Friday, June 4, 2010

Faith and honesty: I am a terrorist and so are you | Naveen Naqvi

The power-holders who created and bred these killers were complicit. Those who continue to feed them for strategic reasons are complicit. Whomever the voice in the recording that did the rounds on the internet before it became a scandal and threatened to be a lawsuit, the man who pronounced Ahmadis to be the worst kind of kafirs, he is complicit.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Staff | Opinio
Source & Credit: The Express Tribune
By Naveen Naqvi | June 2, 2010

There are many before me who have written about Friday’s attack on the Ahmadis in Lahore. By the time this piece goes into print, still more will have written – and written better – of the audacious attack on Jinnah Hospital by the terrorists who came back to save their own. However, if I do not write of these attacks, I will become more complicit than I already am, for isn’t it true that every time I renew my passport I am complicit as are you? Every minute that I hold my national identity card, I may as well be holding a gun to the head of any Pakistani minority.


The power-holders who created and bred these killers were complicit. Those who continue to feed them for strategic reasons are complicit. Whomever the voice in the recording that did the rounds on the internet before it became a scandal and threatened to be a lawsuit, the man who pronounced Ahmadis to be the worst kind of kafirs, he is complicit. Let us also not forget the immediate reaction from the state, which was predictably to not look inward but to blame the ‘foreign hand.’ I could almost see Tariq Aziz, fist raised in the air standing at the stage of his Neelam Ghar, bellowing, ‘Sahee jawab kay liye, Rahber water cooler aap ka hua! Denialistan Zindabad!’

But wait, it’s not over yet. We cannot overlook the judiciary on which we have pinned our hopes, the Supreme Court that set free the greatest hate monger against religious minorities, Hafiz Saeed. Then there is the government, which indicates a possible military operation against what have now been conveniently coined the Southern Punjab Taliban while allowing Saeed to embark on the extremist version of a rock tour.

One thinks there is hope yet. There is the activist community. A few members of Karachi’s civil society collected at the Press Club to agitate against the assault on the Ahmadis. They could only assemble for half an hour, and had to cut their protest short. Why? Because, reminiscent of a Monty Python skit, next in line was the anti-Israel protest. Of course, this was the real crowd-puller. They easily managed to nudge and jostle their way in. ‘Well, it’s our turn now, innit?’ The liberals, having been threatened by a bunch of murderous thugs just a week before over the Facebook fiasco, complied and withdrew.

Much as I disagree with Israel’s actions, I was ashamed to read in the papers the following day that in Islamabad alone a thousand people came out to protest within minutes of Flotilla.

No matter what I write, and how I may protest or apologise, it does not change the fact that I am complicit.

I am a terrorist and so are you.


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