I almost completely agree with you Niaz.
My difference of opinion is on one thing. Ofcourse i recognize that Pakistani's alone have the right to decide the future of Pakistan.
My question: Why do you not want Pakistan to be completely secular?
Let alone the question that many say that if Pakistan had to be secular, why the need to separate from India at all. Those are stupid things.
My question is on the present perspective - today- why do you think Pakistan should not be secular? You want a liberal progressive Islamist state. Why? Why does the state have to have any religion? People can be perfect Muslims without living in an Islamic state.
There are two views of secularism:
1. Western version: Where the state shuns religion and all religious symbols and thus treating them equally.
2. Indian version: Where state state embraces all religions and works towards betterment of each equally.
This is the theoretical part. So what prevents Pakistan from following a perfect implementation of the Indian concept of secularism? Note: India is not able to implement the constitutional idea. However like you said in your post, it is always a work in progress. This is called top induced change. The people of a country may not be secular, but since the state is, they slowly and slowly take to it. Like US took X number of years in giving some semblance of equality to the Black population even after constitutionally declaring it.
It may take another 300 years for India or any other nation to achieve what we declare as the idea. But why not work towards it.
Why should the 2 or 3% of Pakistani minority be treated any differently at all. Whether for good or bad, they should be equal in the eyes of the state?
You give an example of US, but my point is, US is not the ultimate democracy, you can make a better one. Holding the US(or any other country) as the best a nation can achieve is a huge fallacy.
Why should Pakistan not strive to achieve that perfect secularism of state, where each religion is treated equally and embraced equally? Where it is the ultimate choice of any human to choose any religion or no religion and the State has no role in that apart from facilitating whatever he wants for his personal life.
Some Muslim scholars such as Mualana Abul Kalaam Azad; who was a giant among them; correctly guessed the problems that could develop in a state created on the basis of religion. This was probably foreseen by the Quaid as well; therefore he clearly spelled out his vision for Pakistan in his famous 11th August 1947 address. However the Quaid did not last long and now the forces that detested Muslim League and the Quaid e Azam are in ascendance. You would have noticed the posts that rubbish the Quaid, Sir Syed & Agha Khan on the allegation Quaid married a Zoroastrian and the other two were allegedly members of a masonic lodge. How can such elements have respect for the ideas of the founding fathers of Pakistan? That is why Pakistan is slowly turning into a dark age Emirate.
You have asked me a valid question. My comment is that despite all of the above; I was born in a Muslim household and Islam is in my blood. Salafis/Taliban and Takfiris may not consider me a Muslim because of my tilt towards Sufi Islam, but I consider myself a believer. If I was an Agnostic, I would want Pakistan to be secular.
In a secular country laws are formulated because ‘Will of the people’ is supreme. My bone of contention with a secular society is that the laws such as same sex marriage, permissiveness of incest etc. can be promulgated if the majority so decrees. With all my liberal and progressive ideas, I still believe that the laws of the Almighty are supreme. I would therefore not want Pakistan to turn secular.
No matter how secular a state is, it is ultimately the will of majority that prevails. Ayudhia mosque was demolished by a mob and the State Police remained inactive; which Hindu policeman would dare to beat up a Saffron clad Pundit?
Same sort of thing happened in the anti Sikh riots in Delhi and anti Mulsim riots in Gujrat. US constitution is secular but people get away with attacks of a Gurduwara because they mistook bearded Sikhs for Muslims. IMO turning Pakistan into secular state would not have stopped anti Ahmadi riots or target killing of Shias or the exploitation of Christians and Hindus.
Pakistan up to 1965 was a good country to live in. I am hoping against hope that sanity will eventually prevail and we will revert to that progressive and liberal period even though Pakistan was not secular.
It was only after climb down of ZA Bhutto to save his skin by promulagtion of Islamization laws and subsequent rise of anti Pakistan religious forces during the long period of the bigot Zia that made things take a turn for the worse for all but the Deobandi/Salafi/Takfiri alliance and we come across Lashkars and Sepahs and start of killing of Shias by Riaz Basra.
In my personal view all men were created equal, even in an Islamic Republic such as Pakistan, there should be no discrimination regarding religion, race, ethnicity or language. The determination of a person worth should strictly be on merit alone. This is possible to some extent in an Islamic country, Dubai being a living example.
I am an ordinary human, with the biases and prejudices built in and ask your indulgence if I turn out to be below expectations.