By Hassan Niazi
January 04,
2021
Light the
torches; join the mob; kill the infidels.
If national
mottos were an accurate representation of a nation, then these words would
replace unity, faith, discipline.
In the
district of Karak, located in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, the Hindu community has been
fighting for decades to restore the shrine of Shri Paramhans Ji Maharaj.
Initially destroyed at the hands of a local mob, the shrine was then illegally
occupied by a religious cleric who refused to vacate the property. Since then,
the Hindu community went through a Kafkaesque ordeal involving Jirgas, the
district administration, the Evacuee Property Trust Board, and the Ministry of
Religious Affairs to try to reclaim the shrine. It wasn’t until the Supreme
Court of Pakistan, in 2015, ordered the provincial government to restore and
reconstruct the shrine that the issue was finally put to rest.
But as
religious minorities have learned from this country, decades of work can be
burnt to ash by the words of one religious zealot.
Last
Wednesday, spurred on by a local cleric, the shrine was set ablaze and damaged
by a mob that also included members of the JUI-F. The FIR registered against
the cleric reports that he told the crowd that whoever died while demolishing
the mosque would be a martyr. This promise of paradise was enough to motivate
over a thousand people to descend upon the shrine and tear it apart.
This is not
an isolated incident. The list of incidents of violence against religious
minorities is long and full of loss.
Many of
these attacks are actually motivated by private disputes; religious animus is
merely a convenient weapon to wield when the dispute is with a member of a
religious minority. Aasia Bibi’s case was more about her act of drinking from a
communal cup that gave rise to an argument, the blasphemy allegation came
later. In 2013, a mob attacked a Christian neighbourhood in Lahore setting fire
to 150 houses and two churches after a local barber accused a Christian
sanitation worker of blasphemy shortly after a heated argument between them. In
2014, a dispute between lawyers and police in Jhang led to 68 lawyers being
accused of blasphemy by the police as a means to settle the score.
Much like
these incidents, the attack on the shrine in K-P was caused by a private
disagreement. In this case, a dispute regarding a contract for the shrine’s
extension.
Religion
has therefore become a weapon that allows people to settle personal vendettas.
Ably assisted by Pakistan’s many laws that have a zero tolerance policy for any
kind of disagreement with the majority religious faith. “Blasphemy has become a
political battle,” IA Rehman once said to The New York Times. “It is no longer
just a criminal or religious problem — it’s become a political issue that is
used to silence voices and create a climate of fear.”
These laws
are no doubt a problem, and their continued existence is a barrier to any
progress towards religious harmony in the country. But to focus only on laws
would be a shallow way of looking at things because this is a broader social
problem.
A problem
in which religious minorities are persecuted not just through violence, but
through discrimination that robs them of their dignity. Slurs against them are
common and freely used; and they are relegated to jobs that nobody else wants.
To be sure,
the government has responded to last week’s incident with arrests and
proclamations of accountability. However these are reactive measures to a
problem that requires proactive steps. Steps that no government, no political
party, has been willing to take since this country was created.
Nelson
Mandela once pointed out that no person is born hating another; they are taught
to hate. So, to counter hatred, we have to identify where hatred is nurtured.
Educational
institutions are one place where this occurs. In school textbooks, children are
taught how Christians, Hindus, and Jews are the natural enemies of Muslims, and
that it was Muslim heroes who vanquished the infidels from the land,
emancipating it from their tyranny. Eliminating these narratives before they
are taught to impressionable minds is one way to trim the numbers of future
lynch mobs. And if the government is insistent on making our children gulp down
even more religion through the single national curriculum, then it should at
least focus on Islam’s ideas of tolerance and respect for diversity.
Political
leaders must be held strictly to account for any peddling of hate, regardless
of whether hate helps rake in the votes. Last year, Fayyazul Hasan Chohan made
demeaning comments against Hindus which resulted in a mere slap on the wrist.
He was soon back in the Punjab cabinet. Hate speech, it appears, does not
disqualify a person from cabinet positions (meanwhile, holding a permanent
residence of another country means you have to step down from a special adviser
role).
We will
also have to address the socio-economic inequality that makes religious
minorities an easy prey. People are able to weaponise the law against religious
minorities because they often occupy the lowest rung of the socio-economic
ladder in Pakistan. In Sindh, for example, forced conversions happen in the
majority of cases against religious minorities who are trapped in the vicious
cycle of bonded labour.
This only
compounds the problem because the criminal justice system in Pakistan protects
you only if you have a specific social and economic status. In the absence of
money, power, or influence, the system is your worst enemy regardless of what
the law says.
Tackling
this problem will require the political will and vision to introduce a broad
swathe of legal and policy reforms. It cannot be solved by slapping on new laws
or by one court case. It is a hard road, but after letting this country’s
religious minorities suffer in neglect for decades, it is what we owe them.
Original
Headline: Faith as a weapon
Source: The Express Tribune
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-sectarianism/violence-religious-minorities-pakistan-–/d/123995
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