The National - News

Former pop star among victims

Jamshed had gone to Chitral with a group of preachers

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ISLAMABAD // Junaid Jamshed, a pioneer of Pakistani pop who renounced music to become a Muslim preacher and started one of the country’s most successful clothing boutiques, was among 47 people killed in Wednesday’s plane crash.

The 52-year-old died alongside his second wife, Nahya, and is survived by his first wife Ayesha and four children.

Born in Karachi on September 3, 1964, Jamshed shot to fame in the late 1980s as lead singer of the boy band Vital Signs, where his dashing looks and brooding vocals made him a style icon and heart-throb for a generation emerging from the rule of military dictator Zia-ul-Haq.

The band’s fusion of western guitar- driven pop set to traditiona­l Tabla beats inspired a new genre – Sufi Rock – that is popu- lar throughout South Asia today.

Their greatest hit, Dil Dil Pakistan, an ode to the homeland with a synthesise­r-heavy 1980s sound, remains an unofficial na- tional anthem. Many of his fans became critics when in the early 2000s he left his career in pop to become a member of the Tableeghi Jamaaat, a Sunni group that preaches its austere brand of Islam throughout the world.

Jamshed abandoned his leather jackets and stone- washed jeans for traditiona­l tunic and baggy trousers. He grew a beard and began recording religious Naats – hymns that are sung a capello, because instrument­s are forbidden.

Pakistani fans’ disappoint­ment grew as Jamshed made a series of controvers­ial statements, often targeting women, including telling a female TV host that women should not be allowed to drive or leave the home without male guardians.

But his new guise also endeared him to religious conservati­ves who followed his TV appearance­s closely and regarded him as a role model for leaving a decadent lifestyle behind.

In 2014, he found himself embroiled in controvers­y for appearing to criticise one of the Prophet Mohammed’s wives in one of his sermons, prompting a blasphemy case against him.

He issued an apology and the case was not pursued – his connection­s with the country’s religious right seemingly shielded him from prosecutio­n.

In addition to his preaching, Jamshed set up a clothing boutique in 2002, a profitable business that today boasts a strong presence across the country.

In his last tweet, he posted pictures of himself with fellow preachers in scenic northern Chitral, from where the ill-fated Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines flight 661 made its final journey.

“Heaven on Earth Chitral. With my friends in the Path of Allah,” he tweeted.

His death was mourned by clerics, politician­s and music fans.

“Gutted by reports of JJ’s untimely demise. His voice expressed the emotions of a whole generation in the 1990s. RIP,” tweeted cultural critic Nadeem Farooq Paracha.

 ?? Salman Rabbani / AP Photo ?? Junaid Jamshed quit pop in early 2000s to become a member of the Tableeghi Jamaaat.
Salman Rabbani / AP Photo Junaid Jamshed quit pop in early 2000s to become a member of the Tableeghi Jamaaat.

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