By  Dr. Mahjabeen Islam
Toledo, Ohio

March 18 , 2011

Complicit in Cowardice

 

The last shred of possible Pakistani pride has left me. Incontrovertibly we are a nation of cowards and conspiracy theorists, always copping out and shifting blame.

Minister Shahbaz Bhatti was assassinated in broad daylight and immediately all police wirelesses came alive. The killers were not just on a quickly hidden motorbike but a white car. Islamabad teems with police and it is astounding that a clearly described Mehran could not be apprehended. Perhaps it is this rampant enabling of such heinous crimes that engenders the conspiracy theories that the nation loves to employ when faced with tragedy. They conspire themselves and so everyone else, they figure, must do the same.

How does a car just vanish into thin air in a populated area overrun by police? And therein lies the issue.  Pakistanis have become inured to blood and gore. Be they retired generals or the common man, the economy and the national code of greed make each man take the most profitable option. How do armed extremists just appear from nowhere and perpetuate attack after attack especially since 2008? No one cares to find out who this out-of-towner that wants to rent their home is; their main concern is to get the maximum rent.

It is not possible that pockets of the population are not aware of their terrorist neighbors and acquaintances. Aided and abetted by the vitriol of the mullahs and their out-of-context and, at times, blatantly false interpretation of the Qur’an and Hadith, Pakistanis have lost their sense of justice and are totally comfortable settling mullah-imagined scores with blood.  

And the mullah-180 degree switch is mind-boggling. From Munibur Rahman to Liaquat Baloch and all in between the murder of Shahbaz Bhatti is not related to his efforts to protect his community from the reaches of the Blasphemy Law. Excuse me? According to Baloch the religious parties have been very responsible in stemming passions and since the Prime Minister sent a letter saying that nothing would be done with the Blasphemy Law, the issue was over! I want to do the drugs that Liaquat Baloch is on these days; what a lovely delusional state!

On the one hand you have the Pakistan-plundering PPP in high office; the Prime Minister’s son importing his own bullet-proof Land Cruiser and not paying a paisa in tax. On the other Shahbaz Bhatti, though of the PPP and the recipient of multiple death threats for a protracted time but who did not get adequate security, leave alone a bullet-proof car, and whose farewell words speak of dying for the sake of principle and protecting his community. Principles? What an un-Pakistani concept!

Weaving convoluted conspiracy theories is a finely refined Muslim art. And all things horrid emanate from the hunood-yahood-Amrika trio. Just prior to his death Shahbaz Bhatti recorded a video detailing the death threats he’d been receiving. Governor Salman Taseer’s murderer Mumtaz Qadri stated repeatedly that he had killed him because he felt he had disrespected the Prophet (PBUH).  However the clerics believe that Shahbaz Bhatti’s killing is part of a deep conspiracy to destabilize Pakistan after the Raymond Davis affair!

They have condemned the murder of Shahbaz Bhatti quoting the “if you kill one innocent person it is like killing all of humanity” verse of the Qur’an 5:32. Whatever had happened when Mumtaz Qadri killed Governor Salman Taseer? Should murderers be showered with rose petals and given Valentine’s? That too by custodians of the law? How does questioning a man-made law indict you for blasphemy? Why did the clerics hold the nation hostage, threatening anyone that blessed Taseer’s soul or read his funeral prayer as equally blasphemous?  

Islam has the concept of individual and collective sin. Imams and scholars will be called to account on The Day of Judgment for their own deed inventory and will also be held liable for the sins that they incited in their congregations or students. Pakistan’s poison filled air has caused a flight of intellectual and spiritual capital as well. Jealousy and death threats have deprived Pakistan of the amazing  persona and rational, evidence-based knowledge of spiritual greats like Javed Ahmad Ghamdi.

A war with India for decades would have been easier for Pakistan than the wild jungle that is its streets now.  Why have journalist Wali Khan Babar’s killers not been apprehended? What was Governor Taseer’s security detail doing while Qadri changed the rifle magazine? Despite repeated requests and being on the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan’s hit-list, why was Shahbaz Bhatti not provided security?

Most importantly what face will we show to that most magnificent of all men, Muhammad (PBUH)? How will each Pakistani exonerate him/herself and prove convincingly that we had no part to play, by omission or commission, in the murders of thousands whom we felt were disrespecting him?

“Cowards die many times before their deaths; the valiant never taste of death but once,” said Shakespeare. We are complicit in the murders of Governor Salman Taseer, Shahbaz Bhatti and thousands of other for harboring, enabling and protecting the fanatics that have overtaken Pakistan. Instead of pushing for the repeal of the Blasphemy Law Pakistan’s mullahs bullied the nation. And in their cowardice of threats and intimidation, they die, inside, everyday.

(Mahjabeen Islam is an addictionist, family physician and columnist. mahjabeen.islam@gmail.com)

 

PREVIOUSLY


Modesty Is a Multimensional Prospect

Cronyism and Killing: All in the Spirit of Democracy

Question Du Jour

Bismillahs and Ameens

The Bias about Media Bias

A Gem in the Murkiness

Hajj and Connectivity with the High

Crying over What We've Sown

The Pakistani Plague: Personalities but no Processes

Prisoner Abuse at Abu-Ghraib

Wishing Our Pioneer Inner Peace

Remembrance and Reflections: The Repetitive Rungs of Spiritual Ascent

APPNA Convention

When I grow up I will be...

Can Kerry Carry the Muslim Vote?

From 1984 to the Gulag

The American Muslim Voter: Participate or Pout?

What Moral Values?

Nuclear Vacillation and Duplicity

Pleasing God versus His Creation

That’s My Story and I’m Sticking to It

Making Sense of Misfortune

Muslim Americans: Galvanizing Post-Persecution

Selectively Erring on the Side of Life

Honoring the Hitler to Muslims

Self before State: A Paradigm in Pakistan?

APPNA: Doctors without Focus

All Image and No Substance Makes for a PR Disaster

Shared Blame Needs Joint Action

Project Friday Khutba: Taking the Initiative to Spark Change

When Custodians Destroy

Soliciting Rape

Earth-Shattering Lessons

PTSD, Tests and Tears

Jews and Muslims Can Communicate

Going Too Far

The Sale of Sovereignty

Denial, Double Standards and Destroyed Lives

A Virtual Siege?

Hooked on Lahore

The Lebanon Crisis

Silent Spectators

Will Polls Translate into Legislation?

The Reigning Art of Self-Praise

The Sole Redemption

Killing at Will

The Sole Redemption

A Tribute to Serenity

Hypocrisy and Highhandedness

All Care Should Include Palliative Care

Desperate Measures

Eerie Prognostications

Dispassionate Apportioning of Blame

State-Sponsored Hooliganism

A Chorus of Crises

The Panacea for Pakistan

Musharraf’s Messiah Complex

Changing of the Guard

The Pakistan Election Dream Team

The Makings of an Uncivil Society

The Thin Veneer of Power-Mania

Puppet on an American String

A Method to the Mourning

Dropping Names or Money

The Ethics of Disagreement

What Would Muhammad Do?

Necessary Cacophony

Pakistan’s Vibrant Media Ensures Accountability

Maligning Muslims and Electing McCain

Buying into the Concept of Terrorism

Now That Barack Is President

A Talented Nation but

We Must Apply Restraint and Wisdom

A Nation on Notice

What Perpetuates Violence against Women?

Preparing for Adversity, Disability and Death: a Muslim Perspective

To Try or Not to Try: That Is the Question

The Seeds of a Revolution

Self-Hating Muslims

Lies, Deception and Hypocrisy

My Name Is Islam

Changing the Muslim Conversation

The Power of the Friday Sermon

Sequel to the Power of the Friday Sermon

Are We an Unjust People?

Muslims in the American Frame

Of Pens and Names

The Continual Killing of Physicians

A Gun-Slinging Nation

Surging Suicides in Pakistan

An Erosion of National Character

Comprehending the Catastrophe

A Thought Revolution

Perish or Rise

Patriarchy the Hijacker

Abolish Feudalism

Transmission of the Culture of Corruption in Pakistan

Brushing it under the National Carpet

Ignominy and Mayhem

Muslims: Everyone's Favorite Punching Bag

Equal Opportunity Defenders

The Righteous Are Those That Control Their Anger

Mighty Dichotomy

Misplaced Fury and Odd Expectations      

Editor: Akhtar M. Faruqui
© 2004 pakistanlink.com . All Rights Reserved.