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Sticky myths formation of MQM and Sindhi Nationalist - Separatists

pak-marine

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Sticky myths




Amajority of political analysts and journalists, especially those based outside the Sindh province, continue to sound rather presumptuous while commenting on the politics of Sindh. Much of this is due to certain sticky myths that have been constructed over the years by various state security institutions, political parties, media outfits and even political elements operating within Sindh itself.

One such myth is that Sindhi nationalism has never manifested itself as a widespread movement/insurgency (like the Baloch and Bengali movements).

Sindhi nationalism in Pakistan’s context emerged almost about the same time Pushtun, Baloch and Bengali nationalisms had begun to flex their respective muscles — i.e. soon after the state and government of Pakistan introduced the ‘One Unit’ in 1954.

‘One Unit’ was a controversial project launched by the federal government of Pakistan to merge the four provinces of West Pakistan into one unit. Sindhi, Baloch and Pushtun nationalists saw the move as an attack (by the ruling elite) on their
cultural autonomy and democratic right to retain their ethnic identities.

Sindhi nationalism was not separatist; or at least not as much as Bengali and Baloch nationalist movements. Sindhi nationalism was/is largely based on the writings and thoughts of GM Syed, even though over the decades (and especially after Syed’s death), Sindhi nationalism has continued to fragment into various tendencies across classes and between anti-feudal and non-feudal strains.

A scholar and a politician, Syed, through a series of books between the 1950s and early 1970s, painstakingly constructed an elaborate historical narrative of Sindh and its people. His expansive thesis presented Sindh as an ancient land whose people have always been one of the most pluralistic and secular under both Hindu as well as Muslim regimes. He suggested that Sindh’s pluralistic tradition was carried on by a number of Sufi saints after Sindh came under Muslim rule.

In 1966 Syed formed a cultural organization called the Bazm-e-Sufian-i-Sindh. Driven by a number of Sindhi intellectuals, the Bazm proposed that Sindhis could not be integrated by the state of Pakistan due to the stark cultural differences that
they had with what became known as ‘Pakistan ideology’ (a term first used by the fundamentalist Jamat-i-Islami in 1967).

The Bazm then went a step further when it published a controversial study in late 1966 that stated that Raja Dahir (the 8th century Hindu ruler of pre-Islamic Sindh) was actually a hero to many Sindhis and that it was Muhammad bin Qasim (the Arab Muslim commander who defeated Dahir and conquered Sindh) who was the actual usurper!

Ironically, apart from the Pakistani state, Syed could also not reconcile his politics with a fellow Sindhi, Z A. Bhutto. Bhutto and his Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), experienced a meteoric rise (in the late 1960s) when Syed’s narrative had begun to take hold among Sindhi youth. Syed did not applaud Bhutto’s rise in spite of the fact that Bhutto was a declared progressive; to Syed, if one brushed off Bhutto’s leftist notions from the surface, underneath was a man wilfully doing the bidding for the ‘Punjabi ruling elite’.

Syed’s analysis had deemed Pakistan to be a state that was destined to fragment. But it wasn’t until 1972 that Syed openly called for the separation of Sindh. Though Sindhi nationalism, popularised and intellectualised by Syed, did not express itself violently (as Baloch nationalism/separatism), it finally did culminate into an insurgency of sorts against the state of Pakistan in 1983.

Some historians believe that what history records as the 1983 MRD movement was actually an armed uprising of Sindhi nationalists.

MRD (Movement for the Restoration of Democracy) was a PPP-led anti-Ziaul Haq initiative. But parts of it in Sindh (especially in 1983) took the shape of a Sindhi nationalist movement participated by youth wings of the PPP and various Sindhi nationalist organisations.

Many of the nationalists had understood the execution of a Sindhi prime minister (Bhutto) by the Ziaul Haq dictatorship (in 1977) as a show of ‘Punjabi chauvinism and arrogance.’ But in an ironic twist, the main political and intellectual architect of modern Sindhi nationalism, GM Syed, did not take part in the movement.

In fact, at the expense of annoying a number of his supporters, Syed saw the MRD movement as yet another PPP-led initiative to ‘exploit Sindhi sentiments and keep them attached to the federation.’ Also, perhaps he did not feel that the movement was the true representation of the kind of Sindhi nationalism that he was advocating.

Hundreds of Sindhis were killed by the military-led operation and some Sindhi nationalist leaders also claimed that whole villages were razed during the movement. To some, Sindhi nationalism (during the MRD movement) had exhibited its first expression of an armed insurgency.

Another myth associated with Sindh’s political history is that the MQM was created by the Ziaul Haq dictatorship.

Academics specialising in the politics of Sindh, such as Amir Ali Chandio and Dr Tanvir Tahir, trace the formation of Mohajir ethnicity way back to the 1960s. From the 1960s onwards, when the Mohajirs had begun to be dislodged from the Punjabi-dominated military-bureaucratic elite, a number of movements emerged calling for a Mohajir province. In fact, one of the first to do so was Syed Haider Kazmi’s faction of the left-wing, National Students Federation (NSF) in 1969.

Then Mohajir nationalism again reared its head during the language riots in Karachi in 1972, but the fact is few Mohajirs took the notion seriously, as they were still firmly embedded in the concept of federalism, and (like the Punjabis) repulsed by ethnic nationalism — until the 1978 formation of All Pakistan Mohajir Students Federation (APMSO) by Altaf Hussain.

The much overlooked reason behind APMSO’s process of giving birth to MQM (in 1984) is largely an economic one. It has little to do with Zia encouraging the formation of a Mohajir nationalist party to subdue the PPP and Sindhi nationalism, even though he might have tried to do so after MQM’s creation.

According to famous Sindhi scholar, Ibrahim Joyo, ‘Punjabi economic hegemony’ increased immensely in Sindh during the dictatorship of Ziaul Haq. This situation had a negative impact on the interests of Karachi’s leading business communities (Memons, Gujaratis and other non-Punjabis). The concern saw some leading business members of these communities form an organisation called the Maha Sindh (MS) in 1983.

It was an organisation set up to protect the interests of Karachi’s Memon, Gujarati, Sindhi and Mohajir businessmen and traders from — as one Mohajir businessman termed at the time — ‘the invasion of Zia-backed carpetbaggers from Punjab.’

Celebrated Sindhi intellectual, Khaliq Junejo, suggests that Maha Sindh encouraged the formation of a ‘street-strong’ Karachi-based party. It can be argued that it is this aspect of the MQM’s formation that sometimes gets mistaken into meaning that the party came about with the help of the Zia regime. This is so because the business communities in Karachi (stung by Bhutto’s nationalisation policies) were anti-Bhutto and had hailed his overthrow by Zia in 1977.

But by the early 1980s, however, they had been deluded by Zia’s supposedly ‘pro-Punjabi’ economic manoeuvres in Sindh and felt the need to have their own political outfit. It was then that Maha Sindh was further financed by Karachi’s Mohajir, Gujrati and Memon business communities (as a pressure group) , and by 1984 the group eventually became the MQM.


Nadeem F. Paracha

http://http://dawn.com/2012/06/03/smokers-corner-sticky-myths/
 
to avoid these things we have to educate our people, select moral politicians and have to think about Pakistan first not sindhi, balochi or punjabi. Need to realize what benefit unity has and what is the concept of nation is in Islam. We should forget that wether we are sindhis or punjabi but muslims and pakistani.
 
Nadeem F. Paracha

the name says it ALL! Zia made PML Nawaz & MQM to counter the growing Bhuttoism & PPP in sindh & balochistan. however, having said that NOW pakistan is divided into ethnic & religious sects from gilgit to karachi!
 
Nadeem F. Paracha
the name says it ALL! Zia made PML Nawaz & MQM to counter the growing Bhuttoism & PPP in sindh & balochistan. however, having said that NOW pakistan is divided into ethnic & religious sects from gilgit to karachi!

And what do you have to say about the article ???
 
And what do you have to say about the article ???

this article is typical anti jamaati & pro appeasement of MQM article. with opinons being thrown about all round. the langauge riots people forget happened when BHUTTO made URDU the offical language of the country! so clearly no "sidelining" of URDU speaking community! & i am sorry but the world knows that as soon as ZIA came to power APMSO was born to counter PPP.
 
The Bazm then went a step further when it published a controversial study in late 1966 that stated that Raja Dahir (the 8th century Hindu ruler of pre-Islamic Sindh) was actually a hero to many Sindhis and that it was Muhammad bin Qasim (the Arab Muslim commander who defeated Dahir and conquered Sindh) who was the actual usurper!

Oh My God !!! This has gone against everything Pakistani propaganda is based on...
Islamic fundamentalists groups and our Internet warriors are probably tearing their hairs off reading this
 
Sindh is rocking province probably the province that has the most history in South Asia
 
Oh My God !!! This has gone against everything Pakistani propaganda is based on...
Islamic fundamentalists groups and our Internet warriors are probably tearing their hairs off reading this

oh my god oh my god oh my god! sorry but no big deal! we are muslims doesn't matter what raja dahir did! stop trolling little boy!
 
Very Informative Article regarding Sindh Politics espacially about MQM Generation.
 
Jiye Sind movement has its origins from prepartition days. Sheikh Abdul Majeed Sindhi who was editor of the Daily Al Wahid resigned from the Muslim League in 1945 after 30 year membership because he disagreed with partition.

Some Sindhis such as Mohammed Ibrahim Joyo even wrote a book ‘Save Sind'. Sindhis had been a pluralistic society from the ancient times and many in Sindh is (same as NAP- Pashtuns & Baluchistan) were not sure that separation was a good thing. Mohammed Ayub Khuhru, Chief Minister of Sindh, told Malkani, a deputy High Commissioner of India that he did not want Sindhi Hindus to leave in 1948.

GM Syed, the inspiration behind Jiye Sindh has written:

Quote

First the so-called Islamic State of Pakistan''. It is altogether un-Islamic. There has never been an Islamic State --- and there never can be one. It is ridiculous to say that the Koran is the last word in wisdom or knowledge. And in any case there is nothing in the Koran on which you can base a modern polity --- or build a modern economy.

Muslims have been divided into various schools from the first day. There are 350 different sects of Islam. There is no provision for a Khalifa in the Koran; but a Khalifa was fabricated nevertheless --- on the model of the Pope. Religion and politics were also mixed up in Islam --- again on the model of the medieval Church. Christians, however, had the good sense to separate the Church from the State centuries ago. Muslims continue to mix up the two --- and muddy both.

Islamic principles are fine; but ``Arab Chhaap Islam'' (``Made in Arabia Islam'') has always been intolerant, aggressive and imperialist. The Arabs invaded Sindh in the name of Islam, sacked it in the name of Islam, sold 20,000 Sindhi men, women and children in slavery, again in the name of Islam. We have no use for that kind of Islam. Even tyrannical rulers such as Timur and Aurangzeb had been hailed as ``great Islamic leaders''

Unquote.

During the heydays of the bigot Zia, I came across a Jiye Sindh activist in Washington D.C. It was a long time ago so his name has slipped my mind but not his words.

He claimed that Pakistan means rule by Punjabis and Mohajirs. He was particularly against Urdu speaking Mohajirs saying that these people brought Wahabi Islam from Deoband into Sind (Unknown in Sindh until 1947). Sindh, which was a land of the Sufis and tolerance, was being turned into an intolerable hell by these Saudi Arabian inspired bigots. Sindhis are being told that their history started with Mohammed bin Qassim whereas Sindu Desh has civilization going back 3,000 years before the advent of Islam. We are already a minority in our own province and now we are being told to forget that we are Sindhis!

Naturally I don’t agree with Jiye Sind point of view but I do agree that since the Zia era, Pakistanis are being given too much of a dose of the Wahabi version of Islam, lot of which goes against the grain of the people. As a youth, I have myself done ‘Bhangra’ a few times during the marriage procession of my cousins and friends in my Chak (village) in Sargodha; can you believe it, two youths were arrested for dancing at a wedding in Kohistan!!!

I have seen men dancing in Kuwait, Dubai and Oman (a kind of sword dance but dance nevertheless) but not so in Pakistan!!!

In my honest opinion, if the current prevalence of the Wahhabis/Takfiris continues, Jiye Sind movement will become stronger. Howe can you take away cultural identity of an ancient people?
 
Niaz sahib, going how long back into the past and claiming a group of People as our own is the right thing to do ? I mean I'm an ethnic Kashmiri born to a Punjabi mother and I love Punjab, its People, its language and its culture ! But surely before the 4000 or so year old Kashmiri civilization and the equally long Punjabi civilization there were People inhabiting this land that weren't called 'Punjabis or Kashmiris'; so where would it be justified to have a 'cut-off' point in history ? Or could it be that it has less to do with your history as it does with your ability to 'Choose' or 'Refuse' ? I choose to accept the Muslim invaders (the good ones i.e Sher Shah Suri) and the Muhammad bin Qasim and their People as mine, I choose to own upto the Ottoman Empire, the Kingdom of Andalusia, the Safavid Empire, Saladin etc. as mine, with all their warts and blemishes ! Simply because I can choose to do so. Consequently one might argue that because in ages past there was no Pakistan, no Afghanistan, no India, no Saudi Arabia etc and so as long as their is an ounce of their blood in 'My People' and a 'footprint of theirs' for the better, in my Land....I can claim them as 'My Own' ! But seriously...even if I can't where do I draw the line ? And who has the right to tell me otherwise ?
 
Agreed where you draw the line is a difficult choice. However the question here is not where to draw the line, question is do Sindhis have a right to their heritage and culture.

Over a period of time, various people migrate and move out, countries names and boundaries change but majority of the indigenes population stays put. New comers are simply absorbed into the society. Egypt had Pharaohs similarly the Iraqis and Iranian people had old civilizations. Do these countries deny their past and only start their history from the Islamic conquest? Why is it expected of Pakistanis?

It is only the people with a very strong inferiority complex that deny their inheritance and pretend to be something else. More than 90% of Punjab and Sindh population has links to the races that were here long before Mohammed Bin Qassin arrived on the scene and no racial links to the Arabs.

No matter how much I dislike GM Syed for his opposition to Pakistan, I agree with him 100% that we have no need of the ‘Arabic chaap’ Wahhabi Islam and that Sindhis have every right to be proud of their pre Islamic heritage.
 
Oh don't get me wrong Niaz sahib, I've got nothing against recognizing our pre-Islamic roots; in fact I'm all for recognizing our Non-Muslim heroes who fought for a United India till the differences became irreconcilable. I personally am very fond of people like Gokhale, Tilak, Annie Besant, Bhagat Singh etc. and I would, consequently, want Pakistan to recognize their struggle for our ancestors however unfortunate the latter struggle had become. However one would do well to remember that, that by virtue of Pakistan's location and history, many of those who can be called 'Heroes' of each ethno-linguistic groups, might actually be at loggerheads with that of another's.

P.S If I'm not mistaken I do recall reading somewhere that G.M.Syed was Jinnah's man in Sindh and very much instrumental in getting the Muslim League going in the Province. If that is the case then one might do well to ask why did he felt betrayed by 'Pakistan' !
 
Oh don't get me wrong Niaz sahib, I've got nothing against recognizing our pre-Islamic roots; in fact I'm all for recognizing our Non-Muslim heroes who fought for a United India till the differences became irreconcilable. I personally am very fond of people like Gokhale, Tilak, Annie Besant, Bhagat Singh etc. and I would, consequently, want Pakistan to recognize their struggle for our ancestors however unfortunate the latter struggle had become. However one would do well to remember that, that by virtue of Pakistan's location and history, many of those who can be called 'Heroes' of each ethno-linguistic groups, might actually be at loggerheads with that of another's.

P.S If I'm not mistaken I do recall reading somewhere that G.M.Syed was Jinnah's man in Sindh and very much instrumental in getting the Muslim League going in the Province. If that is the case then one might do well to ask why did he felt betrayed by 'Pakistan' !

This is correct. GM Syed joined All India Muslim League in 1938 and was president of Sind Muslim League for a time.

Not sure of the exact details but differences arose between Sir Ghulam Hussein Hidayatullah and GM Syed. It is understood that GM Syed refused to obey Quaid e Azam Jinnah’s instructions regarding award of parliamentary tickets for the fourth coming elections. GM Syed’s argument was that he was loyal to the Sindh and Muslim League Central leadership orders were not protecting the peoples of Sind.

GM Syed along with some Congress Members forced Sir Hidayatullah to resign from chief Ministership of Sindh. Elections were held in Dec 1946 and with Mulsim League winning majority Sir Hidayatullah became Sind Chief Minister again.

Additionally, upon the advice of Nehru, GM Syed started wearing Khaddar which forced the Quaid to take disciplinary action. GM Syed resigned from Muslim League in 1946.
 

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