Pakistan: terror war bolsters Islamism, nationhood.
Malik, Mustafa
A recent visit to Pakistan reminded me of the movie Gone With the
Wind. The country where I lived and worked has been hit by turbulence
that has blown away many of the symbols of secularism and Western
lifestyle that once characterized its urban life. Gone were the bars and
dance clubs, the love songs playing in restaurants, the movie posters
showing scantily dressed actresses, and the Western women tourists
strolling sidewalks in bikinis. Today stores and buses in Pakistan
resonate with Quranic verses flowing out of cassette players. On college
campuses coeds with elaborate hairdos have been replaced by women in
head-scarves. Posh hotels known for their joyful musical performances
have discontinued them; some have added prayer rooms. In the capital,
Islamabad, I asked a journalist colleague what had brought about this
cultural revolution.
"Wars," replied Salahuddin Mahmud, a former editor at
several Pakistani newspapers. "Your wars on terror and against
Russia and our wars with India."
External conflicts have doubtless ratcheted up Pakistan's
Islamization drive. Aren't there, however, systemic sources of this
phenomenon as well? What is Islamism doing to the Pakistani polity?
In this essay I analyze these questions. I argue that Pakistan was
not really a nation when it was born but is evolving into one, and I
focus on two of the key variables that are effecting this
transformation. One is the so-called "war on terror" and other
wars; the other is modernization. Both warfare and modernity have
bolstered Islamism, and Islamism is helping strengthen Pakistani
nationhood.
Islamism seeks to mold Muslim life and societies, in both private
and public spheres, according to Islamic values and norms. The process
through which this takes place is called Islamization. Islamist programs
are being carried out by myriad organizations around the world: Salafism
and the Muslim Brotherhood in several Arab countries; Hamas in
Palestine; Hezbollah in Lebanon; Al-Islah in Yemen; Jamaat-i-Islami in
Pakistan, India and Bangladesh; al-Qaeda worldwide; the Taliban in
Afghanistan and Pakistan; and so on. Islamism repudiates foreign rule or
domination, which it considers an offense to the Islamic umma (the
global Muslim community) and an obstacle to the Islamization of Muslim
life and societies. The Taliban (plural of talib, student) are the
largest of Pakistan's anti-American Islamist guerrilla groups, made
up of current and former students from Islamic seminaries or madrasas.
They express solidarity with the Taliban in Afghanistan in their
struggle to expel NATO forces from that country. Most Islamist
organizations espouse the democratic process. Some, such as al-Qaeda and
the Taliban, resort to violence if they perceive it necessary to attain
their goals.
Among my recent encounters with Islamism in Pakistan was a visit to
Gomal University in the northwest. On October 10, 2007, I visited
Muhammad Farid Khan, the university's vice chancellor. Benazir
Bhutto, the secularist former prime minister (who would later be
assassinated in Rawalpindi), had been scheduled to return to Pakistan a
week later after an eight-year self-imposed exile. She had been backed
by the United States and had publicly committed herself to fighting
anti-American militant groups in Pakistan. I wanted to ask Khan and his
colleagues, among other things, what her return would do to the steady
surge of Islamist militancy in Pakistan.
The smile on the vice chancellor's face vanished as he read my
calling card. He had thought I was "from Pakistan," said the
university administrator. Our common friend at Peshawar University who
had set up the interview on the phone had not mentioned that I had been
working for American newspapers and think tanks for the past
quarter-century.
Khan said apologetically that he couldn't "discuss
anything" with me. I should have known that "nobody here would
talk politics with an American journalist." He was "worried
about your safety," he continued. My short-sleeved shirt, jeans and
sneakers had marked me as an "outsider." I should "leave
the area as soon as you can" and keep quiet while there. The Rose
Hotel in the nearby town of Dera Ismail Khan, where I had checked in,
was known as a favorite of foreigners, and the Taliban "keep an
eye" on its guests.
I knew that the Taliban in the tribal areas were targeting
Westerners, other foreigners and all journalists. The seven "tribal
agencies," inhabited mainly by the Pashtun (used for both singular
and plural, meaning people whose mother tongue is Pashtu), enjoy wide
autonomy from the Pakistan government in administrative and security
matters. The Pashtun make up about a quarter of Pakistan's
population and 40 percent of Afghanistan's, and almost the entirety
of the Taliban movement in both countries. So before visiting the
Mohmond and Bajaur tribal agencies, I grew a bushy beard and dressed as
a typical Pashtun--flowing trousers and shirt, a Chitrali hat and
sandals. I left my U.S. passport, credit cards and calling cards in my
room at the Civil Officers' Mess in Peshawar.
Gomal University is outside the tribal areas, 65 kilometers from
the nearest tribal agency, South Waziristan. I had not thought that I
would have to worry about my American citizenship, media connections and
"outsider" clothes there. Hemayetullah (he had no second
name), chair of the university's agronomy department, offered to
drive me to the nearest Daewoo Company bus depot so I could make the
reservation for my journey to a safer location, Peshawar or Islamabad. I
accepted his offer and bought a bus ticket to Peshawar six hours later
and returned to the Rose Hotel. At the reception I learned that a barber
shop in town had been attacked because men were shaving beards there.
Some Islamists (and traditionalists) consider shaving a beard a sin. I
also met a white woman wearing a headscarf. She would not give her name
but said she was from Britain, a relative of a couple who had been
abducted from Dera Ismail Khan several weeks before. She was visiting
the town "for just a few hours," accompanied by two guards,
besides the driver of her rented car. I suspected that she may have had
some leads about her abducted relatives. Why was she wearing the
headscarf? I asked.
"I like it," she said. "It's my way of saying I
respect Pakistani culture."
As I waited for my Peshawar bus at Daewoo's waiting room, a
news bulletin flashed on the TV screen: The previous day, October 9,
bomb blasts in Peshawar's Hussein Plaza CD market had damaged
nearly 40 shops and injured more than 20 people. Taliban attacks on
symbols of secularism and Western interests in public places have been
daily news. Targets of such violence included music shops, movie
theaters, barber shops that shave beards, Western business places, and
so on. The campaign spanned much of the Northwest Frontier Province
(NWFP) and some parts of the rest of Pakistan. The news clip, repeated
continually, said authorities in Peshawar, the NWFP capital, were on
"high alert," having received intelligence about possible
further militant attacks.
I realized that Peshawar might not be all that safe and changed my
ticket for a trip to Islamabad, a 10-hour ride. I had to wait eight more
hours for that bus, which seemed an eternity in the crowded and dirty
waiting room.
MODELS OF TOLERANCE
Islamist movements are essentially a reaction to Western hegemony
over Muslim societies and to Islamic traditionalism. They could be the
early, untidy phase of the renewal of the Islamic religion and
civilization. Just as American invasions--following on the heels of
European colonization of the Muslim world--have triggered Islamist
movements, Ottoman invasions of southeastern and central
Europe--following the Moorish conquest of Iberia--stirred Franciscan,
Dominican and other Christian religious movements. "The fear that
this Islamic aggression engendered in Europe," writes the
Reformation historian Diarmaid MacCulloch, "was an essential
background to the Reformation." (1) The early years of the
Reformation were much more brutal than anything caused so far by
Islamism. In Germany, 250,000 Christians slaughtered other Christians
during the first four years after Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to
the door of the Wittenberg church. People would walk 20 miles to watch
heretics burn at the stake in Calvinist Geneva. Extremist and violent at
its dawn, the Reformation was a prelude to the renewal and
secularization of European societies. Islamism, too, could spur the
renewal of Muslim societies through which at least a major swath of
Muslim life would be secularized.
Islamism in Pakistan and elsewhere cannot be understood without
appreciating Islam's public and private spaces, as Western scholars
and media would describe them. Prayer, fasting and paying zakat (alms),
and the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca) which mainly involve Muslims'
relationship with God, constitute Islam's private sphere. The
public sphere may include activities that have spiritual merit, but it
may also consist of public statements or the actors' social and
political positions. Public activities would include participating in
programs to promote an Islamic political or social agenda, defending
Muslim communities and Islamic causes against non-Muslims, adopting
"Islamic" social behavior and dress code, and so on.
The idea that religion should, or can, be confined to a private
space is partly a reaction to Christian Europe's religious wars,
the Inquisition and pogroms, which preceded the Enlightenment. Religion
is privatized for good reason in Western societies. It does not seem
practical in most of the East, which has not been similarly traumatized
by religious feuds. Religious or faith-based political movements have
been part of the public space in many Eastern societies. India's
Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata party ruled the "world's
largest democracy" for more than a decade, and Buddhist monks in
Myanmar have led the largest public demonstrations against that
country's brutal military regime. In India, secularism does not
mean privatization or renunciation of religion. It means "equal
treatment of all religions."
A growing number of sociologists such as Peter Berger, Grace Davie,
Steve Bruce, Leyla Benhabib, Jose Casanova and Daniele Hervieu-Leger
have debunked the argument for the privatization of religion in all
societies. Hervieu-Leger has said that individuals live meaningful lives
through a chain of memory and tradition underpinning society. Religion
has historically been the core of tradition. Modern societies, she
added, are not more rational than those of the past for being more
secular, but because they suffer from a kind of collective amnesia from
the loss of a religious memory. (2) To this Davie adds: "Modern
societies may well corrode their traditional religious base; at the same
time, however, the same societies open up spaces or sectors that only
religions can fill." (3)
If so, Islam's public space represents the chain of memories
surrounding essential Islamic principles, embodied in Muslim ethnic and
national communities, that lend meaning to Muslim life. Muslim
collectivities with strong Islamic norms and values in their public
space could, of course, collide with one another and with non-Muslim
collectivities. But so do those with nonreligious public agendas and
policies. The secularized public space in post-Enlightenment Western
societies has arguably been history's most violent, especially in
the twentieth century. The secularized Western nations have spawned
myriad colonial wars, the first and second world wars, the Holocaust,
and countless covert and overt postcolonial conflicts and invasions,
including those raging today in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Islamism in Pakistan is part of the global religious ferment,
fueled in part by the understanding that "the intolerance ingrained
in modernity [is a] source of counterintolerance," strife fueled by
religion and ethnicity. (4) The challenge for the twenty-first century
is to search for sociopolitical models that would facilitate not only
peace among state systems, but tolerance among cultures, creeds and
ideologies within and across societies.
Foremost among those creeds is Islamism, which needs to be
appreciated, engaged and accommodated in the global system if this
century is to be spared some of the convulsions of the last. Pakistan is
a major venue of Islamism. An examination of the Islamist upsurge there
and its impact on Pakistani society and polity would illuminate some of
the ways Islamists could help renew and revitalize Muslim societies.
THE "MOTH-EATEN" STATE
The struggle to create Muslim homelands in the overwhelmingly Hindu
Indian subcontinent began as an anti-colonial movement in the 1920s
under the leadership of Mohammad Ali Jinnah, an Anglicized,
Oxford-educated Muslim lawyer. A larger movement to rid an undivided
India of British colonial rule was led by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, or
Mahatma Gandhi, an Oxford-educated Hindu lawyer.
The Muslim struggle, waged through the All-India Muslim League,
initially aimed at preserving Muslim rights and interests in an
undivided India. Eventually, Jinnah came to the conclusion that what he
considered legitimate Muslim rights would be trampled by a "brute
majority" of Hindus in a single Indian state, and the subsequent
rise of Hindu nationalism in India and the Hinduization of Indian
culture would partly bear him out. Hence he envisioned two
"independent states" in India's Muslim-majority zones. In
1940, the proposal was incorporated in a resolution adopted in Lahore
(the "Lahore Resolution") in what is now Pakistan by Muslim
leaders from all over the subcontinent. Like all other anti-colonial
movements of the day, the Indian Muslim liberation struggle unfolded in
the heyday of the Age of Nationalism, which originated in modern Europe.
Jinnah, a product of that Europe, argued that British Indian Muslims
were a "nation" and hence deserved a national state or states.
Countering Jinnah's argument, Gandhi's Hindu-majority
Indian National Congress pushed for a division of Bengal--the proposed
eastern Muslim state under the Lahore Resolution--so that its
Hindu-majority territory could be added to the new Hindu-majority state
of India. In 1946 in Delhi, fearing that a truncated Bengal would not be
viable as a sovereign state, a convention of Indian Muslim legislators
amended the Lahore Resolution to call for one single Indian Muslim state
instead of two, to be called Pakistan. Pakistan's eastern province,
East Bengal or East Pakistan, would be separated from West Pakistan by a
thousand miles of Indian territory. Jinnah was deeply disappointed at
being handed what he called a "moth-eaten Pakistan."
In his many statements, the secularist Jinnah argued that Islamic
faith, culture and tradition formed an adequate basis for Pakistani
nationhood. He apparently discounted the reality that the citizens of
his Muslim state would speak different languages, belong to widely
different ethnic groups and live in different territories and, moreover,
that East Pakistan would have no land link to West Pakistan.
Among the most daring aspects of the Pakistan project was the
concept that the Muslim polity would be a British-style secular
nation-state. Three days before Pakistan was inaugurated, its founding
father said this before its Constituent Assembly:
You are free to go to your temples; you are free to go to your
mosques or any other places of worship in the state of Pakistan.
You may belong to any religion or caste or creed that has nothing
to do with the business of the state. As you know, history shows
that in England conditions some time ago were much worse that those
prevailing in India today. The Roman Catholics and Protestants
persecuted each other.... The people of England in course of time
had to face the realities of the situation and had to discharge the
responsibilities and burdens placed upon them by the government of
their country, and they went through that fire step by step. Today
you might say with justice that Roman Catholics and Protestants do
not exist. What exists now is that every man is a citizen, and
equal citizen of Great Britain, and they are all members of the
nation. Now I think you should keep that in front of us as our
ideal and you will find that in course of time Hindus would cease
to be Hindus and Muslims would cease to be Muslims, not in a
religious sense, because that is the personal faith of each
individual, but in the political sense as citizens of the state?
Nationalism is a post-Enlightenment movement, and nations when they
evolved in Western Europe and North America were underpinned by
liberalism, the ideology that is concerned mainly about individuals who
would be barred from public assertion of religious rules and norms, and
pursuing happiness would be the overriding motif of their lives. The
nationalists discounted religion and ethnicity, as Jinnah's
statement shows, and demanded that the citizen's primary
relationship rest with his nation-state. The Western nations, evolved
over centuries as primordial ethnic communities, were assimilated into
"imagined communities," partly by the force of state power and
partly through the industrial division of labor. In such
"civic" nations, the members' relationships to the state
and one another would be utilitarian rather than organic. (6)
Outside the West, there have been "ethnic nations" in
which the "emphasis [is] on a community of birth and native
culture." (7) All historically developed nation-states, whether
civic or ethnic, are characterized by common "high cultures,"
each centered on a core ethnic group, transformed through modernization.
Pakistan, like many other postcolonial "nations," belongs
to a different category of collectivities. It was created almost
overnight as a patchwork of a half-dozen major ethnic communities that
had never been part of a nation-state. Jinnah may have realized the
perils of such an enterprise, but he was forced into it. He was leading
the struggle to find a political framework in which major segments of
British Indian Muslims could live without the fear of cultural, economic
or political domination by a Hindu community with more than three times
their population. He tried for decades to achieve that goal within an
all-Indian federation or confederation. Having failed, he opted for the
separate Muslim state. The problem was that his Pakistan was a
multi-ethnic state without a core ethnic group. Its citizens owed their
primary allegiance to their ethnic or tribal communities or to Islam.
The state's artificial boundaries ran through some of these
communities, among them the Pashtun tribes, who have been split between
Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Some of Pakistan's five major ethnic communities began
clashing over economic, political and cultural interests right from the
beginning. East Pakistan seceded in 1971 to become the independent state
of Bangladesh, after complaining for years of suppression and
exploitation under military and civilian dictatorships dominated by the
elites of West Pakistan's Punjabi community.
In what remains of Pakistan today, the province of Punjab provides
roughly 75 percent of the armed forces and government bureaucracy. The
country has endured continual spasms of military dictatorship, during
which Punjabi domination of the three other provinces--Sindh, the NWFP
and Balochistan--becomes especially harsh. This has been the case during
the U.S.-sponsored "war on terror," waged by the
Punjabi-dominated army. The campaign has exacerbated Pashtun-Punjabi
ethnic tensions as the mostly Punjabi troops cracked down on the mostly
Pashtun Taliban and other Islamist militants. When the shorter,
darker-skinned Punjabi soldiers engage the tall, fair-skinned Pashtun
guerrillas, often killing civilians, the encounters take on ethnic
significance.
Hemayetullah (a namesake of the Gomal University professor, a
native of the South Waziristan tribal agency teaching English at Kuchlak
College in Quetta) narrated such an incident. In 2005, Pashtun Taliban
guerrillas lobbed grenades at an army jeep on a road near Wana, the main
South Waziristan town, killing two Punjabi soldiers. The army troops had
been sent out to fight the Taliban. The remaining troops, all Punjabis,
jumped out to shoot the attackers but found none. The unit chief spotted
a young bystander grinning and yelled at his men: "Kill him! He,
too, is a [expletive] Pathan (Pashtun)."
A shot rang out, killing the young Pashtun. As the army jeep sped
away, the dead man's relatives and neighbors fanned out looking for
Punjabis, often identified as darker-skinned, chubby and wearing slacks
and collared shirts. Luckily, their passion cooled before they found
any. (8)
The Pakistani government of President Pervez Musharraf denounces
the Pakistani Taliban, who support Afghan guerrillas fighting NATO
forces in Afghanistan, as "terrorists." The Taliban, on the
other hand, call their anti-NATO and anti-regime movement
"jihad," a struggle sanctioned by Islam. Ever since the
inception of Pakistan, Islam has been the rallying cry for campaigns
against foreign hegemony and conflicts with foreign powers. Most
Pakistanis view America's "war on terror" in that light.
They ridicule it as itself being terrorism; military operations
purported to target the militants usually kill innocent Pakistanis. Some
call the anti-Taliban campaign a "war of terror," and the
Taliban's attacks on the Pakistani troops chasing them
"counterterrorism." (9)
Many Pakistanis view their conflicts with alien forces as a defense
of Islam, partly because Islam permeates Pakistan's national
culture and is almost the only glue holding its disparate ethnic
communities together. It conjures up President George W. Bush's
description of 9/11 as an attack on "our freedom," and British
Prime Minister Tony Blair's characterization of the July 11, 2005,
bomb blasts in London as an offense against "our way of life."
The Taliban's anti-American (NATO forces in Afghanistan are
seen as serving American interests) jihad is mainly a Pashtun cause that
draws its rationale from the Islamic doctrine of defense against foreign
occupation or hegemony. Nearly 95 percent of the Taliban are Pashtun.
(10) Few Pakistanis believe that the Pakistani government--or, for that
matter, the United States--has a chance to defeat the Taliban because
almost the entire Pashtun population in Pakistan and Afghanistan
pulsates with Islamic and jihadi fervor.
"You can't separate Islam from Pashtun life," said
commentator Rahimullah Yusufzai, adding that Islamic inspiration would
enable the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban to wear out the NATO forces in
Afghanistan as well as the governments in Islamabad and Kabul. (11) For
the Pashtun, Islam is not just a faith but everyday life. In Bajaur
tribal agency, if a man misses a Friday congregational prayer, villagers
would "visit his house after the prayer to find out if he is
sick." (12) Pashtun Muslim men would not miss the Friday prayer as
long as they are able to walk to the mosque.
In fact, Islamic values have largely shaped the cultures and
political outlook of all Pakistani ethnic communities. Non-Pashtun
Pakistanis may be less fastidious about "religious" practices
in the private sphere of life, but their commitment to some
"Islamic causes" in the public sphere could be as strong or
stronger than that of the Pashtun. Seventy percent of the Pashtun, for
example, pray regularly (three to five times daily), while only 35
percent of the Punjabis do so. (13) Yet when it comes to the Kashmiri
Muslims' struggle for independence from India, the Punjabis have
been far more supportive than the Pashtun. Many of my Punjabi Muslim
friends in Britain are lackadaisical about prayer and fasting in the
Islamic holy month of Ramadan, but they were in the vanguard of Islamic
organizations there. Some of them led the Muslim campaign in Britain
against the publication of the novel The Satanic Verses, in which
Muhammad and his wives are maligned.
The proclivity of many Pakistani youths to "fight for Islam
[has] increased when their Islamic practices are decreasing," said
Jamil Ahmed, a Peshawar University anthropologist. (14) Some Pakistanis
identify anti-Americanism as "Islamic spirit." Islamic spirit
was instrumental in the creation of Pakistan. That spirit was reinforced
by Pakistan's four wars with India and the Afghanistan war in which
Pakistan was America's key ally. Successive Pakistani governments
have promoted that spirit among the public and armed forces as part of
the nation's defense preparations.
The Pakistani military high command, in particular, inculcates
jihadi spirit among troops through its training curriculum and public
exhortations. The commanders instruct the soldiers about "the
'ideology of Pakistan' and the 'glory of Islam' ...
[and sound] more like high priests than soldiers when they urge men to
rededicate themselves to the sacred cause" of defending Pakistan
through their "determination, courage and high ideals in the best
tradition of Islam." (15)
Because of the umma fraternity, the jihadi spirit often transcends
artificial state boundaries. During a 1989 trip, I saw Pakistani
mujahideen returning from Afghanistan offering thanksgiving prayers for
their victory over Soviet Communists. "We were Arabs, Pathans,
Punjabis, Sindhis, Bangladeshis," one of them told me, "but we
were all brothers in Islam on the battlefields.... We fought the
infidels in the path of Allah.... Allah gives victory to the believers
who fight in His Path." Several other mujahideen (plural of
mujahid, participant in a jihad) I interviewed echoed his comment.
NEW MUJAHIDEEN
I asked several mujahideen why 93,000 Pakistani Muslim soldiers had
to surrender to the mainly Hindu Indian army in the Bangladesh war 18
years before. Their answers: Pakistani commanders did not go into that
war in the name of Islam; Gen. Aga Muhammad Yahya Khan, then
Pakistan's president, was a "drunkard and adulterer"; the
Pakistani army was not sufficiently inspired with jihadi ideals, and so
on. (16) They obviously attributed their victory to God and defeat to
human agency because Islamic scripture had taught them to do so.
Apart from the Pakistani cricket team's international matches,
warfare is the only occasion on which the ethnically divided Pakistani
nation comes together. It is not unique to Pakistan. Historically,
warfare has promoted nationalism and national integration everywhere.
"From the very beginning," says Michael Howard, "the
principle of nationalism was almost indissolubly linked, both in theory
and practice, with the idea of war.... War has been a principal
determinant in the shaping of nation-states." Wars were
instrumental in welding disparate and mutually antagonistic ethnic
communities into the nation-states of Britain, France, Germany, Belgium,
the Netherlands and so forth. In fact, as Howard further notes,
"it's hard to think of any European nation-state, with the
possible exception of Norway," which was not the product of warfare
or other forms of violence. (17)
Warfare has played a particularly integrating role for Muslim
Pakistan because its adversaries in the conflicts have always been
non-Muslims. The most recent of those conflicts is the American-driven
"war on terror." Unlike the others, the campaign against the
Taliban and other Pakistani militant groups has been waged by the
Pakistani government. Yet most Pakistanis view it as sponsored by the
United States, and they consider the NATO operations in Afghanistan as
foreign aggression, which they say they have a right and duty to resist.
The Taliban and many other Pakistanis see no difference between
their Afghanistan jihad today and the one Pakistani youths fought
against the Soviet invaders of Afghanistan in the 1980s. "The
terrorists of today," said Pakistani Senator Enver M. Baig,
"were the mujahideen of yesterday." Guerrillas who fought the
Soviets in Afghanistan alongside the Americans were "known in
America as mujahideen," which American media translated as
"freedom fighters." The lawmaker from the late Benazir
Bhutto's Pakistan People's party added that Pakistani
guerrillas who are trying to help rid Afghanistan of Western tutelage are "today's mujahideen." (18)
Some Pakistanis say the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq are
clashes between "a race" (white) and "a religion"
(Islam). Some argue that they are between two faiths (Islam and
Christianity). Some Pakistani intellectuals say they are part of Samuel
Huntington's "clash of civilizations." Many dismiss the
argument that NATO troops in Afghanistan have been "invited"
by a democratically elected Afghan government. British colonial
authorities in India, they point out, had had native governments
installed through free and fair elections in 1937 and 1946 that did not
legitimize their colonialism.
Pakistanis generally do not think their country has a stake in the
conflict between the United States and al-Qaeda, though they say they
empathized with the Americans over 9/11. Many would like their
law-enforcement agencies to search for any al-Qaeda fugitives inside
Pakistan who may be wanted for terrorist activities. Yet they resent
their government's anti-militant military operations, especially as
those operations are believed to be conducted on American orders and
kill innocent people.
The anti-Taliban campaign has sparked a great deal of public
resentment against the Pakistani army, whose stock was already low
because of its support for successive coups, losses of wars with India,
and proclivity to acquire property and money. In the 1970s, if a retired
army colonel in Karachi invited you for lunch at his home, you would
likely have visited him in a poorly furnished apartment, where he would
have taken great pride in reminiscing about his military career and
showing off his medals and testimonials. Today you would visit him in a
lovely single-family house with expensive rugs and furniture, a
manicured lawn and a garage with two cars; and he would be bragging
about his estate, his partnership in a business and his children in
American universities.
The army is especially criticized for its perceived subservience to
America. The United States has coddled all four Pakistani military
dictatorships, and top military officers--including the current army
chief of staff, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani--have been pro-American.
Washington has heavily invested in the Pakistani military establishment.
Of the $2 billion in U.S. aid to Pakistan in 2006, 90 percent went into
defense. Hence the Pakistan army was America's bulwark against the
Soviet Union's southward thrust during the Cold War and is now
fighting the U.S. anti-terror campaign inside Pakistan. "Pakistan
is a pro-American army," goes a popular joke, "that is holding
a Muslim nation hostage!" The military's American connection
is especially disdained because of its association with the "war on
terror." The campaign has got Pakistani soldiers killing Pakistani
citizens, and vice versa. Secondly, it shows Pakistani troops fighting
for America, when the United States is more widely resented in Pakistan
than ever.
Because of this, Musharraf, the spearhead in the anti-Taliban
drive, is the most hated Pakistani ruler ever. "Musharraf has sold
our independence to America," said Nuzhat Firdous, who teaches
social anthropology at the College of Home Economics in Lahore. (19)
Hence even though the "anti-terror" campaign has been
conducted by Pakistani forces, it has galvanized Pakistanis across their
ethnic divides against the United States and is helping bolster
Pakistani nationhood. The Islamists, who include educated youths adept
in modern communications skills, are disseminating anti-Americanism and
using it to promote their causes.
Modernity is helping spread Islamism most effectively among the
Pakistanis whom it has displaced from their native cultural niche:
youths who have left the countryside in quest of education, jobs and
business in towns and cities. In their native villages, they were known
by their affiliations with their families, tribes, villages, mosques and
so forth. In the urban polyglot environment, they face an identity
crisis, and they build a new identity based on the beliefs, values and
norms they cultivated at home and in the mosque. Those values and rules
of conduct derive from Islam. This is why the quest for modern life and
an Islamic identity go hand-in-hand in Pakistan and in many other Muslim
countries. "Modernity," said sociologist Fauzia Saleem,
"has made Muslims more conscious of their Muslim identity."
(20) But this Muslim identity is different from the one to which these
youths were introduced in their village homes and mosques. They bring
their native Islamic values to their new haunts--factories, offices,
social gatherings, and political campaigns and parties--where
interactions with different lifestyles, even if Islamic, transform their
attitudes toward Islam and the world. Modernizing Islam is by its nature
Islamism, an evolving creed most visible in public space. And its appeal
is greatest among a particular category of youths, those from the
lower-middle class who have migrated from the village to the urban
social setting. A survey has found that 62 percent of the members of the
premier Pakistani Islamist political party, Jamaat-i-Islami, in Punjab
belong to the lower-middle class. (21)
Some non-Muslim postcolonial societies seem to be readily embracing
a more secular lifestyle. Why, then, are so many modernizing Pakistani
Muslims (like many of their fellow-believers elsewhere) recycling their
traditional Islamic values into Islamism? One reason is that, unlike
other major religions (Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism
and Shintoism), Islam emerged with a panoply of sociopolitical concepts
and institutions, built by the Medinese state under the Prophet Muhammad
and the first four caliphs. "Median memory," observes Peter
Mandaville, a perceptive sociologist of Islam, "distant yet
tangible, is pulling at the modern Muslim mind like a magnet. We might
invoke here Lawrence Durrell's description of Alexandria in the
1930s as 'a city half-imagined, yet wholly real'." (22)
These values are embedded in the Islamic consciousness. Many of them
collide powerfully with Western political philosophy and norms, pulling
the modernizing youth back into the Islamic epistemological framework.
Modernity, coupled with globalization, is also promoting the
"translocality" of Islamic sociopolitical norms and thus
"foster[ing] the presence of Islam in the public sphere."
Islamism today "would appear to challenge the conventional dualism
between public and private." (23)
In Pakistan, modernity's Islamizing trend is clashing with an
older, secular one that encompasses the country's powerful feudal,
military and bureaucratic elites. It spans the top echelons of the
leading political parties, the Pakistan Peoples party (PPP) and the two
factions of the Pakistan Muslim League.
The secular Pakistani elites are heirs to the colonial-era
feudal-administrative class, and they make up barely 5% of the Pakistani
population, (24) among whom 500 "culturally and socially
intertwined" people, according to author Stephen P. Cohen, exercise
effective power in the military, politics and the economy. (25) The
social status of this class has undergone a striking transformation
since independence. The grandparents of its members were entrenched in
local communities. They mostly went to local schools, lived in the
countryside and had daily contact with peasants, tenants, laundry men,
cobblers, milkmen, mailmen and others who served them and lived around
them. The majority of the contemporary secular elites are
college-educated townspeople, many of them educated in the West. They
have not only lost their roots in society but are estranged from the
upwardly mobile middle and lower-middle classes, who have an Islamist
orientation.
"There is a deep divide between the Westernized elites and the
vernacular elites," said Mukhtar Ahmed Ali, head of a research and
development NGO in Islamabad. "They are not talking to each
other." (26) The upper ranks of the PPP and the Muslim League
factions belong to these rootless secular elites.
The absence of roots among the masses and their estrangement from
vernacular elites has not, so far, loosened these elites' grip on
power. They retain their long-established links to key centers of power,
especially the army. The Pakistani army, despite the occasional
elections, has maintained its stranglehold on government since the late
1950s and cultivates corrupt and acquisitive politicians. "There is
a growing disenchantment among the general public with the behavior of
the political class," says Ayesha Siddiqa, author of a best-selling
book on the Pakistani military. Because of the public antipathy for
them, "politicians are easily co-opted by the military rather than
playing the political game through fair means." (27)
Even many of the popular politicians are not enamored of the
democratic process. The reason: There has not been a single election in
Pakistan since 1970 that has not been rigged. "The whole
[democratic] process has lost credibility," said Sajid Ali, chair
of the philosophy department at Punjab University. "The army rigs
elections regularly.... Politicians are just puppets" of the army
and other power brokers. (28)
Having been fired twice as prime minister at the behest of the
military and knowing the U.S. clout behind the Pakistani army brass,
Benazir Bhutto secured American backing before returning to Pakistan in
October 2007 to face parliamentary elections. The United States, looking
to put a democratic face to its "war on terror," got Musharraf
to immunize Bhutto against a string of corruption cases so she could
lead the PPP in the elections. She was killed in a suicide attack during
that election campaign.
Bhutto, a corrupt, wealthy and Westernized scion of a feudal
family, symbolized Pakistan's secular elites and their rise to
power in alliance with the army and America. Even though this social
segment still holds onto the levers of power, the mostly Islamized lower
classes are showing growing impatience with it. Sajid Ali, among other
Pakistani intellectuals, suspects that the time is coming soon when the
increasingly assertive lower classes will challenge the corrupt and
repressive establishment, spawning instability.
However, Pakistan is in better shape than it was two decades ago to
weather a level of disorder. Pakistan could come unglued, however, if
the military decides to let go of the country rather than its power, as
it did in 1971, when it refused to cede power to an elected
parliamentary majority from East Pakistan, prompting its secession.
While a period of instability may accompany the resumption of the
democratic process, the nation's increased sense of
solidarity--thanks to both the conflicts of external origin and
Islamization--should help prevent its unraveling. After their encounters
with the Punjabi-dominated army troops, the Pashtun Taliban sometimes
denounce "the Punjabis," but not Pakistan.
The prospect of external and externally orchestrated conflicts may,
however, be diminishing. Many Pakistanis are already discounting an
Indian military threat; Pakistan's more than two dozen nuclear
warheads have given them a sense of security. Pakistan has fought three
of its four wars with India over the disputed state of Jammu and Kashmir and lost all of them. Most Pakistanis now believe that there is no
military solution to the dispute. Instead of worrying about India's
military juggernaut, they now envy its rise to the status of a global
economic power.
The Pakistani military and intelligentsia doubtless have among
their ranks many virulent anti-Indian hawks, among them my old friend
Majid Nizami, editor and publisher of the Nawa-i-Waqt newspaper in
Lahore. He would like to announce a "nuclear first strike"
doctrine against India to neutralize its preponderance in conventional
and nuclear military forces. (29) Still, an overwhelming majority of
Pakistanis realize the futility of massive military expenditure; they
want peace and economic collaboration with India. "You can't
change your neighbors," said Umbreen Javaid, chair of the Punjab
University political science department. "It's necessary to
find mutually beneficial ways to live with [the Indians]. We need
collaboration with India in trade and other non-military aspects of
national security." (30)
CONCLUSION
The "war on terror" is likely to be winding down as well.
It is facing strong public resistance nationwide. The perception that
America is on an anti-Islamic crusade is widespread and a major source
of the unpopularity of the drive against the Taliban and al-Qaeda.
Pakistan was created in the name of Islam, and Pakistanis are always
leery of the real and perceived enemies of the faith and the umma. Many
Pakistanis echo Senator Baig's view that America's invasions
and hegemony in the Muslim world are tantamount to attacks on the umma
and Islamic civilization. They say America's professed desire to
democratize Muslim societies is a smokescreen to hide its real designs
in key Muslim countries: having subservient governments, military bases,
markets for U.S. goods and cheap oil for the West. For many Pakistanis,
Islam and the umma are a greater priority than democracy, which mostly
serves the corrupt elites.
"People in Pakistan," said Yusufzai, "come out on
the street ... when Islam is attacked anywhere. They don't come out
on the street when democracy is attacked in Pakistan." (31)
The largest Pakistani public protests of the decade were staged in
2006 over the publication of the "Muhammad cartoons" in a
Danish newspaper, perceived as an offense to Islam. They were not over
the 2007 assassination of Benazir Bhutto, who led a movement to
democratize Pakistan, let alone the 1999 overthrow of a democratically
elected government by Musharraf, which passed peacefully.
But the Islamist surge in Pakistan, as elsewhere, is not so much
spiritual as it is sociopolitical, and it is more visible in the public
than the private sphere. While Islamist groups have forced the closing
of bars and brothels throughout the country, alcohol consumption and
prostitution have actually increased. Alcohol is being privately made
and consumed in parts of Pakistan, especially southern Punjab, which was
unheard of in the 1960s. Rasul Bakhsh Rais, a political scientist at the
Lahore University School of Management Studies, said he "can't
think of a dinner party [for professionals] without alcohol." (32)
Call girls now are a phone call away in Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad
and perhaps other cities. In the 1960s and early 1970s, bars, brothels,
music halls and dance floors were features of Pakistani urban life.
Alcohol consumption in private homes was limited to a small segment of
the Westernized elite, and call girls were practically unknown. As
Pakistan's public space pulsates with Islamism, part of the
country's private sphere seems to be secularizing. Anthropologist
Firdous calls Islamism a "fashion." (33) Sociologist Amna
Murad says Islamization has become "ritualistic." She has
noticed that many of her female students who have taken to wearing the
Islamic headscarf also date men, an un-Islamic practice. (34)
Religious upsurge, says Anthony Smith, tapers off after "an
enthusiastic phase" only to reinforce the ethnicity of the people
affected by it. (35) If so, Pakistan's Islamist wave could leave
its nationhood, rather than ethnicity, reinforced. Secularizing in
important areas of their private lives, Pakistanis may still be
nurturing Islamic social and cultural values, which the international
community would need to respect. The British woman in Dera Ismail Khan
who put on a headscarf appeared to have known this.
(1) Diarmaid MacCulloch, The Reformation (Viking, 2004), p.55.
(2) Daniele Havier-Leger, Religion as a Chain of Memories (Rutgers
University Press, 2001), pp. 83-101.
(3) Grace Davie, Religion in Modern Europe: A Memory Mutates
(Oxford University Press, 2000), p. 30.
(4) Richard K. Khuri, Freedom, Modernity, and Islam: Toward a
Creative Synthesis (Syracuse University Press, 2000), p. 27.
(5) Quaid-i-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah's Speeches as Governor
General of Pakistan 1947-48, Karachi: Government of Pakistan, 1964.
(6) Hans Kohn, The Idea of Nationalism: A Study in Its Origins and
Background (Macmillan 1944), pp. 329333; Benedict Anderson, Imagined
Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (Verson
Editions and NLB, 1983), p. 15; Anthony D. Smith, National Identity
(University of Nevada Press, 1991), pp. 48-59; Ernest Gellner, Nations
and Nationalism (Cornell University Press, 1983), pp. 78-92.
(7) National Identity, p. 11.
(8) Author's interview with Hemayetullah, Quetta, Pakistan,
October 22, 2007.
(9) Author's interview with Iqbal Khattak, bureau chief of the
Daily Times, Peshawar, Pakistan, October 2, 2007.
(10) Author's interview with Nasirullah Wazir, Department of
Pashtu, University of Balochistan, Quetta, Pakistan, October 18, 2007.
(11) Author's interview with Rahimullah Yusufzai, executive
editor, The News International, Peshawar, Pakistan, September 27, 2007.
(12) Author's interview with Abdur Rahim Salarzai, the village
Sheikh Menu in Bajaur tribal agency, Pakistan. October 7, 2007.
(13) Author's interview with Ali Khan Ghumro, Department of
International Relations, University of Sindh at Jamshoro, Pakistan,
October 28, 2007.
(14) Author's conversation with anthropologist Jamil Ahmed on
their way to Mohmond and Bajaur tribal agencies in Pakistan, October 7,
2007.
(15) Brigadier A.R. Siddiqi, The Military in Pakistan: Image and
Reality (Lahore, Pakistan: Vanguard Books, 1996), pp. 163-64.
(16) Author's interviews with mujahideen fighters, Peshawar
and Quetta, Pakistan, September 3-October 8, 1989.
(17) Michael Howard, The Lessons of History (Oxford University
Press, 1991), pp. 39-43.
(18) Author's interview with Senator Enver M. Baig, Islamabad,
Pakistan, September 22, 2007.
(19) Author's telephone interview with Nuzhat Firdous from
Peshawar, Pakistan, September 28, 2007.
(20) Author's interview with Fauzia Saleem, Sociology
Department, Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan, September 14, 2007.
(21) Author's interview with Irfan Ali Akund, doctoral
candidate in sociology, Karachi, Pakistan, November 1, 2007. Akund cited
the data from the draft of his Ph.D. dissertation on "Government by
the Army for the Feudals."
(22) Peter Mandaville, Reimagining the Umma: Transnational Muslim
Politics (Routlege, 2002), p. 72.
(23) Ibid, pp. 11-12.
(24) Author's interview with Mansur Ahmed Ansari, freelance
journalist, Karachi, Pakistan, November 1, 2007.
(25) Stephen P. Cohen, The Idea of Pakistan (Brookings Institution Press, 2004), p. 69.
(26) Author's interview with Mukhtar Ahmed Ali, executive
director, Center for Peace and Development Initiatives, Islamabad,
Pakistan, September 21, 2007.
(27) Ayesha Siddiqa, Military Inc. Inside Pakistan's Military
Economy (Oxford University Press, 2007), p. 101.
(28) Author's interview with Sajid Ali, Department of
Philosophy, Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan, September 7, 2007.
(29) Author's interview with Majid Nizami, editor-in-chief,
Nawa-i-Waqt, Lahore, Pakistan, December 22, 2006.
(30) Author's interview with Umbreen Javaid, Department of
Political Science, Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan, September 18,
2007.
(31) Yusufzai, op-cit.
(32) Author's interview with Rasul Baldash Rais, Department of
Political Science, Lahore University of Management Studies, Lahore,
Pakistan, September 18, 2007.
(33) Author's interview with Nuzhat Firdous, College of Home
Economics, Lahore, Pakistan September 17, 2007.
(34) Author's interview with Arena Murad, Department of
Sociology, Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan, September 17, 2007.
(35) Anthony D. Smith, The Ethnic Origins of Nations (Basil
Blackwell Ltd., 1987), p. 32.
Mr. Malik is a Washington-based researcher and journalist
investigating the sources and social effects of religious movements in
his native Indian subcontinent.