned Mall Road. During the attack a man gets carried away, climbs atop the statue, falls down and injures himself seriously. The fellow rioters immediately pick him up while one of them screams “Hurry; let’s take him to Sir Ganga Ram hospital”.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 11th, 2011.

The murder of history in Pakistan
Myths, fables and lies: The murder of history in Pakistan

KK Aziz’s seminal study, ‘The Murder of History’ is essential to understand what went wrong inPakistan. The most worrying sign of an insecure and fissured polity is when it reinvents, twists and lies about its history especially relating to its genesis and progress. K K Aziz was not an Indiannationalist, nor a screaming ideologue who wanted Pakistan to fritter away. In fact his early work The Making of Pakistanremains an essential reading on how Pakistan came into being. He believed in Pakistan despite his emotional links to the separated eastern part of the Punjab. However, at the zenith of his career he could not conceal his deep anguish and disappointment with the way ‘History’ in his beloved country had turned into sham-narratives comprising fables, myths and outright deceit.

Three brutal realities by the end of Zia era were clear: Pakistan’s military-bureaucracy complex had reinvented an ideological state based on a sectarian worldview; History was an instrument of propagating this ideology; and the jihad factories were flourishing. Jinnah’s Pakistan had been irreversibly shattered and perhaps destroyed. For K K Aziz’s generation this was nothing short of a great betrayal.

Published in the early 1990s, ‘The Murder of History’ for the first time documented a meticulous analysis of the history books taught in Pakistani schools and colleges. The book revolves around the main argument that History and Pakistan Studies curricula was nothing more political propaganda aimed at indoctrinating young minds through half-truths and blatant falsehoods.In this study, Aziz scrutinized over 65 textbooks, which have been promoting prejudice, xenophobia and discrimination in our young children (who have grown up now). According to the Aziz, the publication of suchtextbooks was the responsibility of the provincial textbook boards but the National Review Committee of the Federal Education Ministry had appropriated the role of approving the ‘ideological’ content.

Aziz starts with how the Pakistan movement is disfigured. How lies about Jinnah are perpetrated (for instance about his education, leanings etc.) and how military rule and wars are glorified that too without credible facts. The most incisive part pertains to the events of 1971. Aziz questions this obviously false account found in one of the textbooks: “In the 1971 war, the Pakistan armed forces created new records of bravery, and the Indian forces were defeated everywhere.” He further traces how the Pakistani Hindus in East Pakistan are blamed for engineering anti-Urdu demonstrations during Jinnah’s time. This movement started by ‘Hindus’ had sowed the seeds of separation of EastPakistan, if the disingenuous sham-historians of the state were to be believed. Aziz questions how the great surrender of Pakistan Army in December 1971 happened apparently when our troops were bagging so-called victories on all fronts. Furthermore, Aziz also dismisses the notion that accepting Bengali cultural values, as a part of national heritage, was some sort of a national humiliation.

A textbook, as Aziz notes, mentions Maulana Maudoodi among the “founders of the ideology of Pakistan”, when in fact the right-wing leader bitterly opposed the creation of Pakistan
A textbook, as Aziz notes, even mentions Maulana Maudoodi among the “founders of the ideology of Pakistan”, when in fact the right-wing leader bitterly opposed the creation of Pakistan and called Jinnah a non-Muslim. Zia ensured that an unconstitutional overthrow of Bhutto’s government was due to an ‘un-Islamic system’. Little wonder, Al-Qaeda and its partners are busy telling us why democracy should be rejected in the Islamic Pakistan. The greatest lie as detected by Aziz’s meticulous pen relates how the arrival of Zia-ul-Haq was celebrated: “General Zia ul Haq was chosen by destiny to be the person who achieved the distinction of imposing Islamic law…. The real objective of the creation of Pakistan, and the demand of the masses, was achieved.”

Aziz also records major omissions and makes a robust effort to correct them in the later chapters. The last parts of the book analyse the impact of such chicanery on the students and on the nation at large: Assuming that three students come from one nuclear home, we have at least eight million households where these books are in daily use … Eight million homes amount to eight million parents (father plus mother), not counting other family members… In this way the nonsense written in the books is conveyed to another sixteen million persons.

After reading Murder , one is left distressed with the unethical principles that the governments and thetextbook boards follow while preparing textbooks. This is not just a matter of school curricula as Aziz rather presciently argues: Some of the people bred on these books become journalists, columnists and editors of popular magazines and digests … making all possible allowances for’ the margin of duplication, we are still left with a very conservative figure of say thirty million people being told what they should not be told and hearing what they should not hear. When we recall that this group contains within itself the social and intellectual elite and the actual or potential leadership of the country, we have nothing but stark despair staring us in the face and promising rack and ruin.

The rot has already set in. Popular media and generations raised on lies are now a formidable reality of our national discourse. Sections of print media and some TV anchors churn out such half-truths on a daily basis. Above all, the youth (as noted by many surveys) are confused about their identity with an ingrained anti-India sentiment and a vague sense of Pan-Islamic identity.


A decade and a half later when Musharraf tried to reform the curricula his attempts were foiled by powerful ideologues within the Establishment and very soon he lost the will to drive this reform. When the Aga Khan Foundation took the initiative in Karachi, the Mullahs threatened and roared. The current PPP government’s education policy makes no concrete commitment to the textbooks. Aziz’s last line remains relevant: “Is anybody listening?”

Pakistan’s existential battle is inextricably linked to the poison of these textbooks. Without a concerted effort to purge our curricula of xenophobia, jingoism and Islamo-fascism, we are simply doomed. The political elites have a small window of opportunity. If they are not going to forge a consensus on textbooks’ reform, their relevance in the long term remains uncertain. This is why K K Aziz’s legacy is formidable and needs to be reiterated every now and then.

Raza Rumi is a writer and policy expert based in Lahore. He blogs at Jahane Rumi - Raza Rumi's website. Email: razarumi@**********
 
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Murder of History(Part 1)

In the last 64 years, a lot of wrong Information has been passed on as “facts” by our textbooks and Media. In this article, I have mentioned some of the most popular myths about Pakistan History and tried to debunk them using authentic sources. I should admit that this is a beginner’s effort, I don’t claim to possess absolute knowledge nor do I claim that whatever I have mentioned is absolutely true. My basic aim is to provide an alternate discourse on the below-mentioned issues.
1. The 1857 War of Independence was in fact a mutiny.

It was no more than a localized uprising in some parts of India.Surendra Nath Sen, in his book Eighteen Fifty Seven(Calcutta,1958) says “Outside Oudh and Shahbad there are no evidences of that general sympathy which would invest the Mutiny with the dignity of a national war”. R.C Majumdar, in his book The Sepoy Mutiny and the Revolt of 1857(Calcutta, 1963) declares that “it cannot be regarded as a national rising, far less a war of independence, which it never professed to be”.

Reference:- KK Aziz, Murder of History;Sang-e-meel Publishers; Chapter 2; p149

2. Sir Syed Ahmed Khan was the Pioneer of two nation theory.
This myth has been propogated ad nauseum since Sir Syed’s death. The origins of this myth can be traced back to Molvi Abdul Haq. He based his claims on parts of a single speech made by Sir Syed in 1884 during his visit to Punjab.(Reference:- Zia-ud-din Lahori, Aasar e Sir Syed, Page 127,128). Iqbal Ali, in his book “Sir Syed ka Safarnama e Punjab” quotes Sir Syed as “ Of the word “nation”, I mean both Hindus and Muslims. That is how I define Nation. It does not matter what their religious belief is because we can not see it and what we see is that despite us being Hindu or Muslim, we are governed by the same rulers, we benefit from the same sources, we suffer from droughts equally. That is why I define the people living in Hindustan as Hindus.” On Page 139 of the same book, Sir Syed is quoted as “I do not think Hinduism is a religion, rather any one can call himself Hindu. Thus, it pains me today that despite living in India, I can not call myself a Hindu”. In an essay written by Sir Syed which was published in Aligarh Institute Gazzette on 12 June 1897, he wrote, “We have been living together for centuries now. We eat the same food, the same water, breathe in the same air. Thus, Hinuds and Muslims are not different. As the Aryans were called Hindus, Muslims can also be called Hindus because they live in Hindustan”.

References via Professor Amjad Ali Shakir, “Do Qaumi Nazriya, Ek Tarikhi Jaiza”, Jamiat publishers; 2007; Chapter 1; Pages 44-52

3. Allama Iqbal was the first person to present an idea of an Independent Muslim state.

This Narrative has been used in textbooks and media for long. We should consider that a lot of schemes for division of India were presented by different personalities between 1857 A.D to 1940 A.D. KK Aziz wrote, “ Exactly 64 such suggestions, vague or definite, were made between 24 June 1858 and 31 December 1929. Twenty-eight Muslims had made such proposals before Iqbal’s address.(in 1930)”. (Khursheed Kamal Aziz, The Murder of History : A Critique of History Textbooks used in Pakistan; Sang-e-meel Publications;Chapter 2; Page 165).
The earliest suggestion was given by John Bright, Member of the British Parliament representing Durham. On the 4th of June 1858, while participating in a discussion in the British Parliament, he suggested that India be divided into five or six large presidencies with complete autonomy, ultimately becoming Independent States. In December 1877, he reiterated that He “is seeing several independent and sovereign states in India when British withdrawal had been affected.”Justice Javed Iqbal(son of Allama Iqbal) wrote in his book Zinda-Rood(biography of Iqbal), that “At Victoria Station, a recent convert to Islam, Khalid received him and presented him a collection of speeches of John Bright. Khalid requested Iqbal to read the book before attending the Round Table Conference. John Bright was the person who, in 1858, had said that India will have to be divided into at least five Independent states when the British leave India. According to Amjad Ali, Iqbal spent the night reading that book”. (Justice® Javed Iqbal, Zainda Rood;Page 451 and 574). Hasan Jaafer Zaidi, in his essay identified a certain Lahore-based Newspaper which started propogating this myth back in 1945-1946. Mr Mohammad Ali Jinnah in an interview given to Beverly Nicholas(author of “Verdict on India”), on 11th January, 1944 in Bombay referred to John Bright’s speech delivered on June 4, 1858 . (We are a Nation, Excerpts from speeches of Quaid-i-Azam; page 60)

Murder of History(Part 1) | Pak Tea House

Murder of History (Part 2)

1.Mohammad Ali Jinah was never arrested in his life.

Mr Mohammad Ali Jinnah, popularly known as Quaid-i-Azam, was a brilliant Barrister and Politician. It is often said that unlike other Indian political leaders(Gandhi, Nehru, Abu-al-Kalam Azad, Subhash Chandra Bose, Molana Shaukat Ali etc) he was never arrested in his life.

Actually, Jinnah was arrested just once in his life – for disorderly behaviour while at the 1893 Oxford–Cambridge boat race. (Stanley Wolpert, Jinnah of Pakistan, Oxford University Press, New York, 1984,p. 13). Incidentally, it was another muslim leader that was not arrested even once in his life,Sir Mohammad Iqbal(also known as Allama Iqbal).

2. The establishment of Pakistan as envisaged by 1940 resolution was favored by all the muslim leaders.

The Lahore Resolution declared: ‘the areas in which the Muslims are numerically in the majority, as in the north-western and eastern zones of India should be grouped to constitute “Independent States” in which the constituent units shall be autonomous and sovereign’. The resolution plainly indicated a desire for ‘Independent States’ and not one independent state. Some leading Bengali Muslims were highly conscious of the distinction. Speaking in Lahore, for example, the Bengali nationalist and future Pakistani prime minister, Husain Shaheed Suhrawardy, made it quite clear that: ‘Each of the provinces in the Muslim majority areas should be accepted as a sovereign state and each province should be given the right to choose its future Constitution or enter into a commonwealth with a neighbouring province or provinces.’ (K. K. Aziz, The Making of Pakistan: A Study in Nationalism, Sang-e-Meel Publications, Lahore, 1998, p. 56.) A senior Bengali Muslim League official, Abul Hashim, objected that the demand for a united Pakistan amounted to an amendment of the Lahore Resolution. He was ruled out of order. When Abul Hashim made his complaint, Jinnah, the lawyer, could see the problem clearly enough but his first attempt to get around it was feeble in the extreme. He suggested that the letter ‘s’ after the word ‘State’ in the Lahore Resolution was a typographical error. When Liaquat Ali Khan produced the original minutes of the meeting Jinnah had to concede that he was wrong and that the word ‘States’ was indeed in the original text. (Anwar Dil and Afia Dil, Bengali Language Movement to Bangladesh, Ferozons, Lahore, 2000, p. 62.) In May 1954, A.K Fazlul Haq(who had originally presented the Lahore Resolution in 1940) caused havoc among the politicians and bureaucrats in Karachi by telling two foreign correspondents that he favoured the independence of East Pakistan. (Anwar Dil and Afia Dil, Bengali Language Movement to Bangladesh, Ferozons, Lahore, 2000, page 92). Even Mr Jinnah, in one of his speeches made in April 1941 said, “Let me tell you as clearly as I can possibly define it that the goal of the All-India Musim League is this: We want the establishment of completely independent states in the North West and Eastern Zones of India, with full control of defence, foreign affairs, customs, currency etc.” (Fatima Jinnah, My Brother; 1987; Chapter 1; Page 8 and 9)

3. Pakistan was made in the name of Islam.

(Note:- This claim can never be definitely proved or disproved. We have heard countless arguments in its favor courtesy our textbooks and Nawai-Waqt, following is an alternative view on this topic.)

This claim has been repeated by different parties and group for their own vested interests since the creation of Pakistan. Hasan Jaafar Zaidi and Zahid Chohdary in Volume 2 of their book, Pakistan Kesay Bana, suggest that the claim “Paksitan will be a laboratory for Islamic system” is not true. They argue that had it been the case, the first Law Minister of Pakistan appointed by Mr Mohammad Ali Jinnah would not have been a Hindu(Jogindhar Nath Manal). They also argue that of all the legislative assembly sessions that Mr Jinnah presided over,none except one was started with Tilawat from Quran. Mr Jinnah also chaged the oath for Governor General and the words that he omitted included “God may help me”.(Pakistan Kesay Bana, Zahid Choudary and Hasan Jaafer Zaidi; Nigarishat Publishers; Volume 2;Pages 624-629) Speaking to the Muslim League Legislator’s Session, the Quaid said that Pakistan was not going to be a theocratic state. He said that though the religion played an important role but tehre were other aspects which were vital for a nation’s existence.(The Nation’s Voice, Volume 4; Pages 611-616)(Civil and Military Gazette, April 11,1946). On the other hand, founder of the party that later claimed that Pakistan was formed as a Labarotary of Islamic System(JI) was strongly against formation of Pakistan. He wrote an article in Nawai-Waqt newspaper, on 1st May 1946, named “A solution for the current Crisis gripping India” in which he advocated formation of a federation of nations living in India(International Federation were his exact words). Interesting to note is that there was a note from the editorial board that appeared before the article stating that they strongly disagree with Mr Maududi’s “solution”.(Pakistan Kesay Bana, Zahid Choudary and Hasan Jaafer Zaidi; Nigarishat Publishers; Volume 2;Pages 637-638)

Murder of History Part III

For people who constantly ask WHO is responsible for altering the history of this country, Please Do read K.K.Aziz’s book for the answers. I.H.Qureshi and Dr.Safdar, both historians, played a major role in the distortion.


1. Mujahidin had gone to conquer Kashmir in 1948.


The first war between newly-independent Pakistan and India happened in 1948 A.D in Kashmir Valley. It is postulated that the prime objective of Mujahideen(mostly from NWFP) was the liberation of Kashmir. Actually,when they reached near Sri Nagar, they forgot their “objective” and started criminal activities. Regarding this, Owen Bennet Jones in his book writes, “At this crucial juncture, when Kashmir was ready for the taking, Pakistan paid the price of the haphazard nature of its operations in Kashmir. Rather than striking forward, the tribesmen became distracted by the opportunities for plunder. Their increasingly lawless conduct had a disastrous consequence. The local Muslim population, rather than seeing them as liberators, began to fear them and, far from providing help to the tribesmen, turned against them. These developments and the bad international press Pakistan was receiving as a result of the invasion dismayed the government in Karachi. Officials not only disowned the tribesmen but also obstructed them. (Owen Bennet Jones, Pakistan:Eye of the storm, Yale University Press; 2002; Chapter 3; page 65) Sherbaz Khan Mazari, a seventeen year-old tribal leader from Balochistan who tried to take some men to join in the fighting, later recounted that when he tried to enter Kashmir, ‘I was stopped by Pakistani officials who told me in clear cut terms that I would not be allowed to cross into Kashmir. It became clear that they thought we were intent on partaking in the plunder that was taking place.’ (Sherbaz Khan Mazari, A Journey to Disillusionment, Oxford University Press,Karachi, 2000, pp. 11 and 12.)

2. Our Ancestors arrived from Arabian Peninsula.

This claim has been made by the Ghairat Brigade since long. They have tried to downplay the linkages that we have with our subcontinental ancestors and tried via popular media and textbooks to somehow prove that our ancestors were not people living in the Subcontinent for thousands of years rather they came from the Arabian Peninsula.
A look at the genealogies of two of our founding fathers i.e Jinnah and Iqbal tells us that Mr. Jinnah belonged to a Sindhi family that had migrated to Gujarat.(Akbar S Ahmad, Jinnah, Pakistan and Islamic Identity; Routledge, 1997; Chapter 1,page 1 ) while Iqbal belonged to a Kashmiri Sheikh family. Also, there was a considerable population consisting of Jatts and Gujjars before Islam came to our part of the world. Most of us are descendents of those early converts. The people most likely to have come down from Arabia are the Syeds who claim to be direct descendents from the Prophet (PBUH). Interestingly, in a research conduted by University College London, Y chromosomes of self-identified Syeds from the Indian subcontinent show evidence of elevated Arab ancestry but not of a recent common patrilineal origin For more on the castes of our country, visit this page.

3. Sheikh Mujib ur Rehman and his Awami league wanted to break the country.

In its report on the events of 1971, the Hamood-ur-Rehman Commission argued that: ‘We must give full weight to the fact that before the elections he[Mujib] offered the Council Muslim League and the Jamaat-e-Islami a number of seats in East Pakistan which would have still permitted him to obtain the majority of the East Pakistan seats but not to have a clear majority in the whole house. Quite clearly his purpose was to be able to play the role of the leader of the largest single party without being under pressure for (sic) members of his own party to go through with the Six Point programme on the basis of an overall majority in the house. This fact clearly established that Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, at that time at least, had not decided on secession’. (Hamoodur Rehman Commission Report, part I, chapter VI, para. 96; Dawn; 13 January 2001; page 21)
 
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