So, you want to kill everyone who disagrees with your exclusivist and parochial (mis)interpretation of Islam?
And given your advocacy for the elimination of modern liberal Muslims from Pakistan, I am curious as to how you would regard the founding fathers of this nation, who held "divergent" views. Would you consider them as apostates deserving of being deemed "Wajib ul Qatl"?
For example:
"We heartily welcome the liberal movement in modern Islam..."
and
"The claim of the present generation of Muslim liberals to re-interpret the foundational legal principles, in the light of their own experience and the altered conditions of modern life, is, in my opinion, perfectly justified."
(Mohammad
Iqbal, The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam)
And it was not just Iqbal.
Sir Syed Ahmed Khan is hailed as the father of the two-nation theory. He, in a lecture given by him before a large and very influential audience of Muslims in Lucknow, on 18th December 1887, said :
" ..... Gentlemen, I am not a Conservative, I am a great Liberal.... "
And Jinnah fits quite closely the model of the classic liberal politician.... He wanted a
Liberal constitution for Pakistan as well (as recorded by Fatima Jinnah in "My Brother")
And as for the
Separation of State and Church(i.e. Secularism),
Iqbal categorically stated:
Islam as a religiopolitical system, no doubt, does permit such a view
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@AA_ Since you have shown support for a highly inappropriate post advocating violence, I am interested in hearing your perspective regarding the founding fathers of our nation and their divergent beliefs
You said you were a Shia. The Shia community in Pakistan has been subjected to severe violence at the hands of the same extremist elements and mindset that you are endorsing here. If given an opportunity, these extremists would not hesitate to resort to violent means and take the lives of all those who hold divergent beliefs, including you and your loved ones. Be careful what you wish for