Thanks for highlighting this.
To me, 'Arab culture' means a whole lot more than 'Saudi wahhabism'. The Arabs of Morocco, Lebanon, and Palestine are so very different from the stereotypical 'Royal Saudi wahhabi Arab' that it is ridiculous to lump them all together. It is very offensive to these Arabs that their culture should be stereotyped by the wahhabis.
It is precisely this kind of careless generalization which makes it hard to fight extermism and intolerance within Pakistan. It gives the extremist mullahs precisely the kind of ammunition they need to portray any opposition as an attack on Islam and "the Prophet's culture". We need to make it crystal clear that we are fighting the extremist, intolerant scourge of wahhabism -- not 'Arab culture' per se.
We are all opposed to extremist indoctrination and suppression of Pakistani culture. Proponents on both sides of the debate have been very vocal -- in this very forum -- about our support for Pakistan's identity and cultural traditions, but the debate has been hijacked by talk of 'Arabization' instead of focussing on specific ideologies.
I think we need to make a distinction between 'Arabic culture' & 'Arabic religious beliefs'. There is nothing wrong with embracing Arabic culture as societies evolve over time: culture comes from a wide range of nations/people. There is no 'right or wrong' in cultural values, it is a matter of one's personal choice. 'Arabic religious beliefs' are different from 'Arabic culture', because they are almost exclusively influenced by the state instituted Salafi Takfiri ideology in SA, creating religious intolerance in people/society, & a 'I'm right, you're wrong' Takfiri mentality when exploring differing religious interpretations.