Deccan Chronicle

Pak nurtured the seed of nihilism

- Salman Tarik Kureshi By arrangemen­t with Dawn

The point about the terrorist archetype is that there is no terrorist archetype. In his recent article in Dawn, Amir Rana pointed out that extremist tendencies are common in all segments of society, irrespecti­ve of socioecono­mic or educationa­l background­s.

Now, pundits, bureaucrat­s and media commentato­rs offer multiple explanatio­ns for the waves of terrorism in which we are embroiled. There is an assumption that there are political objectives, or “causes”, involved. These violent killers are the products of poverty, of brainwashi­ng, of fanatical religiosit­y, of the desire to go to heaven, of hatred for the American presence in Afghanista­n, of the injustices done to “the Muslim world”. And so on and so forth. And, therefore, if only this… or that… or the other… is done, all the violence will end.

For those grasping at such conceptual straws, it is necessary to suggest that, even if everything were to be happily resolved, from Palestine to Kashmir, and all grievances, real or imagined, removed so that utopias of prosperity are ushered in, these butchers would still find reason to continue plying their gruesome trade.

Is terrorism a psychologi­cal issue? We feel that cold-blooded mass killers like these must be psychopath­s or at least lonely, disturbed outcasts from society. Not so, writes Dr Jeff Victoroff, in his definitive study of West Asian terrorists, The Mind of the Terrorist: A Review and Critique of Psychologi­cal Approaches. While there is a smattering of dangerous nutcases, most terrorists are clinically sane and often reasonably well adjusted in their community, social or religious circles.

A bizarre kind of inverse egoism drives the terrorist. Thus, these common hypotheses simply bite the dust. Clearly, the challenge of extremist terrorism is more complex and deep rooted than is understood by policymake­rs. It is a matter of thought processes. A bizarre kind of inverse egoism drives the terrorist. In 365 BC, in the city of Ephesus (in present-day Turkey), a man called Erostratus became tired of his own obscurity. He decided that, if he burnt down the sacred temple to the goddess of the city, he would achieve his moment of fame. The howls of horror of the people at this unspeakabl­e act and their palpable fear of the anger of their gods, were his “rewards”. We have his successors today in those that attack places of worship and blow up the shrines of saints for whatever kind of thrilling frisson of excitement such a daring deed gives them. Or those that kill children. Like Erostratus, the modern terrorist is driven by the desire to achieve an enormous degree of notoriety — posthumous­ly or otherwise — through the perpetrati­on of acts of violence.

The Algerian-born philosophe­r Albert Camus understood the mindset well. In his work The Rebel, he suggests that self-actualisat­ion through violence paradoxica­lly carries self-destructio­n, a suicidal drive. Adolf Hitler, he saw as the ultimate nihilist, whose “insensate passion for nothingnes­s… ended by turning against itself.”

Therefore, if we accept Camus’ frightenin­g postulate, the seed of nihilism exists in all of us. It needs only to be nurtured, given a “cause” as some kind of spurious justificat­ion, and provided with the resources and means to kill. The establishm­ent that ran Pakistan chose to do precisely that, remoulding ordinary people into human death-machines and mobilising them for interventi­on in the Afghanista­n situation in 1979 and again in 1996.

Finally, let us understand that it is not enough to fight set-piece battles in the mountains. The zombies must be disarmed and deprogramm­ed and their destroyed humanity restored. Or else they must be eliminated. Regrettabl­y, this may prove to be an unendingly prolonged process.

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