Abu Zolfiqar
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this guy jaswant singh needs to find better things to do with his (seemingly ample) free time
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this guy jaswant singh needs to find better things to do with his (seemingly ample) free time
Rambling, incoherent article probably written during a drunken weekend.. Maybe its time to chuck the whiskey bottle, Mr. Singh, before presenting your expert comments on state and religion? Although I have a feeling this is your way of apologizing to the BJP for the Jinnah book..
I would argue that behind the demands for 'Islamic State' (of any kind) and implementation of 'Islamic Laws' (to varying degrees) lies a deep loss of faith in the current parliamentary system, because of its continued failure to address the issues that impact the average Pakistani, as well as the perception that the leaders it produces sell out Pakistan and make it the subject or ridicule in the international community.Pakistanis themselves, given the large size, have mixed views. Some want puritanical Islamist state, some want a purely Islamic welfare state, some want secular state, some socialists, and then you have some confused people.
I would argue that behind the demands for 'Islamic State' (of any kind) and implementation of 'Islamic Laws' (to varying degrees) lies a deep loss of faith in the current parliamentary system, because of its continued failure to address the issues that impact the average Pakistani, as well as the perception that the leaders it produces sell out Pakistan and make it the subject or ridicule in the international community.
So not only is the current system (democracy or 'non-Islamic System' if you will) associated with a perceived complete failure to provide proper governance, but also perceived as responsible for the loss of Pakistan's 'honor and pride' on the international stage, and that makes for a very strong combination to drive sentiment against the current system.
I would also argue that the above dynamic feeds into people gravitating towards issues like blasphemy laws, the cartoon controversy and anti-Western sentiment since it provides an easy outlet for blame on 'emotional' issues.
Without taking the impact of the failure of the 'democratic system' in providing good governance into account, analysis of Pakistani society and 'extremist trends' etc. will be inaccurate IMO, and miss the the real issues driving conservative trends in Pakistani society.
General Mirza Aslam Beg, Former Chief of Army Staff, Pakistan
The national resilience of the Pakistani people is to be judged by the degree of their consciousness and commitment to guard their values, traditions and honour, called the National Purpose -
For a contrasting view of "purpose", I give you the Egyptian, Sandmonkey:
As far back as I can remember Ive had this dream. Not much anymore, but for a while I had it all the time. Theres people on a rollercoaster and theyre having the time of their lives, and its loud and crashing, and theres the booming of the ocean and the acoustics of the wind, and theyre screaming with their hands in the air, and the thing that they dont know is that the tracks stop, somewhere at a crest, just gap into nothing, and theyre hurtling toward it. They think that theyre safe but theyre not safe.
And usually the dream gets bogged down in bureaucratic detail, trying to mobilize a team to somehow solve this problem, all the futile possible ways we could save them. Dream logic; leadership dreams. Maybe if they all raised their arms at the same counterintuitive time, at the bottom of the hill maybe, it would provide some kind of drag. Maybe if they all unlatched their harnesses at the same moment, if they somehow all knew to do it at the same time, like in a football wave, if they could do this as they were launching into space, and off the tracks altogether, they would take flight, and we could catch them, somehow. Everyone would be safe.
Karen Armstrong wrote one of my favorite books of all time, the elegant and accessible A History Of God. Its brilliant, Ive read it lots of times. In 2000, she wrote a sort of follow-up called The Battle For God, about fundamentalism in the new millennium.
The idea, the rationale as such, is pretty simple. We find ourselves in a complex, degenerate post-God secular world; there are no rules, the center doesnt hold, nobodys watching you or judging you. Some thrive; I thrive. But its nervous: youre looking into an existential abyss, or youre standing in the middle of Sodom trying to avoid eye contact, or youre getting turned on and about to do something really stupid. Those are the main things. Fundamentalism is sort of like all of those things at once. Let me elaborate
Whats most amazing about the millennial fundamentalists, which every single religion has, is their basic intent on going back to basics in some fashion, while completely ignoring the fact that there arent actually any basics to go back to. The stuff they want to accomplish, for all of us, the walls they want where a body meets a body, the rules be which we must abide, never actually existed. Theyre fantasies about control, mental lockdown, revisions to decisions that no moment can erase. Every single fundamentalism is synthetic, reaching backwards for an imaginary grace.
Fundamentalism reaches past all that nonsense and chaos and into a primordial world where men were men and women werent, where no decisions ever had to be made, where every single option was laid out ahead of time by a firm but loving God, where families meant a certain thing and sex meant a certain thing, and everything was easy except temptation. But thats obviously a crock. You cant honestly tell me there was ever a time when human beings were less complex, less passionate or afraid or unpredictable, less wonderful than they are now.
For me, all this was a revelation on the level of learning, as a kid, that Allah and JHVH and the christian God were the same thing: that all Big Three monotheisms worship the God of Abraham and dont even bother hiding that fact. The idea that fundamentalism was a logically tortured appeal to a beautiful pure world that never existed, and that Al Qaeda and Juniper Creek are essentially parallel movements with the same agenda and arising from the same confusion and fear Revelatory.
Things are confusing, lots of stuff coming at your face all the time. Sex keeps getting less and less kind, and we keep blaming more and more on our parents and our kids, and technology is overwhelming and even the hippest among us can sometimes feel like the world is changing so fast and flying by so carelessly without giving us more than a glimpse of itself, much less a place to grab hold. I cant say they dont have a point. But then, terrorists usually do. If they didnt have something to say (even if its usually a crock of bullshit), they wouldnt feel silenced, and they wouldnt pull the they pull. They wouldnt feel the need to scream so loudly that the whole world must listen.
For a lot of us, its enough to have self-control and to make good choices, and not get out of hand, or take part in whats going on all around you. For others, the projected disarray is way too much to handle, and you start feeling like a rat in a cage as big as the world. Everywhere around you, the world is on fire, and everyone around you goes on like the world hasnt ended. Youre on a roller coaster with everybody alive, headed for a gap, and nobody knows it but you: were all heading merrily toward our destruction, and we dont even know it. We think that were safe but were not safe.
If you have that kind of information, if you know that the tracks run out and people are going to die, its not only your duty to use it, but your purpose on this earth. To be in the world, but not of it. To help, and to heal, and to save the world, and in so doing, save yourself. To do whats necessary to fulfill your destiny: to love them, and take care of them, show them the glory of peace. To see your infinite mercy matched only by your power, and complete control. Isnt that the definition of the righteous man? The saint? The martyr? All of them Terrorists. To give up the right to walk in this world, for a duty that must be obeyed for our souls to stay intact, unbending.
So, in free world(?) we don't have any thing laid out in advance to follow?Fundamentalism reaches ....................... where every single option was laid out ahead of time by a firm but loving God,......, less wonderful than they are now.