And you are ignorant.
"
'Sharization' of Pakistan[edit]
The
Islamic conservatism and the Islamic state became Zia's primary policy of his military government.
[2][2] The secular-socialist orientation and socialist economics process was an attempt to upset to Pakistan's order of operation on a routine life, as Zia maintained.
[2] General Zia rejected Bhutto's philosophy and was reported to highly hostile of Bhutto's philosophical rationale, "
Food, clothing, and shelter".
[2] General Zia defended his policies in an interview in 1979 given to British journalist Ian Stephens, as he puts it.
The basis of Pakistan was Islam. The basis of Pakistan were Muslims in the subcontinent are a separate culture. It was the
Two-Nation Theory that carved out of the Subcontinent as Pakistan.... Mr. [Zulfikar] Bhutto's way of flourishing way of
This Society was by eroding its moral fiber. Mr. Bhutto.. eroded the moral fiber of the society by pitching students against teachers, children against their parents, landlord against tenants, workers against mill owners. Pakistan is not incapable of economic production. It is because Pakistanis have been made to believe that one can earn without working.... We are going back to Islam not by choice but by the force of circumstances. It is not I or my [military] government that is imposing Islam. It was the 99 percent of people wanted; the street violence against Bhutto reflected the people's desire of wanting— just as the campaign for
Pakistan Movement. I am just giving the people [of Pakistan] what they want.
—General Zia-ul-Haq interview giving in 1979 to Ian Stephens,
[2]
On 2 December 1978, on the occasion of the first day of the
Hijra to enforce the Islamic system in Pakistan in a nationwide address, Zia accused politicians of exploiting the name of Islam:
"Many a ruler did what they pleased in the name of Islam."[68] After assuming power, the government began a program of public commitment to enforce
Nizam-e-Mustafa (Islamic System), a significant turn from Pakistan's predominantly
secular law, inherited from the British. As a preliminary measure to establish an Islamic society in Pakistan, Zia announced the establishment of Sharia Benches.
[68] To many secular and communist forces, Zia cynically manipulated
Islam for the survival of his own regime.
[68]
Madrassa Expansions[edit]
Zia-ul-Haq increased the number of
Madrassas from 893 to 2,801 during his years in office. A total of 64% of these
madrassas were
Deobandi, while the remaining 25% were
Barelvi.
[72]Under the Zia-ul-Haq regime, Pakistan experienced its first state sponsorship of these types of institutions.
[73]"