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Like army, like nation

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Like army, like nation
by Nadeem F. Paracha on April 21st, 2011 (28 minutes ago)

Though modern-looking and modern-sounding, the gathering turned out to be a segregated affair.The men’s wives were placed in a separate room, while the men gathered in a wider sitting area.By now it become clear to me that I wouldn’t be getting served anything stronger than Pepsi on the rocks! :rofl:
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The basic socio-political mindset of the Pakistani society is the outcome of various faith-based experiments
conducted by the state and the armed forces.

The party


In 1995, sometime in May, an uncle of mine (an ex-army man), was invited to a party of sorts.

The invitation came from a former top-ranking military officer who had also worked for the Pakistan intelligence agency, the ISI. He was in the army with my uncle (who now resides abroad) during the 1960s.

My uncle, who was visiting Pakistan, asked if I was interested in going with him. I agreed.

The event was at a military officer’s posh bungalow in Karachi’s Clifton area. Most of the guests (if not all) were former military men. All were articulate, spoke fluent English and wore modern, western clothes.I was not surprised by this but what did surprise me was a rather schizophrenic aura about the surroundings. Though modern-looking and modern-sounding, the gathering turned out to be a segregated affair.The men’s wives were placed in a separate room, while the men gathered in a wider sitting area.

By now it become clear to me that I wouldn’t be getting served anything stronger than Pepsi on the rocks!
I scratched my head, thinking that even though I was at a ‘party’ in a posh, stylish bungalow in the posh, stylish Clifton area with all these posh stylish military men and their wives and yet, somehow I felt there very little that was ‘modern’ about the situation.

By modern, I also mean the thinking that was reflected by the male guests on politics, society and religion. Most of the men were also clean-shaven and reeking of expensive cologne, but even while talking about cars, horses and their vacations in Europe, they kept using Arabic expressions such as mashallah, alhamdullila, inshallah, etc.

I tried to strike up some political conversations with a few gentlemen but they expected me to agree with them about how civilian politicians were corrupt, how democracy can be a threat to Pakistan, how civilian leaders do not understand India’s nefarious designs, et al.

Then, alas, as if right on cue, the moment I began telling them that I was actually a working journalist (they thought I was a college student in some foreign university), in came two senior journalists who seemed to be very close to some of the men there. These journalists were known for their somewhat right-wing views. They are still around.

I thought hard about what had just taken place. Especially when (quite accidentally) I glanced into the ladies’ section, I saw smart women (designer handbags, blow-dried hair and the works) chatting away, unperturbed by the fact that their gaudy modernism somehow did not include mixed gatherings.

What was even more surreal was the presence of some hijab-clad ladies among the army wives, and I overheard many of them (both the hijabis and the non-hijabis), enthusiastically mixing their tales of fashion-related escapades with sincere talk about what dua to say at what time and how Pakistanis are moving away from ‘true Islam’.

So what was going on?

The experiment

The Pakistan Army was once a staunchly secular beast. All across the 1950s and 1960s it was steeped in secular (albeit conservative) traditions and so were its sociological aspects.

In fact, until the late 1960s, Pakistani military men were asked to keep religion a private matter and religious exhibitionism was scorned at as well as reprimanded – mostly during Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s dictatorship (1959-69).

However, some Islamic symbolism was tactfully used by the military during the 1965 war against India, but this did not last long – especially in an era when a secular military dictatorship was being challenged by an equally secular and left-leaning civilian opposition (the National Awami Party, the Pakistan Peoples Party and the Awami League).

The situation in this context remained the same during the early 1970s, during the democratically-elected government of Z. A. Bhutto (1972-77).

Nevertheless, the fact was that the kind of Islamisation which began engulfing the Pakistani society from the 1980s onwards, actually began taking root within the barracks of the Pakistan Army.

Believing that populist Islamic symbolism to be compatible with his regime’s staunchly nationalistic and progressive posturing, Bhutto wanted to strike a balance between secular, left-leaning moves and rhetoric with controlled Islamic bluster.

He thought that this way he would be able to keep in check both the secular opposition coming from radical nationalist groups in Sindh, Balochistan and NWFP and that from the Islamist parties which, although electorally weak, had a large nuisance value.

Bhutto also thought that by bolstering Islamic symbolism and myths in school textbooks, the military and eventually the society in general, it would help him keep Pakistan intact after the failure of the Two-Nation Theory in 1971 when the country’s eastern wing broke away to become Bangladesh.

One must remember that all this remained to be a social experiment during the Bhutto regime and Pakistan’s society remained largely secular until about 1975.

This experiment was first performed in the military. Often, military symbols were fused with those of Islam, and many senior officers began introducing ‘Islamic practices’ in the barracks.

For example, alcohol in Pakistan was first banned in the barracks of the Pakistan Army (1973), a good four years before it was banned across the country (in April 1977).

Apart from also introducing enforced prayers and Islamiyat courses, many officers also began introducing writings of the conservative Islamic scholar, Abul Ala Maududi, to the soldiers.

In fact, his books almost became mandatory reading when men like General Ziaul Haq (before he toppled Bhutto in 1977), began handing out books authored by Maududi to soldiers along with medals.

Maududi was a puritan who believed in jihad and his writings had already influenced a number of extremist outfits like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and Syria.

Also, being the chief of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) in Pakistan, his party had actually held demonstrations in the 1960s against popular Arab nationalist leaders like Gamal Nasser whose government had hanged a number of Muslim Brotherhood leaders in Egypt.

The Islamisation experiment seemed to have worked well in an army demoralised by the 1971 defeat against India, and this experiment soon began seeping into the society through revised school textbooks and the state-owned media.

State-owned TV (PTV) and the film industry (Lollywood) were hitting a peak in the 1970s and many of its creations at the time were largely progressive and liberal.

However, in 1975 PTV conducted its first experiment in constructing a popular serial based on the newly conceived Islamised narrative being developed in the military.

A big-budget historical melodrama (produced by young TV director Mohsin Ali) called Tabeer (Reality) was televised. It was based on the history of the Muslims of India from 1857 until the birth of Pakistan in 1947.

This was also the first time when Pakistanis in general were fully introduced to a completely revised history of the region in which Muslims were seen as being completely separate and different from rest of the people of the subcontinent.

For example, the TV series begins during the end of the Indian Mutiny against the British in 1857, an event in which disgruntled Muslims as well as Hindus played leading roles. However, in the serial we only see the Muslims leading the revolt and Hindus are nowhere to be seen.

As the series continued, with each episode more revisions came to light when Muslim characters hardly ever hark back to great proto-secular Mughals like Akbar and Jahangir, and in fact, the last Mughal, the weak and spineless Bahdar Shah Zafar, is shown using words like ‘jihad.’

Also, allusions are constantly made to the Muslim roots lying in Arab nations and lands and India being a land that was conquered by the Muslims but had become a ‘darul harb’ for them after the fall of the Muslim empire.

Such narratives and revised history would soon become mainstream thought by the time Ziaul Haq took over.

The Islamisation experiment in the military too became a mainstay. It especially began consolidating itself during the military’s involvement in the anti-Soviet Afghan jihad in Afghanistan.

As more and more soldiers and officers became radicalised, this radicalisation was then introduced (by the ISI) into the society through a number of militant Islamist groups, sectarian outfits and madrassas that were then used as recruiting grounds for the US-backed ‘jihad’ in Afghanistan. Much of the funding for these came from Saudi Arabia.

The mutation

By the late 1980s, while religion had begun to play a major role in the soldiers’ lives, and the revised historicity first introduced in the late 1970s became the new mainstream historical narrative in Pakistan, one now saw senior officers with even the most liberal and secular habits, spouting Islamist rhetoric.

But this too was about to give in to even more Puritanism. In the early 1990s, the influential Islamic evangelical movement, the Tableeghi Jamaat, began making its way into the military.

Though an apolitical movement that emphasised on ‘correct’ Islamic ritualism and attire, its entry into the barracks produced a surreal mix when it came into contact with the highly political philosophy of Maududi that had by then deeply entrenched itself in the army.

Interestingly, this episode was another example of how an Islamic experiment that was first conducted in the Pakistani army soon seeped out to become a phenomenon in the society in general as well.

The Tableeghi Jamaat which was formed in 1929 had, until the 1980s, been more associated with working/peasant-class Muslims from the Deobandi sect and (in the 1980s) became popular with the trader classes.

A move was seen by the Jamaat from the early 1990s onwards in which a conscious attempt was made to attract upper-middle and middle-class Muslims, and this was achieved when various senior Pakistan Army officers joined the Jamaat.

The army’s influence on the Pakistani society and politics meant that the Jamaat not only began to bag recruits from well-to-do urban classes, but for the first time it also managed to attract a number of celebrities such as TV actors, pop musicians and cricketers.

What I saw at that ‘party’ was actually the socio-political outcome of the above elaborated process.

A process that saw a secular army going through an experiment in political Islam that then was dissipated across the society and consolidated itself as a mainstream phenomenon.

This phenomenon was then fused (in the army) with ritual Puritanism of the Tableeghi Jamaat and this fusion too became a mainstream sociological mainstay amongst various urban classes.

Thus the schizophrenic happenings at the ‘party’ were a modern, upper-middle-class expression of the said process.

Interestingly it is the mindset emerging from this fusion and process that also dictates the choice of the kind of political leaders that the classes embroiled in this phenomenon would like to see.

The choices too have increasingly become equally schizophrenic.

For example, these classes whose politics are a fusion of classical political Islam, Tableeghi Jamaat ritualism and modern-day consumerist capitalism want their leaders to be professional white-collared men, urban in outlook, educated, good to look at, but at the same time, religious, anti-West, anti-India and highly tolerant of Islamic exhibitionism, even sometimes to the point of being apologetic about those who take this exhibitionism to a more violent levels.


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I have just seen that this article has already been put up, please delete this.
 
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Don't think hes going to reply to this, and I couldn't be bothered to edit it. Thought I'd just post it here.

Dear Mr. Paracha,

I was very enthused by your article regarding the Pakistan Army’s proliferation of extremism in Pakistani society. It was an interesting and well formulated piece and I am glad you wrote it.

I do have issue with your larger point and many of your narrative points, but I shall focus on the larger point. Your claim that conservatism and/or political Islam was proliferated from the army into larger Pakistani society, and not the other way round, is bold and I believe inaccurate.

Organizations like the Jamaat-e-Islami and Tableeghi Jamat were not creations of the Pakistani military. They in fact, as I am sure you know, preceded the creation of the Pakistani state. Also, as you tactfully acknowledged, Prime Minister Bhutto was the one who initiated the ‘Islamization experiment’ and he was obviously not military. He largely reacted to pressures from below in a bid to strengthen and retain his grip on power. General Zia, whose grip on power was more precarious, took Islamization much further but largely acted with the same motivations. They both sought to strengthen their political positions by harnessing Islamist sympathy.

Now this leads to one conclusion: the Pakistani population at large was not averse to this. If conservatism was anathema to Pakistan’s rising middle class (and you and I both know it wasn’t) then these political leaders would have had no reason to institutionalize or formalize any Islamic rhetoric, be it in the form of Islamist symbols in the military or in civilian text books. It would have been counterproductive to their interests and simply unfeasible.

We may harp on about how our country has absolutely no democracy and that the views of the populace are absolutely inconsequential to state trends but that I believe is an oversimplification and an abdication of our responsibility. In politics there is an inevitable down-up affect which is unfortunately being neglected by political scientists like you. There was an obvious approval of these Islamists trends in Pakistani society which is why they were sustained and initiated in the first place.

The army itself is not an entity detached from Pakistani society. They are the most powerful, well organized and arguably respected (respect is relative) institution in the country but I feel crediting them with too much independent power is unhelpful. These officers and soldiers are raised in Pakistani homes, in Pakistani cities and villages, by Pakistani parents and they do constitute a part of Pakistani civil society. I believe your view of the army as a driver of social change in Pakistani society is inaccurate and that the opposite is more likely.

The Pakistan Army has changed a great deal from Ayub’s time. As the army opened up its officer ranks, which were previously exclusively the domain of the British affiliated land owning gentry, to the rising urban middle class some transfer of cultural traits such as stresses on Islamic ideals were inevitable. The army could not be forced to accept the ban on alcohol in the mess anymore than the public could be on the street if there wasn’t already sympathy for such a proposal. Perhaps you should consider critically rethinking your argument by examining the opposing view of 'like nation, like army'.

Lastly, from reading your piece I get the distinct impression that you equate ‘modernism’ with the open serving of alcohol and mixing of the sexes. Now don’t get me wrong, I respect your personal social preferences (probably because I share them) but I would like to remind you that you do live in Pakistan where the vast majority of gatherings do not have alcohol or mixed westernized intermingling of the sexes. People have the right to call themselves modern and hold on to these views. Also just because the place is deemed ‘posh’ doesn’t mean it ought to be ideological and socially cut off from the rest of Pakistani society. Even civil societies in more westernized Muslim countries are hardly known for openly endorsing alcohol on social occasions.

The point I’m making here is that you may have read too much into that party and that in calling it schizophrenic you are being harsh and perhaps stereotypical. The army is arguably the only institution that provides social mobility in Pakistan. When people from urban middle classes achieve high ranks in the military they are likely to make use of the material benefits and opportunities they get without ejecting their traditional social and personal preferences. Accumulatively they start changing and redefining the institutional trends.

Perhaps you may also like to reexamine your point of view in light of the social biases you may harbor. I believe you are potentially doing the country a disservice by adopting a simplistic and polarized view of 'secular vs religious' ideals in Pakistan, especially since we need bits of both to defeat terrorism.

I'd be interested to hear if you have something to say against my opinion.

Thanks!
 
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To all those whose posts I've deleted, stay on topic and keep the quality of the discourse high. Attack his arguments, not him.
 
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Yes yes agencies should come hard on the bloggers that's the only thing they are good at where were they when USA navy seals were near kakul acedmy !!!!
 
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So wats the meaning of secular near this dude? drinking,gambling,sex... not caring abt haram n halal?

Lol thnks God our army is not tht secular.

Dumbass journo.

the sort of private parties these nadeem paracha and naveen naqvi type lot host and attend thats pretty much what they want...its on youtube....they are just after petty $$$$$$ cash..they have no education in foreign affairs,political science or journalism....it has become a fashion here...every tom,dick and harry who has nothing else to do becomes an analyst....atiqa odho, she does commentry on strategic affairs too now :lol:
 
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Paracha gets his pay in $$$$$ from his master like many other get in Pak Rupees from local agencies. So they have to write what their master wants.
 
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