FaujHistorian
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I don't think South Asians value truth very highly. Personal or political agendas are more important: facts are presented - or even invented - only to reinforce these, while facts that don't support such agendas are ignored, shouted out, or unjustly denounced.
This is not an original observation. I accept as an authority on the subject centenarian historian Bernard Lewis. He's schooled historians worldwide for three generations and occasionally meets his "grandchildren" and mentions this characteristic in his autobiography Notes on a Century: Reflections of a Middle East Historian.
The casual dismissal of truth by Pakistanis is reinforced by personal accounts like this one:
My experience as a youth ambassador made me more tolerant, understanding and mature. Ironically, even my perception of Islam enhanced while residing in a non-Islamic country. Earlier, I used to believe that bowing down to God five times a day had far greater value than telling the truth all the time. But now I understand that telling the truth is an act of worship.
Well said!
We in Pakistan are drinking from the same koolaid (or the good ole British-Indian punch) that is a mixture of Islamism with Marxist massalah. Ethnic chauvinism is also added for "flavor" and to keep this damn koolaid as boiling hot.