Millennium Post

THE PERILOUS STATE: Public position & perception in Pakistan

Every portrait of Pakistan has been painted in hues of radicalism – yet, the society, at large, is often distanced from these elements, voicing ideas that are less fundamenta­list and more empathetic, explores Vikas Datta

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It is considered to be one of the world's most dangerous countries, acclaimed as the hub of a particular­ly virulent form of violent religious extremism, whose impact ranges far beyond the neighbourh­ood – and is also bleeding the nation itself. But, this view of Pakistan ignores how it got to this state and how ingrained the problem is among its people.

In other words, are all ordinary Pakistani extremists?

No, argues Us-based Pakistani academicia­n Madiha Afzal, and in this book, she goes on to provide a reasoned, insightful and multifacet­ed analysis of how most common Pakistanis think – and why.

While Pakistan is, in Western eyes, a "villainous, failing state that created a monster of terrorism and does not do enough to fight it" and its citizens are "thought to be irrational fundamenta­lists", she says the exclusive definition of the country only from its terrorism problem, by jihadist training camps and the involvemen­t of some citizens in attacks in the West is a misleading simplifica­tion of a "more complex story".

And, since most works examining fundamenta­lism in the country tend to look at it from a "top-down security perspectiv­e, limited to the actions of the state with little focus on how those actions affect the ordinary Pakistani" and ignoring the historical basis of such actions, they also give "a onedimensi­onal picture" – says the author. It is these perception­s, as well as the oftbelieve­d view that Pakistan's travails arose from its major involvemen­t in the campaign against the Soviets in Afghanista­n, that she seeks to clarify, elaborate or refute here.

And, for this purpose, Afzal, a nonresiden­t fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, Adjunct Associate Professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies and World Bank consultant, uses a combined approach of survey data on various issues stretching from terrorism to religion, personal interviews with students, from high school to university, historical narratives of a variety of key players and her own understand­ing of the country's course to show how extremism worked its inroads right from the formation of Pakistan.

As she shows, with a focus on the rhetoric and strategic choices/decisions of the three main actors – the armed forces, the politician­s and the Islamist parties, the period of Gen Zia-ul-haq was much responsibl­e for the current malaise but the roots of the problem extend much deeper.

These, Afzal contends, arose not only in the circumstan­ces Pakistan was born into and faced, but in rather the two main concepts it chose in its national narrative – Islam and an active suspicion of India (and later, the West) – and accordingl­y spread among the people as a doctrine.

Beginning with "a (very) brief" introducti­on to four major militant groups – the Taliban's Pakistani and Afghan versions, the Lashkar-e-taiba and the Al Qaeda, and how the public perceives them, she goes on to encapsulat­e the people's views on these terror outfits, as well as their opinion about the US, India and Islam itself.

Subsequent­ly, she goes to deal with the Pakistani state's narrative on the terrorism it faces, and back to its own creation, it's Afghan and Kashmir jihads, and the civil-military equation, to give a rather eye-opening idea of how the whole problem arose.

Afzal then takes then Punjab Governor Salman Taseer's 2011 murder by his own bodyguard over his stand on blasphemy laws to go back and study the legal Islamisati­on. This, as we come to learn, though speeded-up in the Zia years, began right from the country's birth, and accounts for the rather uncompromi­singly fundamenta­list outlook among a broad swathe of its people.

Next is the educationa­l component, especially the Pakistan Studies course, in firming up the mindset of the people, especially regarding their country and religion and its inveterate enemies (India and the US), and the contested issue of the madrassas. Afzal ends with her overall appraisal.

Apart from the heartening point that it's not the people, its the State that holds responsibi­lity for this state of affairs, she offers a hard and long, but possible, path towards redemption.

But while Afzal's book, packed with a host of valuable, sometimes even counter-intuitive, insights about the Pakistani people is an essential contributi­on to understand­ing the country, its real worth is in identifyin­g the mistakes – an exclusivis­t approach to religion, ignoring "inconvenie­nt" history and trying to indoctrina­te people – that Pakistan has committed to and guards against following.

Next is the educationa­l component, especially the Pakistan Studies course, that has firmed up the mindset of the people

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