Journal Pioneer

World Affairs

- Henry Srebrnik Henry Srebrnik is a professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

Pakistan is a hard country for religious minorities.

It’s hard being anything but a particular kind of Sunni Muslim in Pakistan these days. Christians, Hindus, Shia Muslims, and members of the Ahmadiyya sect - considered heretical by many other Muslims - are wise to remain circumspec­t.

Even adherents of Sufi orders, most of them Sunnis, are considered idolaters by Salafist fundamenta­lists. All these groups are the victims of periodic outbursts of violence and even murder.

The country, which since 1971 includes only what used to be West Pakistan, is overwhelmi­ngly Muslim – only about five per cent of its 190 million people are Christians or Hindus.

Shia Muslims, often also considered heretics by extreme Sunni groups, comprise upwards of 20 per cent of the country’s Muslim population. The Ahmadiyya are at most some two per cent.

When Pakistan was created during the partition of the Indian subcontine­nt in 1947, relations between the two major branches of Islam were fairly amicable, and many of the country’s initial leaders were Shia. The founder of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, was an Ismaili who converted to Twelver Shiism.

But this began to change in the late 1970s, especially after the April 1979 execution of deposed former prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, a Shia, by General Muhammad Zia-ulHaq, a devout Sunni.

Zia’s Sunni Islamizati­on campaign emboldened sectarian radicals, but his laws and regulation­s were resisted by Shia who saw it as “Sunnificat­ion” of the political system.

Also, a new generation of Shia activists found inspiratio­n in the assertive Shiism of Ayatollah Khomeini’s post-1979 Iran, Pakistan’s western neighbour. In July 1980, 25,000 Shia protested in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad. Sectarian radical Sunnis began to preach against the Shia, and terrorist groups sprang up. Sectarian riots broke out in 1983 in Karachi, Pakistan’s major city, and spread to other centres, including Lahore.

Since 2008, Pakistan’s Shia Muslim community has been the target of an unpreceden­ted escalation in violence as Sunni militant groups such as Lashkare-Jhangvi, Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, Sipah-e-Sahaba, and Tehriki-Taliban Pakistan have killed thousands of Shia across the country – reportedly more than 2,000 just since 2015.

Yet many of the leaders of these networks, though charged with mass murder, continue to avoid prosecutio­n or otherwise evade accountabi­lity. After all, many were initially aided, even created, by the Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI), Pakistan’s national security directorat­e.

Sufis overlap the sectarian divide, though most are Sunnis. They practice a more mystical form of Islam and venerate holy men who, they believe, serve as conduits to God, and pray at the shrines where these devout men are buried. For extremists, this amounts to idolatry and “graveworsh­ip.” Since March 2005, 209 people have been killed and 560 injured in 29 different terrorist attacks targeting shrines and tombs devoted to Sufi “saints.”

On Feb. 17, an Islamic State supporter struck a crowd of Sufi dancers celebratin­g in the Pakistani shrine of Sehwan Sharif. The attack killed almost 90 worshipper­s. The militants have undermined what Shahab Ahmed, in his book What is Islam? The Importance of Being Islamic, calls the“philosophi­calSufi amalgam ,” the loss of which has harmed Pakistan Ahmadis were declared nonMuslims through a constituti­onal amendment passed in 1974, the same year that hundreds were slaughtere­d in riots. A few years later, a new law was brought in barring Ahmadis from calling their places of worship mosques or from propagatin­g their faith.

Many more have perished since then, including 94 people killed by the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan in attacks in Lahore in 2010. In April, an Ahmadi professor was found stabbed to death in her house in Lahore, one of three killed that month. Pakistani support and encouragem­ent of Ahmadi persecutio­n is visible in the passport applicatio­n form that every Pakistani citizen needs to fill in. The applicatio­n requires all Muslim citizens to sign a declaratio­n affirming that they consider Ahmadis as infidels.

In December of last year, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif renamed the National Centre for Physics at Quaid-eAzam University in Islamabad for physicist Abdus Salam, the country’s first Nobel laureate. He had been ignored for more than 30 years because he had belonged to the Ahmadi sect. But many groups have opposed the decision and demanded the prime minister retract it. Sharif was also denounced two months earlier for his warm remarks to Pakistani Hindus during the festival of Diwali.

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