Shahbaz Bhatti: Another death, another day – by Nadeem F. Paracha
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The Federal Minister for Minority Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti was killed today in an attack on his vehicle in Islamabad.
Two gunmen fired on Bhatti’s vehicle in I-8/3 area of the capital. He was taken to the hospital where he succumbed to his injuries.
No surprises here. Another voice bold enough to speak out against the madness that has gripped the country has been silenced.
Bhatti, a Pakistani Christian, had been an outspoken critic of the misuse of the controversial Blasphemy Law and according to his colleagues he was facing death threats from those who just wanted him to shut up.
After former Punjab Governor Salman Taseer’s assassination at the hands of a uniformed extremist more than a month ago, Bhatti has become the second high profile victim of the violent fanaticism being demonstrated by those who want the Blasphemy Law to stay put, without any amendments whatsoever.
Why shouldn’t these madmen continue the way they have been so far – slaughtering innocent men in the name of faith, taking out highly-charged rallies condoning the murders and using mosques to announce their list of those who (according to them) are wajibul qatal.
Why shouldn’t they, indeed. Because who are they afraid of? Not the state, not the government, not the law. All three have simply capitulated in front of the psychosis that is ever so often being presented to us through TV talk shows, mosques and cyber space as the ‘true faith.’
Forget the state, the government and the law. One never knows where they stand on anything anyway. The government is weak and is more interested in its own Machiavellian survival, blackmailed into further submission and paranoia by an anarchic, double-talking group of allies and an opposition still stuck in limbo between Riyadh and Raiwind!
And the state? Well, what can be expected from a state that has a history of both creating and hosting exactly the kind of faith-driven lunacy each and every Pakistani is now engulfed in?
For years a convoluted narrative has been circulated by the state, the clergy, schools and now the electronic media: i.e. Pakistan was created in the name of Islam (read, a theocratic state). Thus, only Muslims (mainly orthodox Sunnis) have the right to rule, run and benefit from this country. ‘Minority’ religions and ‘heretical Islamic sects’, who are citizens of Pakistan are not to be trusted. They need to be isolated constitutionally, socially and culturally.
What else? Yes, parliamentary democracy too cannot be trusted. It unleashes ethnic forces, ‘corruption’ and undermines the role of the military and that of Islam in the state’s make-up. It threatens the ‘unity’ of the country; a unity based on a homogeneous understanding of Islam (mainly concocted by the state and its right-wing allies). Most of our political, economic and social ills are due to the diabolical conspiracies hatched by our many enemies.
Now the same state is struggling to control the glorified monsters that it created. These monsters have no fear of their creator. The state is hapless and stunned; only good to play silly games with its subjects. The Pakistani state is not grounded in reality. In fact it is not grounded at all. It is a fantasy that has now started to rot and look redundant. It is a 63-year-old daydream about being pious, just and strong. And yet it has been anything but.
No one trusts the Pakistani state anymore – ironically not even those who want to make Pakistan look and sound macho, ghiaratmand and devout.
Going fascist
So now I wonder, who applauded the killing of a ‘blasphemer’ this time.
Bhatti was shot not only because he was vocal about the controversies that surround and emerge from a man-made law that is considered divine, he was also shot because he was from a minority religion in this country.
By the way, men like Taseer too are a minority: an orthodox Sunni Muslim but secular and liberal. Think about it.
The state and its religious allies have for long collaborated to continue sidelining and alienating the non-Muslim and non-Sunni minorities, so much so that there are actually state-approved history text books out there which to allude them as enemies.
It seems as though Pakistan’s survival can only be justified by the number of enemies we can concoct. As if there is no honour in being a country that does not have or cannot make any enemies. The whole ‘jihad’ industry that we have constructed, the fatwah factories and an army of twisted apologists, their performance and credibility is measured by the number of ‘enemies’ they can either kill or pinpoint.
The bad news is that such beliefs are symptomatic of a society that has started to respond enthusiastically to the major symptoms of fascist thought.
Symptoms such as a xenophobic exhibition of nationalism, a disdain for the recognition of human rights, identification of enemies/scapegoats as a unifying cause, supremacy of the military, obsession with national security, the intertwining of religion and government, disdain for intellectuals and the arts, and an obsession with crime and punishment.
We do not debate. We only react and then huddle up behind our flimsy and lopsided historical and national narratives about ‘Pakistaniat’. We manifest our destiny as conquering Muslims, cursing the world for our ills, looking out for ‘infidels’ and ‘heretics’ among us, or for scapegoats in the shape of media-constructed punching bags.
We are going nowhere. We are only busy constructing walls around ourselves. Societies that do this have lost their will to keep up with and positively compete with the world at large. It begins to isolate itself, cut-off from the outside world and only allowing itself to be compared to its own mediocrities.
So then, the whole world is against us, right? But I am convinced once we have shut ourselves up from this cruel, scheming world, we will then turn on each another (actually, we already have).
The goras have to go, then the religious minorities, the Shias, the liberals, the Sindhis and the Baloch and the Pukhtuns, the Deobandies and the Wahabis, the Barelvies will then begin cleansing ‘bad Muslims’ from among themselves. Qadris vs. the Chishtis vs. the Naqshbandis, and so on and so forth.
Such madness can only vanish when it eats itself. Unfortunately, by then very few will be left to celebrate its end.
Nadeem F. Paracha is a cultural critic and senior columnist for Dawn Newspaper and Dawn.com.
Source: Dawn
marg bar deep state!
’یہ قاتل میڈیا ہے‘
آخری وقت اشاعت: پير 10 جنوری 2011 , 16:39 GMT 21:39 PST
http://www.bbc.co.uk/urdu/multimedia/2011/01/110110_abbas_athar_media_taseer_uk.shtml
سلمان تاثیر کے قتل اور میڈیا میں ان کے قاتل کی کوریج پر سینیئر صحافی اور ایکسپریس اخبار کے ایڈیٹر عباس اطہر سے گفتگو
Muflis-e-shehar ko dhanwan se dar lagta hai
Par na dhanwan ko Rehman se dar lagta hai
Ab kahan Esaar-o-Ukhuwat wo Madine jaise
Ab to Muslim ko Musalman se dar lagta hai
Thinking that perhaps my fellow Pakistani friends here in London were more enlightened than their friends and family back home, I was shocked when they said that Shahbaz Bhatti deserved to die for his blasphemous remarks. And so did that Governor Taseer Salman, they said with a straight face and chilling righteousness. It seems we need to kill each and everyone who disagrees with us, especially on matters of religion. In the last couple of decades, there seems to have grown a huge industry that is churning out bombers, shooters and killers whose sole purpose is to kill as many fellow Pakistanis as possible . . . this is beyond madness and we seem to be heading, without any hesitancy, straight down a massive black hole. Today it’s bombs and bullets, what happens when technology progresses to a level where weapons of mass destruction are readily available to these people of mass destruction, those who seek the Event Horizon, the Apocalypse. The cult leader Applewhite managed to convince 38 followers to drink the elixir of death so they would be transported to the comet Hale-Bopp in the skies above, to live in eternal bliss in afterlife. The Americans and the Japanese who cleverly sent rockets to the comet to delve into its secrets of origin etc, only found ice, gas and dust trailing in its wake. The believers had either missed their mark, or really were six feet under just as they seemed to be in more down to earth actuality. They probably never were beamed upto Hale-Bopp, just as the Pharoes weren’t transposed to the stars. After 3,500 years, Egyptologists found them still entombed in their gilded caskets, looking grim and bewildered beneath their golden masks. The modern day fanatics manage to achieve this grim look in an instant, probably realising very quickly that the highest their souls had risen was about six feet, roughly the same as their bodies would the next day, only in the wrong direction. If only they had their head screwed on the right way, they would have realised that this elusive eternal salvation and bliss does not come to those who torture, enslave, murder and terrorise – for that they have to look within as well as the deepest corners of the universe. Starting with a blank slate and asking the most basic questions, as our ancestors did centuries ago would be a good start, as one of them famously enquired of himself:
Bullia ki jaana main kaun!
Na main moman vich maseetan, Na main vich kufar dian reetan.
Na main andar bhaid kitaban. Na main aaabi na main khaki.
Na main aatish na main paun, Bulla ki jana main kaun.
Na main Arabi na Lahori,
Na main hindi shehar Nagaori, Na Hindu na Turk Pashauri.
Na main bhaid mazhab de paya, Na main Adam Hawwa jaya,
Na koi apna naam dharaya.
Avval aakhar aap nu jana, Na koi dooja hor pacchana.
Bulle Shah kharha hai kaun, Bullia ki jaana main kaun.
Na main Musa na Pharoan, Na main jagan na main saun,
Na main renda vich Nadaun, Na main baitthan na vich bhaun,
Bulleh shah kharha hai kaun. Bullia ki jaana main kaun?!
What’s up, its pleasant paragraph regarding media print, we all understand media is a impressive source of facts.