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Destruction of our education system and distortion of ideology of Pakistan and Muslim league

Ahmad Sajjad Paracha

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Thread on #MythsOfHistory: 1

Why is our real and true history not taught to us in Pakistan Studies?

The answer is, it was... until 1981.

When examining surviving Pakistani history textbooks written between 1947 to 1980, all of them begin with the ancient Indus Valley Civilisation from 3000 BCE rather than the invasion of Sindh by Mohammad bin Qasim in 712. These books contained the collective history of the region Pakistan was in (the Indus Valley), and a decent effort was made to connect students to the land of Pakistan. The nation was viewed as a melting pot of different people and languages. Most importantly, the Pakistan Movement was described as the Muslim League had defined it; as a defense against Brahmin domination.

That all changed in 1981. Under the direction of General Zia ul Haq, the University Grants Commission issued a notice to all prospective textbook authors specifying that new history textbooks were to "induce pride for the nation's past, enthusiasm for the present, and unshakable faith in the stability and longevity of Pakistan".

To eliminate all possible ambiguities to this approach, Pakistani authors were given the following directive:

"To demonstrate that the basis of Pakistan is not to be founded in racial, linguistic, or geographical factors, but, rather, in the shared experience of a common religion. To get students to know and appreciate the Ideology of Pakistan, and to popularize it with slogans. To guide students towards the ultimate goal of Pakistan - the creation of a completely Islamised State."

In fulfillment of this directive, all of Pakistan's ancient history was either removed or simply relegated to a single insignificant chapter, with no emphasis being put that it was our history. Secondly, the invasion of Sindh by Mohammad bin Qasim was given high importance and was considered as the origin of "Pakistani history". The most disturbing aspect was the redefinition of the Pakistan Movement from the Muslim League's definition, to "a movement for Islamic revival", which mirrored the same concepts and politics of Jamaat-i-Islami. All textbooks were now being centered around the following themes, of which none were historically accurate:

1. The 'Ideology of Pakistan', both as a historical force that motivated the movement for Pakistan as well as its raison d'etre.

2. The depiction of Jinnah as a man of orthodox religious views who sought the creation of a theocratic state.

3. A move to establish the ulema as genuine heroes of the Pakistan Movement.

4. An emphasis on ritualistic Islam, together with a rejection of liberal interpretations of the religion and generation of communal antagonism.

— Destruction of Jinnah's speeches

On top of this, General Zia ul Haq ordered many of Jinnah's speeches and audio recordings held at National Archives and Radio Pakistan to be destroyed. These speeches and audio recordings were those that promoted secular, democratic ideals for Pakistan. One famous audio recording was the 11 August Speech, in which Jinnah famously said:

“You are free; you are free to go to your temples. You are free to go to your mosques or any other places of worship in this State of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion, caste or creed — that has nothing to do with the business of the state.”

By sheer luck, the only reason why Pakistan knows of this speech today is thanks to an audio copy that was stored by BBC Radio Archives.

— Collapse of Education System

Before the 90s, everyone attended government schools. The advent of private schools began when Zia implemented his education reforms in the 80s. After 1982, government schools prioritized stuffing student’s minds with paranoia, parochialism, and hyper-religiosity. Students were seen as "young foot soldiers" to preserve and protect a praetorian, ideological state of which they could eventually become a part. To produce students with empathy, moral sense, and capacity to reason independently was not just unnecessary, it was undesirable. Rarely were students told to respect a queue, obey traffic rules, and desist from littering. Exam cheating and degree buying, though widespread, was not decried as a moral crime. Machoism was promoted as a virtue, not treated as a disease. Nowhere was a student taught to appreciate those who are different culturally, ethnically, religiously, in physical appearance, or perhaps ability-disability. Families with money almost immediately withdrew from government schools because of this reason, and by the 90s the era of private schools began.

— Zia Generation vs Junoon Generation

The legacy of Zia was the generation he left behind and what negative effects it had on Pakistan 20 years later. The lost Zia generation (school children of the 1980s) became young adults in the early 2000s. Is it any coincidence that Pakistan's most troubling years of suicide bombings and extremism came between 2002 to 2015? This was the period the Zia generation took control of the country, both politically and socially. Now we're seeing a downturn in extremism, partly because the 90s generation is becoming adults and are beginning to replace the Zia generation. I can already see a big difference between the Zia generation and the 90s generation, which I call the Junoon generation (just because). A general comparison between the two generations is day and night difference in overall behavior, beliefs, and attitude. They are not perfect, but they are one step in the right direction.

— Why did Zia did this? Several reasons.

1. Multi-ethnic countries require politicians who are dedicated and possess a belief in nation building. General Zia ul Haq lacked both.

2. Secession of East Bengal had a huge psychological effect on the cohesiveness of Pakistan. Hence, Islam was substituted in as the "Ideology of Pakistan", which stripped the nation of its heritage, history, multi-ethnicity and languages. Thus, safeguarding Pakistan was considered a "divine duty", rather than just patriotism.

— Solution

The solution to this problem is simple. Pakistan Studies curriculum needs to be cleansed and rewritten if Pakistan is to become a peaceful, democratic and moderate state. In the 90s, some changes were made, which ensured the 90s generation wouldn't turn out like the Zia generation. However, it is evident more needs to be done both in terms of eliminating extremist ideology in society as well as reconnecting our people back to this land and its various cultures. It is also one way to "nation-build", something Pakistan has struggled to do.
Pakistan Studies could be one of the most interesting subjects in school if we make the necessary changes.

— Sources

- University Grants Commission directive, quoted in Azhar Hamid, et al. Mutalliyah-i-Pakistan (Islamabad: Allama Iqbal Open University, 1983), p. xi.
- University Grants Commission directive, quoted in Azhar Hamid, et al. Mutalliyah-i-Pakistan (Islamabad: Allama Iqbal Open University, 1983), pp. xii-xiii.
Courtesy - Ancient Pakistan
 
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Thread on #MythsOfHistory: 1

Why is our real and true history not taught to us in Pakistan Studies?

The answer is, it was... until 1981.

When examining surviving Pakistani history textbooks written between 1947 to 1980, all of them begin with the ancient Indus Valley Civilisation from 3000 BCE rather than the invasion of Sindh by Mohammad bin Qasim in 712. These books contained the collective history of the region Pakistan was in (the Indus Valley), and a decent effort was made to connect students to the land of Pakistan. The nation was viewed as a melting pot of different people and languages. Most importantly, the Pakistan Movement was described as the Muslim League had defined it; as a defense against Brahmin domination.

That all changed in 1981. Under the direction of General Zia ul Haq, the University Grants Commission issued a notice to all prospective textbook authors specifying that new history textbooks were to "induce pride for the nation's past, enthusiasm for the present, and unshakable faith in the stability and longevity of Pakistan".

To eliminate all possible ambiguities to this approach, Pakistani authors were given the following directive:

"To demonstrate that the basis of Pakistan is not to be founded in racial, linguistic, or geographical factors, but, rather, in the shared experience of a common religion. To get students to know and appreciate the Ideology of Pakistan, and to popularize it with slogans. To guide students towards the ultimate goal of Pakistan - the creation of a completely Islamised State."

In fulfillment of this directive, all of Pakistan's ancient history was either removed or simply relegated to a single insignificant chapter, with no emphasis being put that it was our history. Secondly, the invasion of Sindh by Mohammad bin Qasim was given high importance and was considered as the origin of "Pakistani history". The most disturbing aspect was the redefinition of the Pakistan Movement from the Muslim League's definition, to "a movement for Islamic revival", which mirrored the same concepts and politics of Jamaat-i-Islami. All textbooks were now being centered around the following themes, of which none were historically accurate:

1. The 'Ideology of Pakistan', both as a historical force that motivated the movement for Pakistan as well as its raison d'etre.

2. The depiction of Jinnah as a man of orthodox religious views who sought the creation of a theocratic state.

3. A move to establish the ulema as genuine heroes of the Pakistan Movement.

4. An emphasis on ritualistic Islam, together with a rejection of liberal interpretations of the religion and generation of communal antagonism.

— Destruction of Jinnah's speeches

On top of this, General Zia ul Haq ordered many of Jinnah's speeches and audio recordings held at National Archives and Radio Pakistan to be destroyed. These speeches and audio recordings were those that promoted secular, democratic ideals for Pakistan. One famous audio recording was the 11 August Speech, in which Jinnah famously said:

“You are free; you are free to go to your temples. You are free to go to your mosques or any other places of worship in this State of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion, caste or creed — that has nothing to do with the business of the state.”

By sheer luck, the only reason why Pakistan knows of this speech today is thanks to an audio copy that was stored by BBC Radio Archives.

— Collapse of Education System

Before the 90s, everyone attended government schools. The advent of private schools began when Zia implemented his education reforms in the 80s. After 1982, government schools prioritized stuffing student’s minds with paranoia, parochialism, and hyper-religiosity. Students were seen as "young foot soldiers" to preserve and protect a praetorian, ideological state of which they could eventually become a part. To produce students with empathy, moral sense, and capacity to reason independently was not just unnecessary, it was undesirable. Rarely were students told to respect a queue, obey traffic rules, and desist from littering. Exam cheating and degree buying, though widespread, was not decried as a moral crime. Machoism was promoted as a virtue, not treated as a disease. Nowhere was a student taught to appreciate those who are different culturally, ethnically, religiously, in physical appearance, or perhaps ability-disability. Families with money almost immediately withdrew from government schools because of this reason, and by the 90s the era of private schools began.

— Zia Generation vs Junoon Generation

The legacy of Zia was the generation he left behind and what negative effects it had on Pakistan 20 years later. The lost Zia generation (school children of the 1980s) became young adults in the early 2000s. Is it any coincidence that Pakistan's most troubling years of suicide bombings and extremism came between 2002 to 2015? This was the period the Zia generation took control of the country, both politically and socially. Now we're seeing a downturn in extremism, partly because the 90s generation is becoming adults and are beginning to replace the Zia generation. I can already see a big difference between the Zia generation and the 90s generation, which I call the Junoon generation (just because). A general comparison between the two generations is day and night difference in overall behavior, beliefs, and attitude. They are not perfect, but they are one step in the right direction.

— Why did Zia did this? Several reasons.

1. Multi-ethnic countries require politicians who are dedicated and possess a belief in nation building. General Zia ul Haq lacked both.

2. Secession of East Bengal had a huge psychological effect on the cohesiveness of Pakistan. Hence, Islam was substituted in as the "Ideology of Pakistan", which stripped the nation of its heritage, history, multi-ethnicity and languages. Thus, safeguarding Pakistan was considered a "divine duty", rather than just patriotism.

— Solution

The solution to this problem is simple. Pakistan Studies curriculum needs to be cleansed and rewritten if Pakistan is to become a peaceful, democratic and moderate state. In the 90s, some changes were made, which ensured the 90s generation wouldn't turn out like the Zia generation. However, it is evident more needs to be done both in terms of eliminating extremist ideology in society as well as reconnecting our people back to this land and its various cultures. It is also one way to "nation-build", something Pakistan has struggled to do.
Pakistan Studies could be one of the most interesting subjects in school if we make the necessary changes.

— Sources

- University Grants Commission directive, quoted in Azhar Hamid, et al. Mutalliyah-i-Pakistan (Islamabad: Allama Iqbal Open University, 1983), p. xi.
- University Grants Commission directive, quoted in Azhar Hamid, et al. Mutalliyah-i-Pakistan (Islamabad: Allama Iqbal Open University, 1983), pp. xii-xiii.
Courtesy - Ancient Pakistan

Not again.

1. So you are asking to put two nation theory in garbage bin?
2. You are saying Sindhi, Punjabi, Pathan, Baloch, Saraiki, Giligiti, and Urdu are one nation based on demography.

I don't understand if we are not united as Muslims of subcontinent then what these fool thinks can unite us? a Pathan who cannot understand Sindhi language and has no idea of sindhi culture can be united on what basis if its not Islam?

This is a disaster. Even the name of political party who negotiated Pakistan was MUSLIM league and you are telling us no it was not Muslim league it was Liberal league.

To hell with you liberal guys the way you are trying to manipulate history is unprecedented.
 
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Not again.

1. So you are asking to put two nation theory in garbage bin?
2. You are saying Sindhi, Punjabi, Pathan, Baloch, Saraiki, Giligiti, and Urdu are one nation based on demography.

I don't understand if we are not united as Muslims of subcontinent then what these fool thinks can unite us? a Pathan who cannot understand Sindhi language and has no idea of sindhi culture can be united on what basis if its not Islam?

This is a disaster. Even the name of political party who negotiated Pakistan was MUSLIM league and you are telling us no it was not Muslim league it was Liberal league.

To hell with you liberal guys the way you are trying to manipulate history is unprecedented.
Area known as Pakistan has almost been like this excluding the colonial time. Have you actually seen indus valley civilisation which stretched from modern kpk to balochistan to sindh to northern western india. This region has has always been very diverse and it's not from today. We have different customs,languages,traditions,ethnicities which make us diverse but still we are same in broader way. Our northern country is full of linguistic diversity although geographically it is a smaller than even sindh. There are kohistanis,hindkis,kalashis,madakhelis,pashtuns all of these are entirely different languages but do you think these people are living in same areas because they are bonded by Islam or because they share same history and culture in kpk which makes kpk why the most diverse province of pakistan. Our homeland Pakistan is full of different cultures and has vast history which has been sidelined to inspire our people from foreign invaders and completely ignoring the local heroes.
 
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Area known as Pakistan has almost been like this excluding the colonial time. Have you actually seen indus valley civilisation which stretched from modern kpk to balochistan to sindh to northern western india. This region has has always been very diverse and it's not from today. We have different customs,languages,traditions,ethnicities which make us diverse but still we are same in broader way. Our northern country is full of linguistic diversity although geographically it is a smaller than even sindh. There are kohistanis,hindkis,kalashis,madakhelis,pashtuns all of these are entirely different languages but do you think these people are living in same areas because they are bonded by Islam or because they share same history and culture in kpk which makes kpk why the most diverse province of pakistan. Our homeland Pakistan is full of different cultures and has vast history which has been sidelined to inspire our people from foreign invaders and completely ignoring the local heroes.
And when in the history tgese different states survived as a single nation ?
 
. . .
here is the result
and these people are given airtime live on channels

These scholars are quoting an Imam who said 100years ago that the earth doesn't move. They need to understand that 100years ago it was different and now scientific knowledge has increased. They need to learn to move on. When I used to go high school they used to teach us that Pluto is a 9th planet, but now it is classified as part of a new category called Dwarf Planet. Scholars need to learn scientific knowledge as well as Islamic knowledge.
 
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Very Thoughtful article

  • The damage done under Zia Ul Haq's extreme view was abundant

From a Economic stand point country made no real progress under Zia Ul Haq , it simply was a toy for global politics for mere 40 - F16

However similarly not much has been attained in Democratic rules which followed between 1990 -2000 till General Musharaf came to power where there was a genuine change in air


The objective of being a Top Nation in world in term of economy and prosperity have not been met



  • Pakistan TV
  • Pakistan Hockey (Massive fall in quality @ world events)
  • Pakistan Cricket
  • Pakistan Drama / Arts
  • Pakistan Folk Music
  • Tourism in Pakistan

All suffered greatly under General Zia Ul Haq


The education system as a whole saw a massive drop in quality


From most people I have talked to most of the religious folks were not very interested in Two Nation , it was really the folks who were educated who went to Schools and had a balanced point of view who managed to take decisive action to create Pakistan
 
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Pakistan needs an education system that produces human beings. Look at what is going on in the country. Right from lack of social discipline, we have also lost moral values. Corruption, relationship without marriage, drugs, sex is becoming an acceptable behavior.

We were taught some history about Pakistan and Islam too. But to my surprise all those things we were taught are not being taught to our children. As result, they come out of most expensive schools without knowing anything about our values. They know about Spiderman, Batman and Superman more than our ideology and its leader. They know more about Bollywood than our values or Islam.

So its important our children are taught Quran, Pakistan history and social studies in our school system. So that we can produce better human resource in future. We cant be a nation without a syllabus that is uniform and teaches our values and focuses on tarbiyat.
 
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Our liberals needs to get one thing straight yes our forefathers having been living in this area for thousands of years, but thing is for Muslims Islam is only thing which matters. Sahaba were in state of kufr before they converted to Islam but they never bragged about their life in state of kufr. So liberals please stop wasting your time Pakistan is always will be a proud nation of Islam. And those who have issue with are free to leave and live in west.

@Ahmad Sajjad Paracha
 
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Like i said look indus valley civ. nd before that mahgarh civ.
Those are civilization from a period of bronze age. First of all those people do not exist any more/ Secondly that is story of a civilization and not a nation. At that time there was tribal system and the unity at the best level was of a town.

So you are saying to unite Pakistani based on 4,000 year old people who do not even existed now and were not a nation themselves.

Can you give some logic?
 
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Zia was the worst thing to happen to Pakistan. Much of our sectarian, ethnic strife is because of him.

Certain Muslim countries spent billions to spread their new version of Islam in Pakistan. Unfortunately our leadership turned a blind eye due to good relations and commissions.
 
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Those are civilization from a period of bronze age. First of all those people do not exist any more/ Secondly that is story of a civilization and not a nation. At that time there was tribal system and the unity at the best level was of a town.

So you are saying to unite Pakistani based on 4,000 year old people who do not even existed now and were not a nation themselves.

Can you give some logic?
Pakistan is the rightful inheritor of IVC which ,which is one of oldest civilsations. All other countries take pride in their history even china once said to america that we are 4000 years old civilisation not a new discovery like but look at denying our beautiful and colourful heritage. When it comes to tribal system, even now we have strong tribal/caste system in our society. Races nd nations had been basically collection of tribes like turks/turkey or U.K. IVC was known for it's agriculture and even now same is the case so there's no major difference. U can keep on denying everything but history will not change.
 
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