Pakistan must reverse its policy of sitting idle as Islamists blur the line between legitimate civil society and militancy
Mustafa Qadri,
guardian.co.uk, Friday 2 July 2010 16.04 BST
After last night’s bombings in Lahore, an ancient sanctuary, which for centuries was a place for prayer and meditation, has been rudely introduced to Pakistan’s very modern conflict. Nothing short of a shift in national culture will rescue the soul of Pakistan’s Islamic traditions.
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Tags: AfPak · Barack Obama · Data Gunj Baksh · Islam · Lahore · Pakistan · Sufism · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · terrorism · United States · war on terrorism
Violence and uncertainty in Pakistan are driving increasing numbers of people to seek solace in superstition and prayer
Mustafa Qadri,
guardian.co.uk, Monday 7 June 2010 07.59 BST
More and more Pakistanis are looking to prayer for protection in these troubled times. In the absence of credible, secular options, the fatalism this generates is a mixed blessing.
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Tags: Ahmadiyya · Islam · mystacism · Pakistan · poverty · Sufism · superstition · Taliban
For three decades Pervez Hoodbhoy, a Professor of Particle Physics at Qaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, has been promoting science and humanism in Pakistan. His was one of the earliest voices to sound the alarm not only against the Pakistan Taliban movement but also against the perils of developing nuclear weapons and the deepening religious intolerance that has been aided in large part by the Pakistan state. In this fascinating and insightful encounter, journalist Mustafa Qadri speaks with Professor Hoodbhoy about science, Islam, and the challenges faced by Pakistan.
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Tags: democracy · double standards · humanism · Islam · modernity · Pakistaniaat · Pervez Hoodbhoy · political violence · science · Taliban · terrorism
Leading Pakistani humanist and anti-nuclear scientist Pervez Hoodbhoy gives Mustafa Qadri his take on the current crises facing his country
For three decades Pervez Hoodbhoy, professor of Physics at Qaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, has been promoting science and humanism in Pakistan. His was one of the earliest voices to sound the alarm on the perils of developing nuclear weapons, and on the danger posed by the country’s deepening religious intolerance — issues that have gone on to damage the country’s reputation. His respected scientific work has been published widely, but in 2001 when the Pakistani Government wanted to present him with a national award, Hoodbhoy refused it, saying that Pakistan’s misuse of such awards had eroded their own credibility. Recently I spoke to Professor Hoodbhoy about science, Islam and the challenges facing Pakistan.
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Tags: democracy · humanism · Islam · Pakistan · Pervez Hoodbhoy · Qaid-a-Azam Univeristy · science · terrorism
The Diplomat’s Pakistan correspondent, Mustafa Qadri, meets refugees from the conflict in Pakistan’s Swat Valley and finds anger, trepidation and hope as they return home after this summer’s counter-Taliban military offensive.
Travelling along the road leading to the Swat valley is a memorable experience. As the narrow dual carriageway snakes around impossibly steep mountain ranges, the breathtaking vista of snow-capped peaks come into view as they loom over an emerald green valley pierced by the Swat River. It looks too perfect to be natural.
‘The beauty of Swat is unmatched in the world,’ says Ashraf, a Swati villager and journalist who agreed to take me to the region. When I ask if anyone maintains the near perfectly manicured grasslands and pine forests he laughs and shakes his head. Described in local poetry as heaven on earth, for centuries Swat has been home to saints and soothsayers–first those hailing from Hindu and Buddhist traditions, and in more recent centuries mystical Sufi Islam.
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Tags: democracy · Friends of Democratic Pakistan · Islam · justice · Malakand · North West Frontier Province · Pakistan Army · Pakistan Taliban · rule of law · Sufi Mohammad · Swat valley · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · United States
Last month’s attack on a Pakistani Christian community by a mob of Sunni Muslims is a worrying development in a country that purports to fight extremism, writes Mustafa Qadri
“Make mincemeat of the Christians” blared the mosque loudspeakers.
This was not the Taliban speaking, nor was it in the frontier of Pakistan along the Afghan border. The setting was the Christian Colony of Gojra in rural Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous and powerful province.
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Tags: Christianity · double standards · Gojra · Human Rights Commission of Pakistan · intolerance · Islam · Nawaz Sharif · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz branch · Punjab · racism · Shahbaz Sharif · Sherry Rehman · Shia Islam · Shia-Sunni · Sunni Islam
Mustafa Qadri
Last Updated: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 12:24:00 +1000
People in a Pakistani frontier region threatened by the Taliban are trying to preserve a culture rich in poetry and dance from religious extremism.
The culture of the ethnic Pashtun peoples often delights in worldly pleasures – like sex and alcohol – considered un-Islamic by religious conservatives.
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Tags: Badaber · freedom of speech · Ghani Khan · Islam · Pakistan · Pashtun culture · poetry · Swat valley · Taliban
Much of Afghanistan’s Pashtun-dominated south and east has been tense during for the recent presidential elections, but just over the border in Pakistan, outside Peshawar, the battle rages for cultural control of the community. The Taliban are trying to outlaw traditional poetry and dance, which they consider un-Islamic.
Presenter:Mustafa Qadri
Speaker: Fazal Maula, Peshawar-based non-government organisation
QADRI: Following my travels through northwestern Pakistan where millions fled the war against the Taliban, I met members of an anti-Taliban lashkar or army in the tribal district of Badaber. To describe Badaber as an outpost would be something of an understatement. Both the Taliban and government security forces have wrestled for control of this vitally strategic tribal region. Fazal Maula from a local non-government organisation explains.
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Tags: democracy · freedom of speech · Ghani Khan · Islam · Pakistan · Pashtun culture · Taliban
Communal stability is at risk as the rollout of Zia ul-Haq’s Islamisation continues unabated
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Monday 24 August 2009 10:00 BST
In decades past, the town mullahs decried the use of megaphones during the call to prayer. Now they have embraced the technology in Pakistan. In every city the loud blare of the muezzin echoes throughout the streets, although they rarely call out in unison. For centuries Muslims have bickered over prayer times, and much else.
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Tags: Christianity · double standards · Gojra · Human Rights Commission of Pakistan · intolerance · Islam · Nawaz Sharif · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Punjab · racism · Shahbaz Sharif · Sherry Rehman · Shia Islam · Shia-Sunni · Sunni Islam
August 15th, 2009 · 1 Comment
In recent years. there have been increasing attempts to reform Pakistan’s much-maligned religious schools, known as madrassas. At a conference in Islamabad, WPR contributor Mustafa Qadri spoke to religious scholars and teachers about their attempts to broaden the pedagogical scope of Pakistan’s seminaries. The program, funded by the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy, based [...]
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Tags: education · International Centre for Religion and Diplomacy · Islam · madaris · Pakistan
Pakistan has seen rapid change and frequent conflict in its 62 years. Its resilience is a testament to its people
· Mustafa Qadri
· guardian.co.uk, Friday 14 August 2009 19:00 BST
Karachi’s Saddar Town is the frenetic heart of Pakistan’s commercial capital. A retail hub where anything and everything from cameras to salwar kameez can be purchased, it was once the economic gateway into the northern reaches of British India. That legacy is still visible in Saddar’s fading colonial terraces, but the intricate wooden shutters are mostly gone and the Victorian entrances have been converted into street stalls. Today most are too busy trying to survive to notice the heritage.
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Tags: Bangladesh · Hinduism · India · Islam · Karachi · Mohammad Ali Jinnah · Pakistan · partition of Indian subcontinent · Sikhism · Taliban · Talibanisation · United States
Updated August 6, 2009 11:42:34
To many foreign observers, Pakistan is the global centre of extremist Islam, and its madrassas – or religious seminaries – are where the violence starts. However, this kind of scaremongering hides a more complex reality.
Presenter: Mustafa Qadri in Pakistan
Speaker: Professor Qibla Ayaz, Peshawar University; Abdul Ghani, organiser of education conference in Islamabad; Azi Hussain, International Centre for Religion and Diplomacy in Washington DC
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QADRI: There are believed to be 2 million madrassa students in several thousand seminaries throughout Pakistan. But exact figures are hard to verify because most operate independent of government supervision. Although madrassas have ominous connotations in the West…
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Tags: education · International Centre for Religion and Diplomacy · Islam · Islamabad · madaris · Pakistan · Peshawar University
Many of the world’s most dangerous Islamic extremists have learnt their approach in Madrassas, or religious schools, that offer a restricted curriculum that fails to reflect the modern world. In Pakistan madrassas also have a reputation for breeding extremists: but a plan to reform them is in motion, writes Mustafa Qadri.
“One cannot deny the very real role played by madrassas in fomenting extremism in Pakistan. I have met several members of the Taliban and a Lashkar-e-Tayaba operative. All had either been recruited or taught at madrasssas.”
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Tags: Bareilly · Barelwi · democracy · Deoband · Deobandi Islam · education · International Centre for Religion and Diplomacy · Islam · Jaish-e-Mohammad · madaris · Mufti Usmani · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism · zakaat
A snapshot of life in Pakistan’s refugee camps
Updated July 16, 2009 11:48:55
Although the fighting in Pakistan’s Swat valley has ended and some refugees have started to head home, many remain wary of returning.
An estimated 2 million fled the conflict between Pakistani troops and the Taliban, and some ended up at a displaced person camp two hours north of the capital Islamabad.
Presenter: Mustafa Qadri
Speakers: Purmanari, displaced person; Mohammad Yahya, a former town mayor; Ziauddin Yousufzai, School teacher; Mannu, school student
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Tags: double standards · IDPs · Islam · justice · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Swat valley · Taliban · war on terrorism
Fixing Pakistan’s madrasas
Pakistan’s madrasas have a bad reputation. But is it justified, and will a new programme of reform improve standards?
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Tags: democracy · education · Islam · madaris · Pakistan
Pakistan madrasas: ‘We focus on how to live together and respect diversity’
Mustafa Qadri reports on a programme to reform madrasa curriculums in Pakistan
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Tags: democracy · education · Islam · madaris · Pakistan · Taliban
Late last year I interviewed “Mullah Noor Allam”, a middle ranking Taliban commander from the Swat valley. The interview was published in Australia’s Canberra Times newspaper on 17 January 2009. You can view the story…
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Tags: democracy · Islam · Malakand Division · Pakistan · Sharia · Swat valley · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban
Not everybody is in a position to write a column, but may have a profound experience or perspective to share. In this feature we seek out such people and report back so the Unleashed audience can absorb and discuss unique, fascinating or moving stories.
In our latest instalment of “Unleashed Voices” Mustafa Qadri meets a boy from Pakistan who has trained to become a Taliban suicide bomber.
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Tags: Dera Adam Khel · Islam · justice · Kohat · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
In my hometown in Punjab, a businessman friend was inspired by the news from Swat. “If two hundred Taliban take over our town, then we can all start making our own decisions. Who needs this corrupt system anyway?” My friend is a typical middle-class conservative Pakistani, and people in cities across the country share his [...]
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Tags: democracy · double standards · Islam · Mohammad Hanif · Pakistan · Taliban
Addressing a gathering at Friday prayers, the JI Amir said those who speak for Shariah and Islam including Maulana Sufi Muhammad deserve appreciation.
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Tags: Islam · Jamaat-e-Islami · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Syed Munawar Hasan · Taliban
A group of 35 Hindus, nearly half of them women, from Pakistan have crossed over to India and asked the government to allow them to settle in the country, Indian media reported Monday.
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Tags: Federally Administered Tribal Areas · Hinduism · Islam · Pakistan · refugees · Taliban
In January I interviewed a member of Lashkar-e-Toiba, the pro-Pakistan militant group believed to have been involved in the Mumbai attacks, for The Diplomat magazine. The interview has just been published in the latest edition of the magazine and is available online here.
JIHAD: THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES
02-Mar-2009
Mustafa Qadri investigates the organisations believed by many to have been behind the Mumbai terrorist attacks
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Tags: Islam · jihad · Karachi · Lashkar-e-Toiba · Mumbai · Pakistan · war on terror
The following article appears on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Unleashed website today:
Taming the Taliban
Mustafa Qadri
This month the world reacted with surprise and trepidation at the news that Pakistan had reached a peace agreement with religious groups closely aligned to the Taliban. The accord relates to the mountainous Malakand division of the North Western Frontier Province that borders Afghanistan. It covers the beautiful Swat valley, the onetime alpine honeymoon resort, that, since 2007, has been gripped by a Taliban insurgency.
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Tags: Islam · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi · Tehreek-e-Taliban · war on terror
Tags: Islam · justice · Pakistan · terrorism
With the rise in religious extremism and growing antagonism among ordinary Muslims against the West–largely a response to U.S. interventionist policies abroad–secular, Western-style feminists in countries such as Pakistan are increasingly seen as U.S. agents and regarded with suspicion and distrust.
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Tags: double standards · Islam · Pakistan · women's rights
LAHORE: A meeting of Muttehadda Ulema Council (MUC) held here Tuesday issued a unanimous decree (fatwa) declaring suicide attacks in Pakistan as haram (unlawful) and Najaez (unjustified).
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Tags: Islam · Pakistan · terrorism
It is extremely ironic, not to say embarrassing, that the Muslim people, who led the world for a millennium in every scientific discipline, developed the scientific method itself and taught it to the west, are still in a state of chaos over a relatively simple matter of science and religion, ie the lunar calendar.
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Tags: dogma · humour · Islam · Ramadan · science
September 1st, 2008 · 3 Comments
“The Taliban’s War Against Muslims” NewMatilda.com 1 September 2008
(The Taliban claims to be a Muslim movement but most of its victims are Muslims, writes Mustafa Qadri from Islamabad)
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Tags: Islam · Jamiat-e-Ulema Islami · Nawaz Sharif · NWFP · Pakistan · Sufism · Taliban · United States
“Going in circles” altmuslim.org 7 August 2008
(On Islam, blind faith and the importance of considering different perspectives)
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Tags: humanism · Islam · philosophy · theology
Today I had some yummy pancakes with a cousin and his family. It was good to have a chilled out late Sunday chat and a big feed. There was another bloke there, around my dad’s age or possibly older. He was an interesting character. Quite knowledgeable and it seems he’s had a lot of life [...]
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Tags: humanism · ideology · Islam · Karachi · Pakistan · philosophy · travel diary
The vilification of Islam, particularly in the West, has developed into something of a pseudo-intellectual industry.
My first piece for Online Opinion has just been posted here.
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Tags: clash of civilisations · Islam · racism
Lost in the contrived debate over whether Islam is compatible with democracy is a far more important set of questions: what does democracy mean to different societies – not just Westerners or Muslims, but to the Chinese, Tibetans and so on?
Does it matter that no Western government offered material support to the people of Pakistan as they sought to depose their dictator over the past several years?
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Tags: clash of civilisations · democracy · Iran · Islam · The West