Published in The Nation, December 30, 2012.
Half-cocked measures never work. Public sentiments
are echoed in slogans like ‘drone attacks must end’, ‘stop supporting Baloch
separatism’, ‘Black Water and the likes must end terrorism in Pakistan’, ‘stop
interfering in our domestic affairs’. But these are mere public appeasement
proclamations, made in a manner not to offend our masters. The people, however,
know that nothing short of a total breakaway from the US will end our plight.
Half-cocked measures never work. And we cannot breakaway unless the current
political order is replaced with something more dynamic. They have permeated to
the very roots of this system and will control any change within it. This
political carousel, irrespective of new players, will continue to remain
compliant to US objectives. For any positive outcome, these shackles have to be
entirely removed and a new citizen friendly order created; adjustments to fit
ankle size will not reduce the pain.
The fear is that any push for a new political
scenario will stir up US sensitivities and activate their involvement in the
course of change, to enable them to stay on top of it. Failing this, they will
be forced to commence the last phase of their plan to dismember and defang us.
They cannot let this, however mild, Islamic country slip out of their grip.
Without the Army’s backing, whose battle cry is “Allah o Akbar”, the push for
such a change would create a scenario which could unroll towards fragmentation.
Our hostility with the US will strengthen the
currently stirred up extremist sentiments, while rendering our secular state
vulnerable. Both will then create chaos in the country – the US to dismember it
and the extremists in an endeavour to gain control over it. Between them, we
will be torn apart. We cannot remain on the current secular path and seek to
rid ourselves of the US. If we must close our doors to the US, we have no
option but to open our hearts to Allah and go for an enlightened Islamic
government. This is our only empowering option.
Pakistan is an Islamic country and you can drag it
only so far from its ethos. Our support to US occupation of Afghanistan, in
clear defiance of the Holy Quran, has brought forth horrifying results: bombs
exploding in mosques in the name of Allah, soldiers killing children in the
name of Allah; everyone is talking in such haste, no one wants to stop and
ponder. Both sides are saying, “We are the good guys, let’s kill the bad guys”,
without regard to the basis of our muddled criteria. In this self righteous
prudence calculus, bloodshed has become insignificant and Allah has become
irrelevant. The true message of Islam has been lost in this battle between the
unlettered idealists and scholars enlightened by the Western sunrise.
The government and the electronic media are
exhorting the people to stay on this allegedly middle course between the two
extremes, and classify this as the course recommended by our Prophet (pbuh).
However, the middle path does not lie between kufr (disbelief) and faith in
Allah, but within the realms of our all encompassing deen (way of life in
Islam). You cannot be a part time Muslim; after your namaz (prayers) you cannot
fold and put Allah in the closet along with the prayer mat. He is part of each
moment of our life. And that is what makes it bearable. And that is what makes
it beautiful. Taking the true middle path is our only way out today.
Such a change requires dynamic and visionary
leadership. However, our state machinery is neither designed to take a long
term perspective, nor capable of taking decisive steps. Our decisions will
continue to be based on immediate concerns. We are merely going along with the
momentum of the tide, trying to stay afloat, without any clue or care about
where we are headed. Our leaders sit back and indulge in petty political
game-playing, which is all that they can handle. Without a bold initiative we
will continue to remain amongst the trodden and never actualize to our
potential as a nation. It is during such hard times that nations rise and
shine.
The idea of standing up as a truly Islamic state is
not as fearsome as some of us have been made to believe. The immediate image
that comes to mind is of frenzied gun toting jihadists forcing the population
to their version of Islam; of lashes and stoning; of a society living in fright
and anguish: a Talibanised Pakistan. The reality could be far from it. This
religion came to end tyranny and oppression; there is no coercion in it. Islam
is a message of social justice, benevolence and peace, not only for the Muslims
but for the entire community. If it does not bring tranquillity and serenity in
the lives of the people, then it is not the true message of Islam but some
distorted version of it.
Imposition of Islamic law will be a revolutionary
change, but its enforcement will be evolutionary. And there is no fear of
conflict in its imposition. These have already been resolved, since our
constitution clearly expresses that laws shall be in conformity with the Holy
Quran and Sunnah and that personal laws shall be according to each sect; so
there is no dispute about “Whose Islam?”
Immediate enforcement of Islamic law on the entire
population is neither practically possible nor socially conducive. Creation of
enabling environment will take time; a system of justice will have to be
established before we can talk of punishments – and all this has to commence
from the top. Change in the economic order will take its own time. Social
changes will certainly take longer.
Today, in this environment of chaos and
hopelessness, an Islamic government can be the only guarantor of peace and
stability in Pakistan. Allah has left us with no other option.
The writer is a retired lieutenant general and
former corps commander of Lahore.
Email:
azizshahid10@gmail.com Blog: gen-shahidaziz.blogspot.com