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Battle for Pakistan

 

Battle for Pakistan's soul

A titanic battle for Pakistan's soul is raging in the country. The fate of this battle will decide the destiny of Pakistan. This battle will decide whether Pakistan evolves into a democratic, moderate, enlightened and progressive state in conformity with the ideals of a modern Islamic welfare state espoused by Allama Iqbal and the Quaid-i-Azam or whether it degenerates into an authoritarian, extremist, obscurantist and retrogressive state wedded to Islamic rituals but devoid of its true revolutionary and reformist spirit.
In this epic struggle, the forces of religious extremism symbolised by the Taliban and other reactionary religious groups and parties are on the one side while Pakistan's mainstream political parties, enlightened and progressive religious parties, most of the educated classes and, in fact, the silent majority of the people, which has traditionally toed a moderate line, are on the other. This is not the time to sit on the fence. This is not the time to temporise or to play politics. It is incumbent on the people of Pakistan and their leaders to take an unambiguous and vigorous stand in favour of moderation, enlightenment and progress. They should not allow a small minority of misguided and semi-educated people lacking an understanding of Islam's reformist and progressive message to dictate to the rest of us.
It is high time the state and its various organs, specially the armed forces, established the writ of the government if all efforts to persuade the extremist and prone-to-violence religious forces to lay down arms and operate within the framework of Pakistan's constitution and law fail. Needless to say that the government must adopt, based on national consensus, a comprehensive policy to fight the menace of religious extremism and terrorism including a judicious combination of political, economic, developmental, educational and administrative initiatives while keeping the option of the use of force as a measure of the last resort. The inability of the government to take effective measures to roll back and overcome the current wave of religious extremism sweeping the country will sow the seeds of its disintegration. There is no room, therefore, for complacency on the part of the country's leadership. The challenge must be faced head on and the cancerous growth of religious extremism and terrorism must be rooted out.
Pakistan was dreamt and founded as a modern Islamic welfare state and not as a theocracy. It is surprising that a state founded on the progressive interpretation of Islam rooted in the dynamic principle of Ijtihad as advocated by Allama Iqbal has fallen victim to the ugly phenomenon of religious retrogression. The Taliban and other religious groups of that ilk are the very anti-thesis of progress and an invitation to the stagnation of the Islamic civilisation. In a major deviation from the teachings of the Holy Quran and the Sunnah, they are opposed to the quest for knowledge. What else can one make of their opposition to the education for girls? Instead of using their mind to find solutions to the challenges of the modern world within the framework of Islam's basic principles, they rely on hollow rituals and archaic dogmas for guidance in today's life. The acceptance of their thinking would be a recipe for disaster for the Muslims

(The Nation :By Javid Husain: Published: April 28, 2009)

 


 

 

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