Pakistan has many kinds of Muslims;
not only there are many sects but there are also multiple factions within these
sects. Though not many but some have started to question the Wahabi ideology in
connection with the rise of the militant Islam, however, not many people are questioning
the social impact of such an ideology and how it is affecting our collective behavior.
The past couple of decade has
witnessed an increasing number of middle-class and upper class urban Pakistani
women actively turning towards this brand of Islam – through schools like Al
Huda – and they influence their families and their circle of friends to this particular
religious framework that they work towards actively constructing a particular
kind of culture in Pakistan which they say is the pure Islam – free of all the foreign
influences or bida’at. The bida’at could range from wedding festivities to Sufism
to co-education among other things.
The question that should become part
of popular discourse in Pakistan but has not been given due attention is who gets
to define what is local and organic and what is foreign and intrusive?
The Wahabi interpretation shuns something as simple as a birthday celebration as foreign
concept or a mehndi function which is deemed un Islamic and bida’at and a
legacy of living with Hindus. Basant is a
festival indigenous to Punjab marking the advent of spring. It dates back 3,000
years and has traditionally been celebrated by people of all the religions in
Punjab. Though local and organic, it is erroneously linked with Hinduism, and
disowned as both un Islamic and foreign. However, adoption of abaya, which is
clearly a Saudi import, is not considered foreign at all. Sub continental women
observing purdah have traditionally used a big chador, in fact women in urban Khyber
Pakhtunkhwah still prefer a chador over an abaya, however an abaya never faced the
same hostility as that of the festival of basant.
The curriculum has helped this discourse in Pakistan, the history books that say “when we came or ruled the subcontinent,” they provide factually incorrect information. Barring a few who are the descendents of the armies of Mohammed Bin Qasim or the Mughals, most of the people of Pakistan are descendants of those who were already living in the subcontinent. Negating centuries old civilization for an identity that is still in evolution is not only untrue, but can have catastrophic consequences for the society. The elimination of local practices on the basis of their being un Islamic and foreign reflects the adherence to a particular interpretation of Islam and people upholding this interpretation as the truth are not only negating the religious experiences of different kinds of Muslims, but also the history of the land, creating a culture based on beliefs and practices that originate from outside the land.
The curriculum has helped this discourse in Pakistan, the history books that say “when we came or ruled the subcontinent,” they provide factually incorrect information. Barring a few who are the descendents of the armies of Mohammed Bin Qasim or the Mughals, most of the people of Pakistan are descendants of those who were already living in the subcontinent. Negating centuries old civilization for an identity that is still in evolution is not only untrue, but can have catastrophic consequences for the society. The elimination of local practices on the basis of their being un Islamic and foreign reflects the adherence to a particular interpretation of Islam and people upholding this interpretation as the truth are not only negating the religious experiences of different kinds of Muslims, but also the history of the land, creating a culture based on beliefs and practices that originate from outside the land.
Another
term that needs to be academically
and socially questioned is the use of the term ‘Muslim way’. Can there
be just
one way to be a Muslim when Muslims are as geographically diverse as
they are –
from Indonesia to Nigeria and beyond? Can one live with a sole primary
identity?
Is the primary identity of being a Muslim is so exclusionary that it
leaves no
space for other competing identities, be they region based or ethnicity
based? Must a cultural identity be mutually exclusive with that of a
religious identity? Aren’t human beings complex beings who are
supposed to have layered identities?
Originally written for Express Tribune, though they chopped the last paragraph away.
1 comment:
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