Hon Members of this august forum. I came across this article in "opinions' in todays (29/11) Dawn. It is a food for thought for fellow Pakistanis. I may not agree with all of it but it does provide a food for thought to all fellow countrymen regarding the kind of Pakistan we would like to be and what it is becoming.
Plight of the minorities
By Hafizur Rahman
EVERY country, every nation, has its minorities ââ¬â racial, ethnic or religious. In a truly Islamic state, which Pakistan is not, (nor is it likely to be with so much hypocrisy around) the majority is supposed to be the protector of non-Muslims. But one is heartened by the spirit shown by the Christians to safeguard their rights in the context of the Shariat.
Now another element has crept into the minorities question. Smug in our false satisfaction that we are being good, and even generous, towards the Christians (and particularly towards the Ahmedis) we have started calling the kettle black. You have to read the statements issued by our political leaders in the recent past condemning Indian Hindus for committing violence against Christians, to understand what double-faced means.
Christians in Pakistan do not properly appreciate how much better we treat them as compared to the Ahmedis. For example, if a Christian chooses to wear the Muslim kalima on his breast weââ¬â¢ll make much of him and exhibit him as an ââ¬Åhonorary Muslim.ââ¬Â But if an Ahmedi has the temerity to do so, we trot him off to jail for a year or two.
Similarly, all Christians in Pakistan use the salutation as- salaam-o-alaikum even among themselves, but if an Ahmedi does that it is a crime, duly punishable with imprisonment. He can say ââ¬Ënamasteââ¬â¢ or ââ¬Ësat siri akalââ¬â¢ if he likes, but not wish salaam to anyone which even Jews do when they say shalom. That is why I say that our Christians donââ¬â¢t count their blessings, something they are exhorted to do all the time by their faith.
A study of statements by government leaders reveals that Pakistan and its Muslim population have given unprecedented concessions and allowances to the minorities. Though if you ask the votaries of this claim to enumerate a few they are at a loss to do so. As for our maulvis, they think it is more than generous to let the minorities live in peace in the Muslim homeland. So what more do they want!
The whole atmosphere in the country as regards the attitude towards non-Muslims, as also the attitude of the adherents of one sect towards the followers of other sects, is so vitiated with intolerance that one now really marvels at what the Quaid-i-Azam did on Sunday, 17th of August 1947. (If I have the date correct).
On that day the Quaid and Miss Fatima Jinnah attended a special service in Karachiââ¬â¢s St. Patrickââ¬â¢s Cathedral. After the religious service, which was dedicated to the strength and welfare of the new state, Mr Jinnah reiterated his resolve before the Christians of the city that there would be absolutely no discrimination between Muslims and non-Muslims in Pakistan.
Elderly Christians and Parsis of Karachi recall his words fondly and remember how he assured them that Pakistan was as much their country as a new homeland for Muslims. Today they must be wondering which Pakistan the Quaid was talking about.
Can you imagine Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz attending a church service today? Of course it is unthinkable for President Pervez Musharraf to do so; he would never dare. With all their sincerity they wouldnââ¬â¢t venture anywhere near a church.
You can bet that on the birthday of the Father of the Nation next month, both the president and the PM will inform us that the best way to pay tribute to the Quaid-i-Azam is to follow in his footsteps. Are there different footsteps for the leaders and for the masses? Why donââ¬â¢t the two emulate his example, and as a symbolic gesture, attend a church service devoted to tolerance and mutual goodwill among various religions and various Muslim sects? The local Bishop would be happy to hold one. This would be far more effective than empty rhetoric and hollow slogans.
In the present state of affairs which, without doubt has been brought about over the years by our own leaders, the most important requirement is that the religious minorities and as well as the Muslim minority sects should feel safe and protected, and even privileged.
Of course there is no defence against individual acts of fanatics, but the government and the nation as a whole should
never allow themselves to fall below a certain level of civilized behaviour. Unfortunately the steps taken to reinforce society through Islamic principles
have only resulted in making fanatics of the whole Muslim population.
Some nine years ago there was Shantinagar, the Christian village in Southern Punjab, which was raided by Muslim zealots fed on false rumours set afloat without justification. They behaved like the Huns and laid the village waste. Nothing substantial was done by the PML government to either restore the confidence of the sufferers or bring the culprits to book. The then PM, Mian Nawaz Sharif, was in the habit of flying to the scene of a rape, but he didnââ¬â¢t consider it necessary to visit Shantinagar.
Then, probably in 1999, there was the abduction of a hundred haris ââ¬â apparently Hindu men, women and children ââ¬â in a part of Sindh. The purpose behind this brutal exercise was not clear, but if minority leaders had not raised the alarm, and a few good Muslims hadnââ¬â¢t shouted themselves hoarse, nothing would have been done to rectify the wrong.
A majority of the abducted were got freed, but who was behind their trauma and who compensated them for their mental torture? Votaries of the Shariat? It seems that Mr Liaquat Jatoi, Sindhââ¬â¢s chief minister at that time, was too busy doing the most important thing in the world, i.e. saving his government, so you canââ¬â¢t blame the poor fellow.
On a related piece on the subject last year, I had quoted from a long letter from a Christian woman to the columnist of a national Urdu daily. I shall not recount her complaints against Muslim bias and the insidious propaganda about non-Muslims, but I do want to repeat one sentence from it. She had said, ââ¬ÅLet me share a private thought with you.
I honestly believe that it is the prayers of us Christians that are sustaining Pakistan, otherwise you people would have finished it long ago by killing one another and anyone who disagrees with you.ââ¬Â Ominous words, I must say.
http://www.dawn.com/2006/11/29/op.htm#top