(The author can be contacted at Mkawan@aol.com)
There are of course many key issues
that come to one’s mind as one thinks about the survival and well being
of Pakistan: the real purpose of Pakistan’s creation in 1947, the sociopolitical
chaos for over 50 years and revolutionary grass-root changes that are required
to institute a system of governance in order to succeed in the 21st century.
Some orientalists in the West are of the opinion that Pakistan as a country
made no geographic or demographic sense being founded as a homeland for
the Muslims of the subcontinent when there are more subcontinent Muslims
outside Pakistan than within it. They correctly believe that Pakistan has
been reduced to a patchwork of many ethnic groups and sects increasingly
in violent conflict with one another. It is being considered as a failed
State and the Western political pundits predict that it is bound to fall
apart sooner or later. The secular and sham democratic governments in Pakistan
have had less and less legitimacy as well as less ability to manage ethnic
and sectarian groups and resources of the country.
When all else has failed we have only
the great Quaid to fall back on as our savior. He was and remains the only
unblemished leader around whom we can rally even today and re-build our
unity and our country in the darkest of days in our history. Simply quoting
the Quaid and talking about building a Quad’s Pakistan is not enough. We
must propagate and fulfill the Quad’s vision, ideology, hopes and aspirations
for Pakistan and its people by sincere and consistent acts and deeds.
For understanding these and other issues and their implications,
we will need a think tank with a great deal of diversity and perspective
on sociopolitical and economical problems facing Pakistan and the underlying
and ongoing causes of those problems. The ideas of our Quaid remain as
important today for Pakistan’s survival and its future as they were at
the time of its inception. I do not believe, short of a revolution, it
is possible to bring about a grass root and lasting change in a failed
state that has reached its lowest ebb over 50 years.
Pakistan has, since its creation,
suffered four military coups. The 4th coup in October 1999 was probably
a temporary solution given the circumstances. The degeneration had been
ongoing over many decades. It could have been a coup by some form of sectarianism
and an extremist religious group that could have led to further chaos throughout
the country. Or it could have seen a less able lower level military officer’s
takeover. We already know very well that an extended involvement of the
military in politics and civilian administration leads to corruption and
undermines the military’s professionalism, discipline and moral standards.
Hamood ur Rehman commission report has revealed disastrous consequences
of past military interventions and loss of a half of our country.
Since your becoming the chief executive, there has been
a great deal of talk about return to democracy in Pakistan. What democracy
are we talking about? It is apparent that corrupt politicians wish to return
to the same ‘sham’ democracy that did not work for the masses. To me ‘sham’
democracy means a democracy where parliamentary practices are officially
and superficially adhered to, while behind the scenes the military and
security services play the controlling and dominant role. That has been
indeed the case in Pakistan when ever military was not in direct control.
How long since Pakistan’s birth has the military stayed away from Pakistani
politics? The answer is first 13 months only until the unfortunate and
early demise of our Quaid.
Many Westoxicated Pakistani intellectuals
may want Western type of democratic model for Pakistan. Western democracy
is not necessarily applicable for every country on this planet and is definitely
not suitable for Pakistan in its western forms. You have talked about returning
Pakistan to ‘real democracy’. What do you mean by ‘real’ democracy? Repeated
trials of ‘sham’ democracy and military dictatorships in Pakistan have
already brought about a total degeneration of our country and all its institutions.
Pakistan’s military has been the most powerful political party in Pakistan
ever since Ayub Khan involved the military into the politics. Our masses
are illiterate and poor but overly trusting and they have suffered enough.
The masses are undoubtedly politically immature and they have been lied
to over the decades by the civilian as well as military dictators. Why
should they believe in your scheme of devolution of power plan that you
believe would change that dream of the Quaid into reality? Why don’t you
explain to the masses what dream of the Quaid were you talking about? Our
masses need to be educated and prepared about the real purpose and the
dreams the founding fathers had for Pakistan. A great many of our intellectuals
even do not really understand what really the Quaids’s Pakistan meant and
what Allama Iqbal was all about? Our founding fathers had a very unique
form of democracy in their mind and that was an Islamic pluralistic model
of democracy. They never meant a theocracy or sectarian system for Pakistan.
They also never meant dictatorship by the military or by the politicians.
Your determination and objective to
return Pakistan to ‘real’ democracy by October 2002 is rather overly ambitious
and impossible to achieve in a short time that is available to you. You
stated that the Government would hold elections for the national and provincial
assemblies by October 2002 under the Supreme Court verdict of May 12, 2000.
These elections, as stated by you, have been preceded by local bodies polls
in December 2000 as the first phase of the devolution plan.
I personally do not believe that Pakistan’s
problems are fixable in a period of three years. Our not well informed
masses and even our intellectuals need educating and preparing about the
Islamic democratic process and that will require a longer time to accomplish.
We must however start somewhere and somehow. However, we must be sure that
you and your comrades have the integrity, sincerity and the ability to
accomplish this very tall order in a manner Iqbal and the Quaid would have
liked you to accomplish for the masses.
The corruption in Pakistan has deeply
penetrated from top to bottom and remains an integral part of our national
character. How will you change that in a short 3-year time frame? How will
you control the bigots and thieves at all levels of the Pakistani society?
Sectarianism continues to distort our true Islamic teachings. How are you
going to correct that? Even if you possess an ability of a great leader
and a correct vision, it will still take a large team of dedicated Mujahids
for many years to bring about a true grass root and revolutionary
change and to help keep Pakistan on the right path.
Being simply a soldier by training
and experience, do you and your military comrades really understand Pakistan’s
founding fathers’ vision and aspirations? You now have the best of opportunity
and an obligation to genuinely reforming the country, and although the
media has reported very little on this, you have the reputation of being
a Turkophile. You have lived in Turkey and you speak fluent Turkish. As
a military man with interests in military history, you are known to be
influenced by Kamal Attaturk. He Introduced ‘sham’ democracy in Turkey
and that is why the Turkish military and security forces still play the
most dominant role behind the scenes of Turkish quasi-democracy. I hope
you will not try to re-impose Kamalist model in Pakistan ignoring the vision
of Pakistan’s founding fathers. Given Pakistan’s unique purpose and circumstance,
Turkophile ideas are detrimental for Pakistan and its people. You could
surely succeed by creating a role model of your own based on the aspirations
of our own founding fathers and our masses .You have the best and unique
opportunity to achieve the true objectives of Pakistan’s creation.
Doctrines of Fascism, totalitarianism
that came out of Western democratic circumstance and communism that supposedly
came out as a reaction to contemplated failures of western political democracy
have all been discredited. We continue to live in a disorderly and fragmented
world with numerous eruptions in the Islamic and other countries and widening
disparity between the rich and poor within each country and globally between
countries. The Western industrialized nations, though economically still
affluent, lead the world in the control of material desires and sensual
gratification that are leading rapidly to the moral and social decay of
western societies, culture and even regression of their own democracies.
This decay and regression is progressively and adversely impacting the
western sociopolitical system and is infectious to all countries of the
world. We must draw lessons from the failed and failing systems of the
20th century in which over 200 million people were slaughtered in the name
of insane but organized politics and ruthless dictators. Having said that,
we should also never hesitate to pick whatever best and constructive ideas
come out of the positive experiences of the west in political thought,
science and technology. The West too has benefited tremendously in the
past from the positive experiences and contributions of the golden era
of Islamic civilization in developing its own civilization and culture.
Western world has made tremendous
contributions to the betterment of mankind and continues to lead the world
in all spheres of human endeavor today. However, Western intellectuals
and political scientist are facing serious questions, as the 20th century
western democracy has indirectly brought about the diseases of Nazism and
Fascism and even communism. Western styled democracy may still bring in
this postindustrial epoch other and new forms of diseases if applied inappropriately
and blindly in countries where it can not fit.
Of-course, Western democracy, apparently
at the end of the 20th century, seems to be the ideal system when compared
with those cataclysmic failed systems of the past and the dictatorships
that are still prevalent in many countries of the world. The western democracy
is not suitable and necessarily good for every country and even the West
must undergo an ongoing overhauling and evolution for the better if it
is to survive in the long run. Third world countries are attracted by the
comparatively better life of the people in the West, which is due only
to their scientific achievements and their being a melting pot for young
and highly educated people from the world over to come and settle in this
vast and beautiful country with ever present human and material resources
for a long time in the future.
Among approximately 60 Muslim nations
of the world, Pakistan is unique because the sole purpose of its creation
was Islam. It was meant to be a starting point for the reawakening and
revival of the decaying Islamic civilization over the past several centuries.
It was Allama lqbal, an Islamic thinker and philosopher of the 20th century
who after an in-depth study of the Qur’an realized that the true
Islam has got buried under the debris of the artificial sectarian Islam.
He called upon the Ummah to revive the true Islam in the light of Qur’an.
He actually converted the Quaid from being a staunch Indian Nationalist
to an Islamic ideologue of Pakistan through their mutual and personal meetings
and exchange of ideas in numerous letters spanning over a period of about
10 years. It is evident from Quad’s numerous speeches and statements that
Pakistan was to be governed in accordance with an alternative democracy
(Islamic Democracy).
It is my observation by living in
the West for over 30 years that Western Democracy has worked best for the
West since no alternative system in recent history has won over this system.
However, it is not a perfect system and has its own flaws and needs a great
deal of improvements.
The Quaid by helping create Pakistan
gave us the opportunity to institute a model pluralistic Islamic democracy
as an improvement over all forms of democracies but we unfortunately failed
miserably over the past 50 years to accomplish what our founding fathers
had hoped. The founding fathers by Islamic democracy did not ever mean
theocratic sectarianism system to be run by Mullahs.
Islam is an all-encompassing universal
system of life. In an Islamic State, sovereignty belongs to God and Islam
integrates the spiritual and the secular. The Qur’an repeatedly
talks about this total system of life called Din. The word ‘religion’
in the English vocabulary means ‘private relationship between man and God’.
The equivalent word for ‘religion’ is Madhhab that has not once
been mentioned in the Qur’an. Islam is a collective belief system
that enjoins the community (Ummah) to behave in an integrated and
disciplined manner not only individually but more importantly in a collective
manner. Thus an overlap exists in Islam between the domains of public life
and private life. Islam includes both spiritual and secular and achievement
of balance (Mizan) between these two aspects of life is indeed the
essence of Islam.
The Sunnah and path of the
Prophet (sws) constitute an evidence of the necessity for establishing
an Islamic government. He himself established a government, as history
testifies. He engaged in the implementation of Islamic laws, the establishment
of the ordinances of the Shari‘ah, and administration of the society.
According to one of the verses of the Qur’an, the ordinances of
Islam are not limited with respect to time and place; they are permanent
and must be enacted until the end of time. Thus the formation of Islamic
government and establishment of its executive, legislative and judicial
organs are all necessary. The ratio of Qur’anic verses concerned
with the affairs of society to those concerned with the ritual aspect is
greater than hundred to one. Of the approximately fifty sections of the
corpus of Hadith concerning all ordinances of Islam, no more than
three or four sections relate to matters of ritual worship and the duties
of man towards his Creator. A few more are concerned with ethics, and all
the rest are concerned with social, economic, and political aspects.
The extreme secular camp in Pakistan
believes that the Quaid’s August 11, 1947, speech supported their position.
This speech must be understood in the light of all of his previous and
subsequent speeches and statements that pertain to the 1937-1947 period.
He had clearly promised an Islamic political idea for Pakistan. In this
particular speech of August 11, 1947, he had said: ‘You are free to go
to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other places
of worship in this state of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or
caste or creed -- that has nothing to do with the business of the state.’
This, in my view, is exactly in accordance
with the teachings of Islam that promises liberty of religious beliefs,
rituals, customs as well as personal laws to the followers of all faiths.
That is what the Mithaq-i-Madinah meant. In this context, the people
of faiths other than Islam would be equal citizens of an Islamic State
as long as they enjoy their own liberty and do not interfere with the ideology
and the authority of an Islamic State. If Pakistan had instituted real
Islam over the past 50 yeas, the members of our non-Muslim minorities would
have been appreciative of Islam’s positive role in guaranteeing equal citizenship
for non-Muslims in an Islamic State.
Some Pakistani intellectuals who are
in the habit of negating Islam’s historical role in the genesis of Pakistan
are lost between real and artificial Islam. They have formed misguided
and incorrect notions of Islam. The open discussion of this subject should
be welcomed for all of us to clarify and settle once and for all the ideological
issues of Islam as well as a complete understanding of the purpose of Pakistan’s
creation.
The Quaid in a Broadcast talk to the
people of the United States of America on Pakistan, recorded in February,
1948, in his capacity as Governor General of Pakistan, said: ‘The Constitution
of Pakistan has yet to be framed by the Pakistan Constituent Assembly.
I do not know what the ultimate shape of this constitution is going to
be, but I am sure that it will be of a democratic type, embodying the essential
principles of Islam. Today, they are as applicable in actual life as they
were 1,300 years ago. Islam and its idealism have taught us democracy.
It has taught equality of man, justice and fair play to everybody. We are
the inheritors of these glorious traditions and are fully alive to our
responsibilities and obligations as framers of the future constitution
of Pakistan. In any case, Pakistan is not going to be a theocratic State
to be ruled by priests with a divine mission’.
By this, the Quaid clearly meant Islamic
democracy: ‘democracy embodying the essential principles of Islam’ in practice
meaning the ways and means for the implementation of the Qur’anic laws
and the principles to be framed by the masses by mutual consultation, within
the permanent boundary lines determined by the Qur’an. That is what
an Islamic State is permitted to do; beyond this it has no authority. The
Qur’anic permanent laws are not that many and therefore, the most
law making in the Islamic State would fall outside the boundary lines prescribed
by the Qur’an and thus will be framed in a democratic manner according
to the will of the people. The whole idea was for Pakistan to be an Islamic
democratic state embodying essential principles and idealism of Islam worked
out by Iqbal and the Quaid over the decades.
There would thus be no unrestricted
capitalism and no landlords in an Islamic State. The Quaid made this abundantly
clear during his struggle for the achievement of Pakistan. In his presidential
address delivered at the annual session of the All-India Muslim League,
Delhi, on April 24, 1943, he said: ‘Here, I should like to give a warning
to the landlords and capitalists who have flourished at our expense by
a system which is so vicious, which is so wicked and which makes them so
selfish that it is difficult to reason with them. The exploitation of the
masses has gone into their blood. They have forgotten the lessons of Islam.
Greed and selfishness have made these people subordinate to the interests
of others in order to fatten themselves. It is true we are not in power
today. You go anywhere to the countryside. I have visited villages. There
are millions and millions of our people who hardly get one meal a day.
Is this the aim of Pakistan? Do you visualize that millions have been exploited
and cannot get one meal a day? If that was the idea of Pakistan, I would
not have it. If they are wise they will have to adjust themselves to the
new modern conditions of life. If they won’t, God help them: we shall not
help them.’
For over half a century, the bigots
and thieves have continuously subjected the innocent people of Pakistan
to the exploitation. All of them have had vested interests of their own
and have been closely linked with the status quo and the present critical
plight of Pakistan. Revolutionary change is required for the survival and
salvation of Pakistan at this critical juncture in our history. All obstacles
in the path of pluralistic Islamic Pakistan have to be effectively and
permanently removed. You Mr Chief Executive have an obligation to cleanse
Pakistan of all the impediments, the realm of decades of status quo and
putting Pakistan on the right course and making it stay on the right path
for years to come. It is a tall order that will require a large cadre of
Mujahids and a cohesive team of experts with genuine integrity to
help keep Pakistan on the right course for a long time and to correct the
wrongs done to it over half a century. Organizing governance based on true
Islamic democratic system is the only definition and nature of a long awaited
change in Pakistan. Our Quaid actually had suffered from an early demise
as his health kept deteriorating under the progressive stress he underwent
in a struggle for Pakistan's creation.
As a Chief Executive, you now have
an ultimate obligation to the Pakistani people, and the Ummah for
recreating a true Islamic identity, allegiance and a model pluralistic
Islamic democracy. You must also help recreate a sociopolitical and Islamic
economic system based on common Islamic belief and culture -- the Ummah
of Islam, a distinct civilization form others. Iqbal through his life long
dedicated works and an in-depth study of Qur’an developed insights
into the real Islam and its revival. His reinterpretation of the Qur’an
-- reawakens the sociopolitical thought and the Islamic ideology. Islam
cuts across continents, nationalities and ethnic groups and indeed is a
global system with tremendous future possibilities for the solution of
serious problems faced by the mankind and for peace and tranquillity of
the entire human family. If you prove to be a genuine agent of change
(by sincerely understanding the real purpose of Pakistan’s coming into
being), you will surely succeed. You have a tremendous and real opportunity
of fortune and fame to recreate the history of Islam in the 21st century.
Let us wait and see if you indeed have the vision to be a hero or you too
turn out to be a villain in Pakistan’s history like many of your predecessors
at the helm of Pakistan’s affairs over a period of half a century. May
Allah guide you in the right direction. (Amen)
|