Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): 15 Jan 201

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ramana
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by ramana »

Now that you clarify your thinking, let me tell what I think.
What is not known is if there will be an ideological counter attack to Taliban/ Islamic ideology within the nation.
No there wont be a counter to the IEDology of TSP.

Reason is the TSPA needs that IEDology to sustain itself.
So until they realize its futile there wont be counter.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by devesh »

until the TSPA is totally and irreversibly crushed, there will not be a counter. the myth of the martial Paki needs to be fundamentally obliterated. the very idea should be uprooted from the Paki psyche. the very notion should become a laughable parody. until such a time, there will be no "counter". so, in Bakistan's case, crushing the Pakjabi military is a necessity before the civilian elements can chart a new course.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by RamaY »

RamaY wrote:Pakistan is nothing but an asuric Hindu in the likes of Mahishasura.

Only an awakaned Bharatiya Nation can kill the kaliyuga Mahishasura.
IMO, the need for looking at Pakistan in new ways is to find suitable solutions to get back those regions into dharmic fold.

The secular and dhimmi India feels more comfortable and equipped to solve their Hindu problems. But they become Frozen when dealing with foreign concepts.

So it is necessary for people to understand the problems in our own way.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by harbans »

So until they realize its futile there wont be counter.
(By 'it' i presume you mean the TSP IEDology)

2 questions here:

1) What happens when they realize it is futile
2) What signs will be manifest to us, that they have begun to realize it is futile?
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by shiv »

harbans wrote:
The fact that Pakistan is collapsing is well known, also well known is the fact that Taliban and purer forms of Islam are gaining ground all over the country. What is not known is if there will be an ideological counter attack to Taliban/ Islamic ideology within the nation. An important benchmark for the same is mainstream media articles such as above. Even if the chances of such a clash are remote, it will be significant if there is a clash between Islam and those who oppose it's ideology emerging of all places in Pakistan. That is why i personally felt surprised reading that in Paki mainstream media. Also hundreds of comments in favor of the author from presumable Pakistan itself possibly show a constituency which might like to break away from the shackles of that ideology.
Harbans, why do any Pakis want moderation? Not because they don't want Islam, but they know that moderation is possible. Although they point to Turkey and Indonesia as examples, the fact is 120 million Indian Muslims next door do serve as as an example of the freedoms that Muslims can have if they choose to have them. But Pakis want those very freedoms without any kafirs. They want to claim an Islamic society that has Indian Islam type freedom without the "subjugating influence" of dastardly Hindus

But there is a problem and that problem has been discussed on here time and again and it even showed up in the moderates, radicals plus kafirs game theory models I had made. Islam is always a mix of radicals and moderates with rules that give the radicals power to kill anyone who is "less" Islamic. Radicals are always the best Muslims. That is the basic structure of Islam.

Throughout history the only thing that has upset this power equation is the presence of non Muslims or kafirs in a Muslim population. Whether these non Muslims are dhimmi or not, they allow a moderating influence that allows Muslims to behave unislamic ("moderate") with the excuse that they have to show this disgusting behavior to deal with the inferior kafirs. As long as kafirs meet Islamic needs everyone in an Islamic society tolerates this and the Islamic society comes out appearing moderate. Not least because kafirs are tolerated and an opening is made within Islamic society to allow kafir behaviour so that these kafirs can serve as an inferior but necessary group - like slaves, servants etc. This happens in Gulf countries.

The other thing that forces moderation in an Islamic society is democracy with an excess of kafirs. Here the same thing happens but because kafirs are not dhimmis the Muslims are always complaining and act as if they are being forced to be unislamic even when they enjoy kafir like life. Ths happens in many countries including the US, UK, Europe, India and even Thailand. They enjoy kafir like freedoms while pretending that they are being forced to be unislamic. This is the Pakistaniyat/"Two nations in one" tendency in Islam. The same behavior that created Pakistan shows up in the UK/Sweden etc

There is no mechanism for moderation within Islam. Islam is Islam and unless you call Taliban moderate, there can be no moderation in Islam without kafir influence/dilution of core tenets. Pakistan has killed most of its own kafirs, the goose that laid the golden eggs of moderation. Now the radicals rule the roost. Pakistan can only become a poor, backward Islamic state. There is no mechanism in Islam to allow in kafirs unless they go out and conquer or they have enough money to get kafirs in as slaves.

I foresee an unstable Paktunistan in future and a rabid aggressive rump Pakistan balanced by a threatening India that will not be conquered and a US that pumps money in to buy off the army and keep radicalism down. Pakistan's radicalism can only be countered by an infusion of 100 million Hindus and Sikhs into Pakistan. Islam has to undergo revolution and as long as there is money in oil, gulf states and radical Islam will survive. After that Islam will learn the lessons that all other religions figured out. I don't expect or advise my countrymen to expect a peaceful and stable Pakistan in my lifetime. Pakistan is a problem of inexperienced Islam led by illiterate Mullahs that do not know how to fit into the world. This won't change soon. Many more Muslims will have to suffer a lot more from their own Islam before they learn. That has started in Pakistan.

Islam has to learn moderation in the absence of kafirs. That will not happen without watering down Islam which currently deifies and respects the most murderous people as good Muslims. Forget Malala. Malala's mistake was that she survived. See the way these stupids have talked about the victories of Ghori, the victories of the 26/11 ch**ths and Qadri. Murder in the name of Islam is considered good in Islam. Even the RAPE class cannot say this loud They will be cuttled. Non Muslims will unhesitatingly kill Muslims if they attempt this. The only people who are left to be killed are Muslims themselves. This is what Islam is doing in Pakistan. And Pakistan is an Islamic state.

Popcorn and beer, and dry gunpowder, loaded weapons is the way forward
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by ramana »

The Red Army was also a Kabila guard army safeguarding the other heresy. Yet it saw the futility of the other heresy and went back to barracks
Unlike TSPA it had won many victories
.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by shiv »

An afterthought:

Jinnah and the people who created Pakistan believed that everything that was good about India was Islamic and everything that as bad was Hindu. This is exactly the idea that Pakistani children have been taught in Pakistan studies.

Pakistan was a gamble that, it was hoped, would prove this idea - that the greatness that India represented through history would swell out of Pakistan while Hindu India would go to the dogs. Pakistan is the result of this idea. Pakistanis of the RAPE category still hope that a moderate "We are better than India, all Muslim and no Hinduness" Pakistan can still shine and lead the world.

Leading the world is less easy that Pakis imagine and being Islamic just doesn't cut it. After all those discussions in the "Out Of India" thread I have discovered one thing about the West. They have a need to praise themselves and blow/inflate themselves up (like anyone else). For this reason the West exaggerates the greatness of the Islamic empires. Exaggerating the greatness of Islamic empires makes the victory of the West seem greater and bigger. Islam hardly ruled the world, but talking of Islam as superpower is a good starting point to show how the West defeated that superpower.

Pakis actually believed that . They believed that they would recreate that superpower. Let them kill themselves doing that. There is no rule in the universe that only Islam leads to greatness. If Pakistanis believe that it is their problem and if they don't believe that Islam subjugates and intimidates Muslims before anyone else, that again is their problem.

As for me, I think the Taliban are good pure Muslims. They may not like me as a kafir but that is their way of being good Muslims. Why should I criticise the Taliban who are good, pure Muslims? I am not an Islamophobe. Are you?
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by harbans »

As for me, I think the Taliban are good pure Muslims. They may not like me as a kafir but that is their way of being good Muslims. Why should I criticise the Taliban who are good, pure Muslims? I am not an Islamophobe. Are you?
I completely agree with you they are the best and purest of Muslims. In that very article in one of the comments someone even mentions if the Prophet were alive he would be leading the Taliban. He led his Armies against the Kufrs waving a Black flag, so do the Taliban. The Taliban also wear a black turban like he did. So we do have an idea where purer forms of Islam are headed certainly on BRF.

However this is the day of the internet. A very very powerful tool. A 1000 years past combined knowledge transfers happen in a day or two on the net. Millions change their views and reposition their lives every day because of information flow on the net. What was hidden for a 1000 years is available today at a click to millions more every day. We know from our common Dharmic past that Knowledge that is light destroys darkness, Tamas.

What if a chain of events and introspection become dominant and start to roll. How many of us have underestimated the power of Truth to transform. What if such change does occur in the Islamic world. From my POV, while i keep my powder dry and the Internet free, i would also welcome efforts within Pakistan or the wider Islamic world to introspect on it's ideology. Personally i would welcome with open arms those that would like to break the ideological shackles that bind them to hatred and fear.

I am not an Islamophobe. I am convinced Dharma will prevail. I would always prefer that Dharma prevails through the light of knowledge, not the sword of Durga or Bow of Arjuna or Rama in the first place..wouldn't you? Are those not the last resorts?
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by shiv »

harbans wrote:From my POV, while i keep my powder dry and the Internet free, i would also welcome efforts within Pakistan or the wider Islamic world to introspect on it's ideology. Personally i would welcome with open arms those that would like to break the ideological shackles that bind them to hatred and fear.

I am not an Islamophobe. I am convinced Dharma will prevail. I would always prefer that Dharma prevails through the light of knowledge, not the sword of Durga or Bow of Arjuna or Rama in the first place..wouldn't you? Are those not the last resorts?
No it is the sword of Islam that is bloodying itself with the blood of Muslims.

In absolute terms every Islamic hero has killed someone, but his killing of someone is justified in the name of Islam. So if more Muslims are killed in Pakistan in the name of Islam, that should not be opposed. 25% of the population of Europe had to die before Christians in Europe understood the follies being committed in the name of various churches. However much of that was famine and disease. But still a lot of Pakistanis will have to die in the name of Islam before introspection can occur.

Many journalists article writers, scholars and innocent women and children with Muslim names and Pakistani passports will die in Pakistan in the hands of pure Muslims trying to purify Islam more. It is difficult to tell how much blood must be spilled before introspection comes to Islam. That is because introspection must come to the people who are doing the killing or cheering and supporting the killing rather than those who are being killed.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by johneeG »

shiv wrote:
harbans wrote:
The fact that Pakistan is collapsing is well known, also well known is the fact that Taliban and purer forms of Islam are gaining ground all over the country. What is not known is if there will be an ideological counter attack to Taliban/ Islamic ideology within the nation. An important benchmark for the same is mainstream media articles such as above. Even if the chances of such a clash are remote, it will be significant if there is a clash between Islam and those who oppose it's ideology emerging of all places in Pakistan. That is why i personally felt surprised reading that in Paki mainstream media. Also hundreds of comments in favor of the author from presumable Pakistan itself possibly show a constituency which might like to break away from the shackles of that ideology.
Harbans, why do any Pakis want moderation? Not because they don't want Islam, but they know that moderation is possible. Although they point to Turkey and Indonesia as examples, the fact is 120 million Indian Muslims next door do serve as as an example of the freedoms that Muslims can have if they choose to have them. But Pakis want those very freedoms without any kafirs. They want to claim an Islamic society that has Indian Islam type freedom without the "subjugating influence" of dastardly Hindus

But there is a problem and that problem has been discussed on here time and again and it even showed up in the moderates, radicals plus kafirs game theory models I had made. Islam is always a mix of radicals and moderates with rules that give the radicals power to kill anyone who is "less" Islamic. Radicals are always the best Muslims. That is the basic structure of Islam.

Throughout history the only thing that has upset this power equation is the presence of non Muslims or kafirs in a Muslim population. Whether these non Muslims are dhimmi or not, they allow a moderating influence that allows Muslims to behave unislamic ("moderate") with the excuse that they have to show this disgusting behavior to deal with the inferior kafirs. As long as kafirs meet Islamic needs everyone in an Islamic society tolerates this and the Islamic society comes out appearing moderate. Not least because kafirs are tolerated and an opening is made within Islamic society to allow kafir behaviour so that these kafirs can serve as an inferior but necessary group - like slaves, servants etc. This happens in Gulf countries.

The other thing that forces moderation in an Islamic society is democracy with an excess of kafirs. Here the same thing happens but because kafirs are not dhimmis the Muslims are always complaining and act as if they are being forced to be unislamic even when they enjoy kafir like life. Ths happens in many countries including the US, UK, Europe, India and even Thailand. They enjoy kafir like freedoms while pretending that they are being forced to be unislamic. This is the Pakistaniyat/"Two nations in one" tendency in Islam. The same behavior that created Pakistan shows up in the UK/Sweden etc

There is no mechanism for moderation within Islam. Islam is Islam and unless you call Taliban moderate, there can be no moderation in Islam without kafir influence/dilution of core tenets. Pakistan has killed most of its own kafirs, the goose that laid the golden eggs of moderation. Now the radicals rule the roost. Pakistan can only become a poor, backward Islamic state. There is no mechanism in Islam to allow in kafirs unless they go out and conquer or they have enough money to get kafirs in as slaves.

I foresee an unstable Paktunistan in future and a rabid aggressive rump Pakistan balanced by a threatening India that will not be conquered and a US that pumps money in to buy off the army and keep radicalism down. Pakistan's radicalism can only be countered by an infusion of 100 million Hindus and Sikhs into Pakistan. Islam has to undergo revolution and as long as there is money in oil, gulf states and radical Islam will survive. After that Islam will learn the lessons that all other religions figured out. I don't expect or advise my countrymen to expect a peaceful and stable Pakistan in my lifetime. Pakistan is a problem of inexperienced Islam led by illiterate Mullahs that do not know how to fit into the world. This won't change soon. Many more Muslims will have to suffer a lot more from their own Islam before they learn. That has started in Pakistan.

Islam has to learn moderation in the absence of kafirs. That will not happen without watering down Islam which currently deifies and respects the most murderous people as good Muslims. Forget Malala. Malala's mistake was that she survived. See the way these stupids have talked about the victories of Ghori, the victories of the 26/11 ch**ths and Qadri. Murder in the name of Islam is considered good in Islam. Even the RAPE class cannot say this loud They will be cuttled. Non Muslims will unhesitatingly kill Muslims if they attempt this. The only people who are left to be killed are Muslims themselves. This is what Islam is doing in Pakistan. And Pakistan is an Islamic state.

Popcorn and beer, and dry gunpowder, loaded weapons is the way forward
Excellent posts, saar, But a minor nitpick: Did the other religions really moderate or were they forced to pretend 'moderation' because their own followers did not buy the view that theology was benevolent in in its complete raw form?

It seems to me that religions did not really 'moderate'. It was just that followers(including the state) were disassociated from the religions. They would, now, accept only those parts of the religion that they perceived as benevolent. Because they believed that some(if not many) parts of the religions were not benevolent or beneficent(especially in the raw/original form). This attitude led the other religions to pretend 'moderation' and 'modernization'.

But, the followers of Islam continue to believe that Islam in its raw absolute form is benevolent and beneficent. So, Islam does not have to pretend any 'enlightenment' or 'reformation'.

Frankly speaking, there are certain core aspects within every religion/cult/philosophy that cannot be given up without damaging the very religion/cult/philosophy.

So, 'reforming' or 'moderating' Islam is a mirage. And, the 'reformation' or 'enlightenment' of other religions is mostly a myth, the core aspects of theology remain intact.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Atri »

shiv wrote:It is difficult to tell how much blood must be spilled before introspection comes to Islam. That is because introspection must come to the people who are doing the killing or cheering and supporting the killing rather than those who are being killed.
Bravo, gurudev....

Regards... :)
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by harbans »

No it is the sword of Islam that is bloodying itself with the blood of Muslims.
Yes we may have glee as tens of millions die to the sword of Islam within Pakistan. But ultimately the Black Flags will turn against us. And they will have 300 plus nukes aimed. Also the inevitable exodus of unreformed millions who the liberal WKK type elite here coax that Islam is a RoP. Thats why i said it's prudent that we encourage the fightback within their own boundaries. That is why it is good to encourage the poster of the 1st article against the IEDology in a Paki mainstream newspaper. To encourage a fight against the Black flag within their own. In our country i would keep the Internet free and gunpowder dry throughout the saga. But to say let's stand back and watch in glee..i think that is temporal. We have to go a little beyond that.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Atri »

harbans wrote:
Yes we may have glee as tens of millions die to the sword of Islam within Pakistan. But ultimately the Black Flags will turn against us. And they will have 300 plus nukes aimed. Also the inevitable exodus of unreformed millions who the liberal WKK type elite here coax that Islam is a RoP.
Harbans ji,

This will facilitate "us" in knowing and defining "ourselves" in better fashion than the way we do it now.. The establishment which reigns in India is the one which accommodated TSP in first place. DIEnasty and TSP are interlinked like Siamese twins. Both will not let the other fall.. Mark my words.. For TSP to cease existing, those with whom DIEnasty has ties should perish. And DIEnasty should also "retire" (talking about entire Deshi+Videshi NBJPRE network which keeps DIEnasty propped up) simultaneously..

This is becoming too much political for me, hence I will resort to fantasy fiction and start talking about Harry Potter and Deathly hallows, instead. DIEnasty is the last "horcrux" that dark lord created when he attached part of his soul to Harry Potter.. :D Harry had to die and come back to life, keeping his part of soul intact and killing the parasitic Voldemort's soul in the process. Apparently, it is "Love" which saved Harry's soul. Here it will be "Dharma". All that is adharmik and asurik will have to die along with dharmik component while keeping in mind the fact that dharmik component should be neatly protected to allow rejuvenation.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by harbans »

For TSP to cease existing, those with whom DIEnasty has ties should perish.
I don't agree with that alone. I think the IEDology must perish for that, We have to work towards that. The Pakistan problem is not the Dynasty problem. It is an Ideology problem. The faster we realize it, the faster we can work on the solutions.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Atri »

harbans wrote:
For TSP to cease existing, those with whom DIEnasty has ties should perish.
I don't agree with that alone. I think the IEDology must perish for that, We have to work towards that. The Pakistan problem is not the Dynasty problem. It is an Ideology problem. The faster we realize it, the faster we can work on the solutions.
Harbans ji,

I doubt whether this IEDology (if by that you mean nazariya-e-pakistan) exists. Formation of TSP is understanding, sharing and accommodation of power between Muslim Salariat (elite) and GV invested compromised Indics so that the respective power-networks who were backing both these lobbies stay in power. Nothing more, nothing less.

Today's DIEnasty people are lesser sons of somewhat greater but compromised sires. If we come down to their IQ, then things are even more simpler. Vote-bank politics ceases to make sense if TSP ceases to exist.

On the other hand, if by IEDology you mean Islam, then I stand by what Shiv ji said about Islam learning moderation few posts above.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by shiv »

harbans wrote:
No it is the sword of Islam that is bloodying itself with the blood of Muslims.
Yes we may have glee as tens of millions die to the sword of Islam within Pakistan. But ultimately the Black Flags will turn against us. And they will have 300 plus nukes aimed.

Harbans I have a quibble with that statement. the black flags have always been against us. Pakistani unity hnged around a united Islamic opposition to India. It is only when that reached a dead end with diminishing returns that the black flags turned on each other.

This is hardly the time to try and entice any one of them to look at dharma.

In my opinion not only must we drink beer and eat popcorn when Pakistanis kill each other, we must also make it clear that any Pakistanis who choose to become moderate and mend their ways will be the butt of no end of jokes and utter derision from Indians for being such losers. They will be laughed at for showing moderation in opposition to the strictures of Islam.

If fear of shame in front of kafir Indians makes Pakistanis prefer death and civil war in Pakistan to being mocked by Indians, so be it. Let them cook in their own green stew. Pakistanis must take radical islam and wear it the way they intended while they mocked, laughed at and killed Indians. If they don't want that now tough shit. They had better keep it.

Ultimately if Pakistanis want to abrogate the most radical elements of Islam to take on a moderate anti Taliban stance they should know beforehand that a whole lot of Indians will be laughing their guts out at these Pakis, saying "See? What did we tell you , you stupid idiots"

For Pakistan, moderation and shame have to come together. It was Islamic pride all these years while they killed Indians. The do not deserve even an iota of pride. They can have moderation and we will watch them and laugh. And if they attack as radicals, we will eliminate them, nukes or no nukes. They deserve only shame, or death or both. It feels good to be on the other side.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by RajeshA »

Any Paki moderate willing to convert openly to a Dharmic tradition should be given a reprieve, but any Paki who thinks that he can play some liberal tune to appeal to the West or Dharmics even as he can remains Muslim, and he will be embraced should be shown the huge middle finger and be told to go back into the ring with the Taliban.

In fact even conversion is not enough, he needs to show opposition to his previous ideology!

As things seem to be now, Paki moderates need to stew in the juice and be given no reprieve!
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by ramana »

RajeshA, For catharisis to be effective Shiv's suggested path is the rith thing. If they have chance to escape the cess pool they will fake it again and resume in India.

I repeat there are no moderates in Islam for then they are not Islamic.

When Timur invaded India while Feroz Tughlaq was ruling he distributed many captives as slaves to all his reinue including the sufi councillors. The slaves were all massacred even by the pious sufis! For being pious in Islam they had to kill.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by shiv »

Since Pakis seem to be fully cognizant of "Hinduon ka zehniyat", (whatever that means!) they must be prepared to receive that in full measure with no way of wriggling out
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by harbans »

Harbans I have a quibble with that statement. the black flags have always been against us. Pakistani unity hnged around a united Islamic opposition to India. It is only when that reached a dead end with diminishing returns that the black flags turned on each other.
Indeed the Paki's have always had the Islamic banner as they rallied against India. They put a front of liberalism to the Western donors and snarled Islamic teeth against us at the same time. However at some point of time we have 2 options emerging:

1. Any voice against Taliban disappearing and getting devoured by the purest.

2. Dissension and ideological attacks on the Taliban or Islamist ideology starting in full, leading to a Civil War kind of situation.

We all prefer the 2nd option. It keeps them occupied and gives us time to further strengthen our economy, get more popcorn and pop a few more beers and watch the fun. However in case the Taliban wins become too easy, some proactive intervention can keep both sets at each others jugulars for more time.

In the longer scheme of things, once we have satiated ourselves of the pop corn- beer and 'i told you so' temporal phase of things, it becomes necessary to find ways to co opt sections of the population as Rajesh Ji here suggests..
Any Paki moderate willing to convert openly to a Dharmic tradition should be given a reprieve, but any Paki who thinks that he can play some liberal tune to appeal to the West or Dharmics even as he can remains Muslim, and he will be embraced should be shown the huge middle finger and be told to go back into the ring with the Taliban.
So even as we co opt 10s of millions into the Dharmic fold, the big finger and back to the ring with the Purest holds for those tens of millions that still have doubts about coming into the Dharmic fold.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Prem »

RajeshA wrote:Any Paki moderate willing to convert openly to a Dharmic tradition should be given a reprieve, but any Paki who thinks that he can play some liberal tune to appeal to the West or Dharmics even as he can remains Muslim, and he will be embraced should be shown the huge middle finger and be told to go back into the ring with the Taliban.In fact even conversion is not enough, he needs to show opposition to his previous ideology!As things seem to be now, Paki moderates need to stew in the juice and be given no reprieve!
Bhai Sahib, Conversion Ka Burden kyo Daal rahe ho. Let them be. It aint worth the effort. They made their bed long time ago. Let them die with the dream of Whoors after living the life of thousand shames. INSAallah eill sort out their reward. Even Liev Shroeber took the bitter sip in exorcising Shaitan out of his own child. Dharmic job is easier than him , it only pretains to land and not our own blood like in our great epics. Think of it as a favour to Mukt the Dusht. Millions of Paki will thank us. Watch the psychological make up of A Poaq in the video i posted in TSP thread. 75% of them are mentally sick and Arab Spread Leaporasy now cover 99.99 % of their body and mind.
Last edited by Prem on 19 Oct 2012 00:15, edited 1 time in total.
ramana
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by ramana »

Harbans, Its a replay after Muhammad's death. See this book review:
Muhammad and the Believers: At the Origins of Islam By Fred M. Donner
Publisher: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2010 | 304 Pages | ISBN: 0674050975


The origins of Islam have been the subject of increasing controversy in recent years. The traditional view, which presents Islam as a self-consciously distinct religion tied to the life and revelations of the prophet Muhammad in western Arabia, has since the 1970s been challenged by historians engaged in critical study of the Muslim sources.

In Muhammad and the Believers, the eminent historian Fred Donner offers a lucid and original vision of how Islam first evolved. He argues that the origins of Islam lie in what we may call the "Believers' movement" begun by the prophet Muhammad—a movement of religious reform emphasizing strict monotheism and righteous behavior in conformity with God's revealed law. The Believers' movement thus included righteous Christians and Jews in its early years, because like the Qur'anic Believers, Christians and Jews were monotheists and agreed to live righteously in obedience to their revealed law. The conviction that Muslims constituted a separate religious community, utterly distinct from Christians and Jews, emerged a century later, when the leaders of the Believers' movement decided that only those who saw the Qur'an as the final revelation of the One God and Muhammad as the final prophet, qualified as Believers. This separated them decisively from monotheists who adhered to the Gospels or Torah.
See how the greenest of green only survive as the Believers.
RajeshA
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by RajeshA »

ramana garu,

I think the propaganda value of open Paki conversions is high, and that is a carrot one needs to dangle. The first few would be accepted, the next 20-30 would have some waiting to do, the next 30-40 would get it after much pleading, and the rest would be left dangling.

I am all in favor of playing with the emotions of Pakis. A carrot and a lathi, sometimes from the front and sometimes from somewhere else. It is the unpredictability of the enemy that really makes one suffer, and we should use unpredictability to our full advantage.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Agnimitra »

RajeshA wrote:ramana garu,

I think the propaganda value of open Paki conversions is high, and that is a carrot one needs to dangle. The first few would be accepted, the next 20-30 would have some waiting to do, the next 30-40 would get it after much pleading, and the rest would be left dangling.

I am all in favor of playing with the emotions of Pakis. A carrot and a lathi, sometimes from the front and sometimes from somewhere else. It is the unpredictability of the enemy that really makes one suffer, and we should use unpredictability to our full advantage.
RajeshA ji you're a sadist :rotfl:

I think assimilation back into a New Dharmic fold should always be encouraged. Their hatred can be converted into a cathartic repentant "love" (even if its opportunistic), and the energy directed outward or elsewhere. A good analogy for this would be something like what Islamism did with the Arabs --

The Ghassanids were a Christianized, Hellenized Arab set of tribes that migrated and settled in the North West of the Arabian lands. They were civilizationally an enthusiastic vassal state, a spearhead of the Byzantines, hating the Persians and with contempt for the rest of their fellow-Arabs. The Ghassanids maintained their rule as the (1) guardian of trade routes, (2) policed their fellow-Christianized Arabic Lakhmid tribes, and (3) was a source of troops for the Byzantine army. Most importantly, by being Hellenized and Christianized, they were deracinated from their fellow-Arab "pagans", whom they were taught to have contempt for. They were gifted the status of being the overlords of Syria.

All this is exactly like the Pakjabis - they control the trade routes between the Indian subcontinent, C. Asia and the Mid-East, they police the unruly fellow-Islamized Afghan tribes, and are a source of troops for the GEC, Anglosphere and perhaps China sometimes. Like the Ghassanids were Hellenized and Christianized and interbred with their puppet-masters, so also the Paki RAPES are Islamized, Arabized, Persianized, Turkified and Anglicized by their FourFathers. Like the Ghassanid elites, the TSP RAPEs are made to feel like inheritors of a nobility and overlordship of a critical part of the Indian Subcontinent.

What happened to the Ghassanid vassal-state? In the Battle of Yarmuk in 636 AD, they were defeated by the new Islamist movement and re-absorbed into the new Arab nation - a nation that was forged by (1) an ethnocentric consolidation, (2) internal "cleaning of the stables" of accumulated sects, (3) appearing to absorb and digest the significant memes of the Hellenic-Roman-Christian enemy, as well as the Persian-Zoroastrian enemy -- the former by claimed affinity, the latter via demonstrated enmity. Point (3) neutralized the ideological basis of Ghassanid alienation and TFTA-delusions.

Nevertheless, even after the defeat at the hands of the Mohammedan army, Ghassanids such as those lead by Jabalah ibn-al-Aiham did not accept Islam. This was because they did not want to give up their status as the nobility and overlords of Syria. So also, there will be a similar RAPE coterie in Pakhanastan. But the vast majority is ripe for the conversion, because they are the most oppressed by their RAPE elites.

So a religious-social-political movement coming out of India can do what it takes to make Bharat Akhand again. That would also require a cleaning of the stables within Indic religions, a going back to the fundamentals, so to speak. Of course, this won't be in the same ways as Islamism did it at all (in terms of IEDology and praxis), but the idea is there. This Indic movement requires a historic toppling of the current DIEnastic order.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by RamaY »

The conviction that Muslims constituted a separate religious community, utterly distinct from Christians and Jews, emerged a century later, when the leaders of the Believers' movement decided that only those who saw the Qur'an as the final revelation of the One God and Muhammad as the final prophet, qualified as Believers. This separated them decisively from monotheists who adhered to the Gospels or Torah.
Also shows the reason behind west's comfort with Islamism. At the end of the day all the Abrahamic religions are same. They are just different versions of the same IEDeology. Each later version used the new revelations to extend itself.

Rji - You already said this
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Prem »

Carl wrote:
RajeshA wrote:ramana garu,

o a religious-social-political movement coming out of India can do what it takes to make Bharat Akhand again. That would also require a cleaning of the stables within Indic religions, a going back to the fundamentals, so to speak. Of course, this won't be in the same ways as Islamism did it at all (in terms of IEDology and praxis), but the idea is there. This Indic movement requires a historic toppling of the current DIEnastic order.
Arya Samaj was doing the job of Shuddhi.
Right on the border , Sikh Dharma is flourishing and also have the holy places within Pakistan. DIEnasy have been preempting such religious, social -political abd above all militant movement precisely because of this reason, IMHO only. Pseudo Secularism was imposed on India by these Naddu Khans of Nehru Khandan. Given the chance Kesri will clean Green in short period.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Agnimitra »

Jhujar wrote:
Carl wrote:a religious-social-political movement coming out of India can do what it takes to make Bharat Akhand again. That would also require a cleaning of the stables within Indic religions, a going back to the fundamentals, so to speak. Of course, this won't be in the same ways as Islamism did it at all (in terms of IEDology and praxis), but the idea is there. This Indic movement requires a historic toppling of the current DIEnastic order.
Arya Samaj was doing the job of Shuddhi.
Right on the border , Sikh Dharma is flourishing and also have the holy places within Pakistan. DIEnasy have been preempting such religious, social -political abd above all militant movement precisely because of this reason, IMHO only. Pseudo Secularism was imposed on India by these Naddu Khans of Nehru Khandan. Given the chance Kesri will clean Green in short period.
True. To get an idea of the impact of movements like the Arya Samaj - it caused such an upheaval, that the reaction from the Islamists ranged from rage to panic. In fact, the Ahmadiyyah movement rose in that situation, and a lot of their work was to counter this "doomsday scenario" where the momins were all becoming kafirs. In this "doomsday" scenario, when the eternal truth-claims of the Qur'an were being questioned, only the coming of the Mahdi (aka Ghulam Ahmad) could rescue the faithful. A lot of the bogus material that Wahabi folks like Zakir Naik are using about "Vedas" is actually completely lifted from that old Ahmadiyyah "research". (Imagine if Zakir Naik's Wahabandi fans found out that the source of their material was Ahmadiyyah! :lol: -- article 1, article 2, article 3).

So if a single jolt like Swami Dayananda can split the remaining pure ones into Ahmadis and Wahabandis, imagine a wider movement. Arya Samaj movement generated wide-ranging social and political reform, and many freedom fighters were inspired by it. But it also generated stiff opposition from the priesthoods of all Hindu and Sikh sampradayas because he unrelentingly criticized all of them. IMHO lots of positive and negative lessons to learn from that iteration.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Prem »

Sikh body and Vedantic mind is the ultimate sword that can and will cut down the Islamic feet for good. Unfortunately , this very force is being clipped , their hand tied and mouth shut to avoid the uprooting and blowing away of falsehood .
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by ramana »

Guru Nanak was the first one to reverse the flow. He was one smart Dharmic person. He side stepped the shuddi pothole.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by ramana »

X-Post...
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad: The Man Who Knew The Future Of Pakistan Before Its Creation
Congress president Maulana Abul Kalam Azad gave the following interview to journalist Shorish Kashmiri for a Lahore based Urdu magazine, Chattan, in April 1946. It was a time when the Cabinet Mission was holding its proceedings in Delhi and Simla. Azad made some startling predictions during the course of the interview, saying that religious conflict would tear apart Pakistan and its eastern half would carve out its own future. He even said that Pakistan’s incompetent rulers might pave the way for military rule.

According to Shorish Kashmiri, Azad had earmarked the early hours of the morning for him and the interview was conducted over a period of two weeks. This interview has not been published in any book so far — neither in the Azad centenary volumes nor in any other book comprising his writing or speeches — except for Kashmiri’s own book Abul Kalam Azad, which was printed only once by Matbooat Chattan Lahore, a now-defunct publishing house. Former Union Cabinet Minister Arif Mohammed Khan discovered the book after searching for many years and translated the interview for COVERT



Q: The Hindu Muslim dispute has become so acute that it has foreclosed any possibility of reconciliation. Don’t you think that in this situation the birth of Pakistan has become inevitable?

A: If Pakistan were the solution of Hindu Muslim problem, then I would have extended my support to it. A section of Hindu opinion is now turning in its favour. By conceding NWFP, Sind, Balochistan and half of Punjab on one side and half of Bengal on the other, they think they will get the rest of India — a huge country that would be free from any claims of communal nature. If we use the Muslim League terminology, this new India will be a Hindu state both practically and temperamentally.

This will not happen as a result of any conscious decision, but will be a logical consequence of its social realities. How can you expect a society that consists 90% of Hindus, who have lived with their ethos and values since prehistoric times, to grow differently? The factors that laid the foundation of Islam in Indian society and created a powerful following have become victim of the politics of partition. The communal hatred it has generated has completely extinguished all possibilities of spreading and preaching Islam. This communal politics has hurt the religion beyond measure. Muslims have turned away from the Quran. If they had taken their lessons from the Quran and the life of the Holy Prophet and had not forged communal politics in the name of religion then Islam’s growth would not have halted. By the time of the decline of the Mughal rule, the Muslims in India were a little over 22.5 million, that is about 65% of the present numbers.

Since then the numbers kept increasing. If the Muslim politicians had not used the offensive language that embittered communal relations, and the other section acting as agents of British interests had not worked to widen the Hindu-Muslim breach, the number of Muslims in India would have grown higher. The political disputes we created in the name of religion have projected Islam as an instrument of political power and not what it is — a value system meant for the transformation of human soul. Under British influence, we turned Islam into a confined system, and following in the footsteps of other communities like Jews, Parsis and Hindus we transformed ourselves into a hereditary community.

The Indian Muslims have frozen Islam and its message and divided themselves into many sects. Some sects were clearly born at the instance of colonial power. Consequently, these sects became devoid of all movement and dynamism and lost faith in Islamic values. The hallmark of Muslim existence was striving and now the very term is strange to them. Surely they are Muslims, but they follow their own whims and desires. In fact now they easily submit to political power, not to Islamic values. They prefer the religion of politics not the religion of the Quran. Pakistan is a political standpoint.

Regardless of the fact whether it is the right solution to the problems of Indian Muslims, it is being demanded in the name of Islam. The question is when and where Islam provided for division of territories to settle populations on the basis of belief and unbelief. Does this find any sanction in the Quran or the traditions of the Holy Prophet? Who among the scholars of Islam has divided the dominion of God on this basis? If we accept this division in principle, how shall we reconcile it with Islam as a universal system?

How shall we explain the ever growing Muslim presence in non-Muslim lands including India? Do they realise that if Islam had approved this principle then it would not have permitted its followers to go to the non-Muslim lands and many ancestors of the supporters of Pakistan would not have had even entered the fold of Islam?

Division of territories on the basis of religion is a contraption devised by Muslim League. They can pursue it as their political agenda, but it finds no sanction in Islam or Quran. What is the cherished goal of a devout Muslim? Spreading the light of Islam or dividing territories along religious lines to pursue political ambitions? The demand for Pakistan has not benefited Muslims in any manner. How Pakistan can benefit Islam is a moot question and will largely depend on the kind of leadership it gets.

The impact of western thought and philosophy has made the crisis more serious. The way the leadership of Muslim League is conducting itself will ensure that Islam will become a rare commodity in Pakistan and Muslims in India. This is a surmise and God alone knows what is in the womb of future. Pakistan, when it comes into existence, will face conflicts of religious nature.

As far as I can see, the people who will hold the reins of power will cause serious damage to Islam. Their behaviour may result in the total alienation of the Pakistani youth who may become a part of non-religious movements. Today, in Muslim minority states the Muslim youth are more attached to religion than in Muslim majority states. You will see that despite the increased role of Ulema, the religion will lose its sheen in Pakistan.



Q: But many Ulema are with Quaid-e-Azam [M.A. Jinnah].

A: Many Ulema were with Akbare Azam too; they invented a new religion for him. Do not discuss individuals. Our history is replete with the doings of the Ulema who have brought humiliation and disgrace to Islam in every age and period.

The upholders of truth are exceptions. How many of the Ulema find an honourable mention in the Muslim history of the last 1,300 years? There was one Imam Hanbal, one Ibn Taimiyya. In India we remember no Ulema except Shah Waliullah and his family. The courage of Alf Sani is beyond doubt, but those who filled the royal office with complaints against him and got him imprisoned were also Ulema. Where are they now? Does anybody show any respect to them?



Q: Maulana, what is wrong if Pakistan becomes a reality? After all, “Islam” is being used to pursue and protect the unity of the community.

A: You are using the name of Islam for a cause that is not right by Islamic standards. Muslim history bears testimony to many such enormities. In the battle of Jamal [fought between Imam Ali and Hadrat Aisha, widow of the Holy Prophet] Qurans were displayed on lances. Was that right? In Karbala the family members of the Holy Prophet were martyred by those Muslims who claimed companionship of the Prophet. Was that right? Hajjaj was a Muslim general and he subjected the holy mosque at Makka to brutal attack. Was that right? No sacred words can justify or sanctify a false motive.

If Pakistan was right for Muslims then I would have supported it. But I see clearly the dangers inherent in the demand. I do not expect people to follow me, but it is not possible for me to go against the call of my conscience. People generally submit either to coercion or to the lessons of their experience. Muslims will not hear anything against Pakistan unless they experience it. Today they can call white black, but they will not give up Pakistan. The only way it can be stopped now is either for the government not to concede it or for Mr Jinnah himself — if he agrees to some new proposal.

Now as I gather from the attitude of my own colleagues in the working committee, the division of India appears to be certain. But I must warn that the evil consequences of partition will not affect India alone, Pakistan will be equally haunted by them. The partition will be based on the religion of the population and not based on any natural barrier like mountain, desert or river. A line will be drawn; it is difficult to say how durable it would be.

We must remember that an entity conceived in hatred will last only as long as that hatred lasts. This hatred will overwhelm the relations between India and Pakistan. In this situation it will not be possible for India and Pakistan to become friends and live amicably unless some catastrophic event takes place. The politics of partition itself will act as a barrier between the two countries. It will not be possible for Pakistan to accommodate all the Muslims of India, a task beyond her territorial capability. On the other hand, it will not be possible for the Hindus to stay especially in West Pakistan. They will be thrown out or leave on their own. This will have its repercussions in India and the Indian Muslims will have three options before them:

1. They become victims of loot and brutalities and migrate to Pakistan; but how many Muslims can find shelter there?

2. They become subject to murder and other excesses. A substantial number of Muslims will pass through this ordeal until the bitter memories of partition are forgotten and the generation that had lived through it completes its natural term.

3. A good number of Muslims, haunted by poverty, political wilderness and regional depredation decide to renounce Islam.

The prominent Muslims who are supporters of Muslim League will leave for Pakistan. The wealthy Muslims will take over the industry and business and monopolise the economy of Pakistan. But more than 30 million Muslims will be left behind in India. What promise Pakistan holds for them? The situation that will arise after the expulsion of Hindus and Sikhs from Pakistan will be still more dangerous for them. Pakistan itself will be afflicted by many serious problems. The greatest danger will come from international powers who will seek to control the new country, and with the passage of time this control will become tight. India will have no problem with this outside interference as it will sense danger and hostility from Pakistan.

The other important point that has escaped Mr Jinnah’s attention is Bengal. He does not know that Bengal disdains outside leadership and rejects it sooner or later. During World War II, Mr Fazlul Haq revolted against Jinnah and was thrown out of the Muslim League. Mr H.S. Suhrawardy does not hold Jinnah in high esteem. Why only Muslim League, look at the history of Congress. The revolt of Subhas Chandra Bose is known to all. Gandhiji was not happy with the presidentship of Bose and turned the tide against him by going on a fast unto death at Rajkot. Subhas Bose rose against Gandhiji and disassociated himself from the Congress. The environment of Bengal is such that it disfavours leadership from outside and rises in revolt when it senses danger to its rights and interests.

The confidence of East Pakistan will not erode as long as Jinnah and Liaquat Ali are alive. But after them any small incident will create resentment and disaffection. I feel that it will not be possible for East Pakistan to stay with West Pakistan for any considerable period of time. There is nothing common between the two regions except that they call themselves Muslims. But the fact of being Muslim has never created durable political unity anywhere in the world. The Arab world is before us; they subscribe to a common religion, a common civilisation and culture and speak a common language.

In fact they acknowledge even territorial unity. But there is no political unity among them. Their systems of government are different and they are often engaged in mutual recrimination and hostility. On the other hand, the language, customs and way of life of East Pakistan are totally different from West Pakistan. The moment the creative warmth of Pakistan cools down, the contradictions will emerge and will acquire assertive overtones. These will be fuelled by the clash of interests of international powers and consequently both wings will separate.

After the separation of East Pakistan, whenever it happens, West Pakistan will become the battleground of regional contradictions and disputes. The assertion of sub-national identities of Punjab, Sind, Frontier and Balochistan will open the doors for outside interference. It will not be long before the international powers use the diverse elements of Pakistani political leadership to break the country on the lines of Balkan and Arab states. Maybe at that stage we will ask ourselves, what have we gained and what have we lost.

The real issue is economic development and progress, it certainly is not religion. Muslim business leaders have doubts about their own ability and competitive spirit. They are so used to official patronage and favours that they fear new freedom and liberty. They advocate the two-nation theory to conceal their fears and want to have a Muslim state where they have the monopoly to control the economy without any competition from competent rivals. It will be interesting to watch how long they can keep this deception alive.



I feel that right from its inception, Pakistan will face some very serious problems:

1. The incompetent political leadership will pave the way for military dictatorship as it has happened in many Muslim countries.

2. The heavy burden of foreign debt.

3. Absence of friendly relationship with neighbours and the possibility of armed conflict.

4. Internal unrest and regional conflicts.

5. The loot of national wealth by the neo-rich and industrialists of Pakistan.

6. The apprehension of class war as a result of exploitation by the neo-rich.

7. The dissatisfaction and alienation of the youth from religion and the collapse of the theory of Pakistan.

8. The conspiracies of the international powers to control Pakistan.

In this situation, the stability of Pakistan will be under strain and the Muslim countries will be in no position to provide any worthwhile help. The assistance from other sources will not come without strings and it will force both ideological and territorial compromises.



Q: But the question is how Muslims can keep their community identity intact and how they can inculcate the attributes of the citizens of a Muslim state.

A: Hollow words cannot falsify the basic realities nor slanted questions can make the answers deficient. It amounts to distortion of the discourse. What is meant by community identity? If this community identity has remained intact during the British slavery, how will it come under threat in a free India in whose affairs Muslims will be equal participants? What attributes of the Muslim state you wish to cultivate?

The real issue is the freedom of faith and worship and who can put a cap on that freedom. Will independence reduce the 90 million Muslims into such a helpless state that they will feel constrained in enjoying their religious freedom? If the British, who as a world power could not snatch this liberty, what magic or power do the Hindus have to deny this freedom of religion? These questions have been raised by those, who, under the influence of western culture, have renounced their own heritage and are now raising dust through political gimmickry.

Muslim history is an important part of Indian history. Do you think the Muslim kings were serving the cause of Islam? They had a nominal relationship with Islam; they were not Islamic preachers. Muslims of India owe their gratitude to Sufis, and many of these divines were treated by the kings very cruelly.

Most of the kings created a large band of Ulema who were an obstacle in the path of the propagation of Islamic ethos and values. Islam, in its pristine form, had a tremendous appeal and in the first century won the hearts and minds of a large number of people living in and around Hejaz. But the Islam that came to India was different, the carriers were non-Arabs and the real spirit was missing. Still, the imprint of the Muslim period is writ large on the culture, music, art, architecture and languages of India. What do the cultural centres of India, like Delhi and Lucknow, represent? The underlying Muslim spirit is all too obvious.

If the Muslims still feel under threat and believe that they will be reduced to slavery in free India then I can only pray for their faith and hearts. If a man becomes disenchanted with life he can be helped to revival, but if someone is timid and lacks courage, then it is not possible to help him become brave and gutsy. The Muslims as a community have become cowards. They have no fear of God, instead they fear men. This explains why they are so obsessed with threats to their existence — a figment of their imagination.

After British takeover, the government committed all possible excesses against the Muslims. But Muslims did not cease to exist. On the contrary, they registered a growth that was more than average. The Muslim cultural ethos and values have their own charm. Then India has large Muslim neighbours on three sides. Why on earth the majority in this country will be interested to wipe out the Muslims? How will it promote their self interests? Is it so easy to finish 90 million people? In fact, Muslim culture has such attraction that I shall not be surprised if it comes to have the largest following in free India.

The world needs both, a durable peace and a philosophy of life. If the Hindus can run after Marx and undertake scholarly studies of the philosophy and wisdom of the West, they do not disdain Islam and will be happy to benefit from its principles. In fact they are more familiar with Islam and acknowledge that Islam does not mean parochialism of a hereditary community or a despotic system of governance.

Islam is a universal call to establish peace on the basis of human equality. They know that Islam is the proclamation of a Messenger who calls to the worship of God and not his own worship. Islam means freedom from all social and economic discriminations and reorganisation of society on three basic principles of God-consciousness, righteous action and knowledge.

In fact, it is we Muslims and our extremist behaviour that has created an aversion among non-Muslims for Islam. If we had not allowed our selfish ambitions to soil the purity of Islam then many seekers of truth would have found comfort in the bosom of Islam. Pakistan has nothing to do with Islam; it is a political demand that is projected by Muslim League as the national goal of Indian Muslims. I feel it is not the solution to the problems Muslims are facing. In fact it is bound to create more problems.

The Holy Prophet has said, “God has made the whole earth a mosque for me.” Now do not ask me to support the idea of the partition of a mosque. If the nine-crore Muslims were thinly scattered all over India, and demand was made to reorganise the states in a manner to ensure their majority in one or two regions, that was understandable. Again such a demand would not have been right from an Islamic viewpoint, but justifiable on administrative grounds.

But the situation, as it exists, is drastically different. All the border states of India have Muslim majorities sharing borders with Muslim countries.

Tell me, who can eliminate these populations? By demanding Pakistan we are turning our eyes away from the history of the last 1,000 years and, if I may use the League terminology, throwing more than 30 million Muslims into the lap of “Hindu Raj”. The Hindu Muslim problem that has created political tension between Congress and League will become a source of dispute between the two states and with the aid of international powers this may erupt into full scale war anytime in future.

The question is often raised that if the idea of Pakistan is so fraught with dangers for the Muslims, why is it being opposed by the Hindus? I feel that the opposition to the demand is coming from two quarters. One is represented by those who genuinely feel concerned about imperial machinations and strongly believe that a free, united India will be in a better position to defend itself.

On the other hand, there is a section who opposes Pakistan with the motive to provoke Muslims to become more determined in their demand and thus get rid of them. Muslims have every right to demand constitutional safeguards, but partition of India cannot promote their interests. The demand is the politically incorrect solution of a communal problem.

In future India will be faced with class problems, not communal disputes; the conflict will be between capital and labour. The communist and socialist movements are growing and it is not possible to ignore them. These movements will increasingly fight for the protection of the interest of the underclass.

The Muslim capitalists and the feudal classes are apprehensive of this impending threat. Now they have given this whole issue a communal colour and have turned the economic issue into a religious dispute. But Muslims alone are not responsible for it. This strategy was first adopted by the British government and then endorsed by the political minds of Aligarh. Later, Hindu short-sightedness made matters worse and now freedom has become contingent on the partition of India.

Jinnah himself was an ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity. In one Congress session Sarojini Naidu had commended him with this title. He was a disciple of Dadabhai Naoroji. He had refused to join the 1906 deputation of Muslims that initiated communal politics in India. In 1919 he stood firmly as a nationalist and opposed Muslim demands before the Joint Select Committee.

On 3 October 1925, in a letter to the Times of India he rubbished the suggestion that Congress is a Hindu outfit. In the All Parties Conferences of 1925 and 1928, he strongly favoured a joint electorate. While speaking at the National Assembly in 1925, he said, “I am a nationalist first and a nationalist last” and exhorted his colleagues, be they Hindus or Muslims, “not to raise communal issues in the House and help make the Assembly a national institution in the truest sense of the term”.

In 1928, Jinnah supported the Congress call to boycott Simon Commission. Till 1937, he did not favour the demand to partition India. In his message to various student bodies he stressed the need to work for Hindu Muslim unity. But he felt aggrieved when the Congress formed governments in seven states and ignored the Muslim League. In 1940 he decided to pursue the partition demand to check Muslim political decline.

In short, the demand for Pakistan is his response to his own political experiences. Mr Jinnah has every right to his opinion about me, but I have no doubts about his intelligence. As a politician he has worked overtime to fortify Muslim communalism and the demand for Pakistan. Now it has become a matter of prestige for him and he will not give it up at any cost.



Q: It is clear that Muslims are not going to turn away from their demand for Pakistan. Why have they become so impervious to all reason and logic of arguments?

A: It is difficult, rather impossible, to fight against the misplaced enthusiasm of a mob, but to suppress one’s conscience is worse than death. Today the Muslims are not walking, they are flowing. The problem is that Muslims have not learnt to walk steady; they either run or flow with the tide. When a group of people lose confidence and self-respect, they are surrounded by imaginary doubts and dangers and fail to make a distinction between the right and the wrong.

The true meaning of life is realised not through numerical strength but through firm faith and righteous action. British politics has sown many seeds of fear and distrust in the mental field of Muslims. Now they are in a frightful state, bemoaning the departure of the British and demanding partition before the foreign masters leave. Do they believe that partition will avert all the dangers to their lives and bodies? If these dangers are real then they will still haunt their borders and any armed conflict will result in much greater loss of lives and possessions.



Q: But Hindus and Muslims are two different nations with different and disparate inclinations. How can the unity between the two be achieved?

A: This is an obsolete debate. I have seen the correspondence between Allama Iqbal and Maulana Husain Ahmad Madni on the subject. In the Quran the term qaum has been used not only for the community of believers but has also been used for distinct human groupings generally. What do we wish to achieve by raising this debate about the etymological scope of terms like millat [community], qaum [nation] and ummat [group]? In religious terms India is home to many people — the Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Parsis, Sikhs etc.

The differences between Hindu religion and Islam are vast in scope. But these differences cannot be allowed to become an obstacle in the path of India gaining her freedom nor do the two distinct and different systems of faith negate the idea of unity of India. The issue is of our national independence and how we can secure it. Freedom is a blessing and is the right of every human being. It cannot be divided on the basis of religion.

Muslims must realise that they are bearers of a universal message. They are not a racial or regional grouping in whose territory others cannot enter. Strictly speaking, Muslims in India are not one community; they are divided among many well-entrenched sects. You can unite them by arousing their anti-Hindu sentiment but you cannot unite them in the name of Islam. To them Islam means undiluted loyalty to their own sect.

Apart from Wahhabi, Sunni and Shia there are innumerable groups who owe allegiance to different saints and divines. Small issues like raising hands during the prayer and saying Amen loudly have created disputes that defy solution. The Ulema have used the instrument of takfeer [fatwas declaring someone as infidel] liberally. Earlier, they used to take Islam to the disbelievers; now they take away Islam from the believers. Islamic history is full of instances of how good and pious Muslims were branded kafirs. Prophets alone had the capability to cope with these mindboggling situations. Even they had to pass through times of afflictions and trials. The fact is that when reason and intelligence are abandoned and attitudes become fossilised then the job of the reformer becomes very difficult.

But today the situation is worse than ever. Muslims have become firm in their communalism; they prefer politics to religion and follow their worldly ambitions as commands of religion. History bears testimony to the fact that in every age we ridiculed those who pursued the good with consistency, snuffed out the brilliant examples of sacrifice and tore the flags of selfless service. Who are we, the ordinary mortals; even high ranking Prophets were not spared by these custodians of traditions and customs.



Q: You closed down your journal Al-Hilal a long time back. Was it due to your disappointment with the Muslims who were wallowing in intellectual desolation, or did you feel like proclaiming azan [call to prayer] in a barren desert?

A: I abandoned Al-Hilal not because I had lost faith in its truth. This journal created great awareness among a large section of Muslims. They renewed their faith in Islam, in human freedom and in consistent pursuit of righteous goals. In fact my own life was greatly enriched by this experience and I felt like those who had the privilege of learning under the companionship of the Messenger of God.

My own voice entranced me and under its impact I burnt out like a phoenix. Al-Hilal had served its purpose and a new age was dawning. Based on my experiences, I made a reappraisal of the situation and decided to devote all my time and energy for the attainment of our national freedom. I was firm in my belief that freedom of Asia and Africa largely depends on India’s freedom and Hindu Muslim unity is key to India’s freedom.

Even before the First World War, I had realised that India was destined to attain freedom, and no power on earth would be able to deny it. I was also clear in my mind about the role of Muslims. I ardently wished that Muslims would learn to walk together with their countrymen and not give an opportunity to history to say that when Indians were fighting for their independence, Muslims were looking on as spectators. Let nobody say that instead of fighting the waves they were standing on the banks and showing mirth on the drowning of boats carrying the freedom fighters [¼].
RamaY
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by RamaY »

^ from above.

I request forum members to read below points, without falling into the trap of anti-Pakiness, and contemplate what this gentelman is trying to convey.

Often we think the enemy of our enemy is a friend. It often is not true in long term. Religion and civilizational survival are long term ideas.
This will not happen as a result of any conscious decision, but will be a logical consequence of its social realities. How can you expect a society that consists 90% of Hindus, who have lived with their ethos and values since prehistoric times, to grow differently? The factors that laid the foundation of Islam in Indian society and created a powerful following have become victim of the politics of partition. The communal hatred it has generated has completely extinguished all possibilities of spreading and preaching Islam. This communal politics has hurt the religion beyond measure. Muslims have turned away from the Quran. If they had taken their lessons from the Quran and the life of the Holy Prophet and had not forged communal politics in the name of religion then Islam’s growth would not have halted. By the time of the decline of the Mughal rule, the Muslims in India were a little over 22.5 million, that is about 65% of the present numbers.

Since then the numbers kept increasing. If the Muslim politicians had not used the offensive language that embittered communal relations, and the other section acting as agents of British interests had not worked to widen the Hindu-Muslim breach, the number of Muslims in India would have grown higher. The political disputes we created in the name of religion have projected Islam as an instrument of political power and not what it is — a value system meant for the transformation of human soul. Under British influence, we turned Islam into a confined system, and following in the footsteps of other communities like Jews, Parsis and Hindus we transformed ourselves into a hereditary community.

The Indian Muslims have frozen Islam and its message and divided themselves into many sects. Some sects were clearly born at the instance of colonial power. Consequently, these sects became devoid of all movement and dynamism and lost faith in Islamic values. The hallmark of Muslim existence was striving and now the very term is strange to them. Surely they are Muslims, but they follow their own whims and desires. In fact now they easily submit to political power, not to Islamic values. They prefer the religion of politics not the religion of the Quran. Pakistan is a political standpoint.

Regardless of the fact whether it is the right solution to the problems of Indian Muslims, it is being demanded in the name of Islam. The question is when and where Islam provided for division of territories to settle populations on the basis of belief and unbelief. Does this find any sanction in the Quran or the traditions of the Holy Prophet? Who among the scholars of Islam has divided the dominion of God on this basis? If we accept this division in principle, how shall we reconcile it with Islam as a universal system?

How shall we explain the ever growing Muslim presence in non-Muslim lands including India? Do they realise that if Islam had approved this principle then it would not have permitted its followers to go to the non-Muslim lands and many ancestors of the supporters of Pakistan would not have had even entered the fold of Islam?
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Prem »

RamaYa
Maulana sensed the demise of Muslim presence in India and knew Pakistan will expose the hoax of Islam as some kind of spiritual value system. How he mention Hindus and Sikhs together, knowing well that both belong to the land. Sad, Indians leadeship failed to rise when it was needed most and these bumbling bewakoof instead of capitalising on the oppertunity , still busy cutting their own feet and pushing the next geneational Indians in grave danger where they have to fight the survival battles again like our ancestors fought .
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by anupmisra »

Maulana Abul Kalam Azad may have been right in correctly predicting the future of pa'astan and East Bengal, the mindset of those muslim elites who demanded the breakup of the nation and seek special rights, and the western interference that would follow, but then he was also an islamist, through and through. His interest was not in maintaining the balance between Hindus and muslims, but furthering the cause of real islam in "Hind". Think of the India that may have been if the nation had not been divided. It would have been a sheer hell for the remaining Hindus to survive in a unified India. I may sound like an alarmist but evidence from current events around the globe is my backup.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by anupmisra »

Jhujar wrote:Maulana sensed the demise of Muslim presence in India and knew Pakistan will expose the hoax of Islam as some kind of spiritual value system.
You may be right with that thesis, but the maulana also acknowledged the Hindu-muslim relations were problematic. He never spoke of how both faiths could come together and grow the nation, resolve their problems, and respect each the other's rights. As an islamist, his solution to resolving the H-M problems (of course, in favor of the muslims) was to prevent the formation of pakistan and keep the ninety million muslims united in India to carry on the fight. The utlimate conquest of Hind.

I would be interested in seeing evidence from the Maulana's pre-independence speeches where he spoke of the same amount of respect for the dharmic faiths as he had for his own.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by aditya »

I apologize if this is somewhat incongruous. I'd raise 2 flags:

1) Clearly there is a divide between those advocating a soft landing of sorts for those among the pure who seek reentry into dharmic space without abandoning their Islamic vehicle and those who believe in the middle finger approach. Putting aside philosophical arguments about dharmic inclusiveness, could it simply be the equivalent strategic error of our ancestors? It is said that several "wayward" folks like KMs were shown the middle finger when they expressed their desire to "revert"(dharmic context), for reasons ranging from simple ridicule to rejection for having become spoilt goods by deviating in the first place.

2) To the votaries of Sikh dharma, as much as I share the admiration and respect, one has to point out serious loopholes that are yet to be fixed. The fanaticism among a lot of folks(mostly diaspora) is truly astounding and is on an equal-equal plane with jihadis. The following video essentially justifying the recent attack on Lt Gen KS Brar is chilling in this respect.

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zLMwIiEArp4

The language is intelligible to me precisely because sanskrit origin terms and expressions are used, but this lot sound no different from islamists repeating "PBUH" in drone mode. It is easy to dismiss such phenomena as transient and related to political events in recent history, but a person batting for the dharmic side once told me he received more physical threats from "jihadi" khalistanis(they can't be called Sikhs) than actual jihadis.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Agnimitra »

Jhujar wrote:Maulana sensed the demise of Muslim presence in India
There hasn't been a "demise" of Moslem presence in India, if we understand it to mean undivided India. Moslem presence in terms of demographics has grown. Even Islamist power has grown.

One way to understand Paki "strategy" is in terms of demographics. Most people tend to focus on this demographic strategy vis a vis non-Moslems. But people don't talk about it in terms of the demographics within the Moslem world itself.

The Qipchak and other Turks were initially lowly slaves and mercenaries of the Arabs, and slowly but surely got into positions of increasing responsibility in military, religious and administrative affairs, and even the popular culture. They were the most zealous of the lot, could be used willingly against others, and were yet obedient slaves. Then when they established themselves as indispensible servants, and the demographics began to favour them -- they took over almost the whole of Eastern Persia, finishing off the native Persian presence there -- then they eventually took over the leadership of the Islamic world itself.

The Pakis see themselves similarly, and this idea was not seldom suggested to them by the British themselves. Blunt's observations were also along similar lines. So the Pakis today are the zealous servants of the Arab birathers, even though they debase themselves for it. Their "meretricious" mercenary culture is in that old Turkic spirit. Slavish zeal is the route to power in those parts of the world. Paki soldiers and pilots man Arab forces today. Pakis are the most active and articulate leaders of Islamist congregations and networks, especially in the West, through which millions of petrodollars flow. Etc.

So in the past 60 years, Pakis have definitely increased their footprint in the Islamic world as a whole. Demographics is definitely on their side. They sense a bigger role and a power shift in their direction in the coming generation or two. After the Arabs, the Caliphate moved into the hands of the Turkic slave race. The Pakis hope to have a big role, if not the leading role, in this next globalized Caliphate.

So Maulana Abul Kalam Azad's plaintive arguments may have been a song of "you left us in a tattered minority", but I don't see how he was "prescient". Its too early to say.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by SBajwa »

by Aditya
To the votaries of Sikh dharma, as much as I share the admiration and respect, one has to point out serious loopholes that are yet to be fixed. The fanaticism among a lot of folks(mostly diaspora) is truly astounding and is on an equal-equal plane with jihadis. The following video essentially justifying the recent attack on Lt Gen KS Brar is chilling in this respect.
The current Sikh religion is totally under control of Jat Sikhs while Arya Samaj is under control of Punjabi Hindus!! So as their respective founders wanted to get rid of casteism from their followers they have become casteist of the worst kind.

The budget of SGPC is more than Punjab government and most of it is control by Badal and other SGPC people who are 80% Jat Sikhs while 20% are assorted Lubana, Tarkhan and rest.

The lower "caste" sikhs have become so disallusioned with mainstream sikhs that even in India they have created their own "Gurdwaras" with their own Granth where they portray Bhagat Ravidass as greater than Guru Nanak.

As always the Dharmic are fighting among themselves and only thing that can bring together is a full fledged nuke attack by adharmic forces (which won't happen as US is engaging them at this time). If U.S leaves Afghanistan by 2015 then I see a Nuke attack on India by 2020 by Adharmic forces led by Pakistan.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Agnimitra »

SBajwa wrote:As always the Dharmic are fighting among themselves and only thing that can bring together is a full fledged nuke attack by adharmic forces (which won't happen as US is engaging them at this time). If U.S leaves Afghanistan by 2015 then I see a Nuke attack on India by 2020 by Adharmic forces led by Pakistan.
I hope people or new leaders figure out how to create unity before a "nuke attack"!

परस्परविरोधे च वयं पन्च च ते शतं ।
अन्यैः साकं विरोधे तु वयं पन्चाधिकं शतं ॥

"When in combat against each other we are 5 and they are hundred. But when against others, we are a hundred and five."
(obviously refers to Kauravas and Pandavas. I believe this is supposed to have been said by Dharmaraj.)
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by sanjaykumar »

The current Sikh religion is totally under control of Jat Sikhs while Arya Samaj is under control of Punjabi Hindus!! So as their respective founders wanted to get rid of casteism from their followers they have become casteist of the worst kind.

The budget of SGPC is more than Punjab government and most of it is control by Badal and other SGPC people who are 80% Jat Sikhs while 20% are assorted Lubana, Tarkhan and rest.

The lower "caste" sikhs have become so disallusioned with mainstream sikhs that even in India they have created their own "Gurdwaras" with their own Granth where they portray Bhagat Ravidass as greater than Guru Nanak.

As always the Dharmic are fighting among themselves and only thing that can bring together is a full fledged nuke attack by adharmic forces (which won't happen as US is engaging them at this time). If U.S leaves Afghanistan by 2015 then I see a Nuke attack on India by 2020 by Adharmic forces led by Pakistan.


As always a cogent post. There is much unease in the Mazhabi Sikh community, many have quit/ been pushed out of Sikh affairs (in Delhi 2-3 years ago). I don't know about Pappa Sikhs, but a Jat once told me quite frankly the only Sikhs are Jats.

I recall a Jat observing quite bluntly to a Bains "so called low caste" that they were low caste. The fellow took it well and merely agreed. I was cringing for a few days afterwards.
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Re: Pakistan : A new way of looking

Post by Agnimitra »

This is getting OT, but how does the Jat monopoly over Sikhism today affect Sikh-Hindu relations? Could someone explain?
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