Thursday, September 1, 2011 - 5:57 PM

In southern Punjab, a fierce battle rages for the future of Islam. For the first time in this region's history, its 700-year-old blue tiled Sufi shrines are being challenged and overshadowed by hundreds of new mosques and madrassas espousing jihadi ideologies. Multan and its sister cities have traditionally been centers of spirituality, housing some of Pakistan's strongest religious networks. As a result, this region has always played a defining role in Pakistan's socio-political and religious identity. However, since 9/11 the "Punjabi Taliban" are undermining traditional power structures to establish their own legal, social, and cultural writ.
We travelled to Multan and across southern Punjab, in addition to other regions of Pakistan, to understand the dynamics of jihadi recruitment and how a range of mainstream groups -- including traditionally conservative Sunni and Shi'a organizations -- are waging their own counter-insurgencies. This is part of a broader project led by the World Organization for Resource Development and Education (WORDE) to explore how Pakistan's civil society is tackling extremism.
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We saw during the course of our travels that poverty has provided a major pool for jihadist recruitment in Pakistan. Similar to how the Lebanese group Hezbollah gains popular support amongst low income families by providing free food, medical facilities and education, in Pakistan organizations like Jamaat ud-Dawa (JuD), the charitable front for the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), feed off of local economic and political frustrations. When a destitute family had their electricity shut off in the scorching 110 degree heat of Multan because they could no longer pay their bills, an extremist imam came to their rescue. He promised to indefinitely cover their electricity bills -- as long as the family switched mosques.
Groups like JuD have also gained considerable leverage from the floods which ravaged the region last year. We travelled to the villages surrounding the district of Muzaffargarh, one of the hardest hit areas, where over 700,000 people were displaced by the rising waters. Today hundreds of homes still lie in ruins, and much of the area's rich mango groves are fallow. The bulk of radical recruiting efforts are targeted here in poor, remote villages.
Although emergency relief efforts by extremist groups have concluded, their networks continue to increase their physical presence by erecting new mosques and madrassas. A number of families in flood affected regions explained that they had been approached by madrassa recruiters offering their children free education, housing, and food. Many of those children were never heard from again, and are believed by community members to have been sold to militant outfits at $3,000 per head.
Inside radical madrassas, students are first taught that those who do not conform to their particular brand of Islam are wajib al-qatl (worthy of being killed). According to a former official of Pakistan's Counter Terrorism Authority, militant outfits like LeT and Lashkar e-Jhangvi (LeJ) send recruiters to these Southern Punjab feeder schools two months before summer break begins to sign children up for summer jihadi camps in the tribal frontier.
In addition to creating new facilities, extremist factions have waged a fierce battle over the ownership of existing religious institutions which have historically rejected terrorism and championed social harmony. We interviewed a number of mosque caretakers and madrassah administrators from Peshawar to Karachi, who told us that mosques are being seized through armed conflict at an unprecedented rate. Community activists we spoke with claim that in Karachi alone, hundreds of mosques have been overtaken by radicals. Others are being taken through "legal" means, by manipulating the registration process and changing mosque ownership, creating legal associations untainted by the names of banned groups. In some areas extremists mask themselves as mainstream moderates. Once they have won the trust of the congregation they begin the process of disseminating their teachings.
These groups also use fear and intimidation tactics, or to out-and-out attacks, to raise funds and silence dissent. To protect themselves, mainstream shrines and mosques have become so heavily fortified that attendance is at an all time low. Numerous anti-Taliban institutions have been bombed, and almost every religious scholar and activist we met has been targeted. In Bahawalpur a moderate imam explained how he had to pay a $1,000 ransom to recover his kidnapped relative. In his neighborhood alone, six other children had similarly been taken and ransomed by militant groups who have been targeting families associated with anti-Taliban movements. In a country where the GDP per capita is about $2500, it is becoming increasingly difficult to take a prominent stand against militants.
However, in this tense environment, religious institutions, political parties, and community organizations across southern Punjab are pushing back through five distinct channels.
First, traditional anti-Taliban religious institutions are leading a concerted effort to establish schools in militant hot spots. Arshad Kazmi, a revered religious scholar with a background in philosophy, has established hundreds of schools throughout Southern Punjab and Sindh using existing social networks with direct fundraising involvement from the community. Due to his anti-extremism "road shows" from Karachi to Lahore and televised lecture series, he has gained millions of followers. Kazmi hails from one of Pakistan's most prominent spiritual families. His brother, Tahir Syed Kazmi, set up the Society for Education and Peace and administers a number of schools, including a madrassa for over 400 women in Multan. According to Arshad Kazmi, "I realized that if we didn't build these schools, our children would grow up with religious intolerance and a narrow, destructive worldview."
Second, community members are turning to such teachers and their institutions to provide religious re-education for at-risk and radicalized youth. Recently, the imam of the Hazrat Jamal Multani shrine staged an intervention for four boys who wanted to become militants. "It wasn't a simple process," he explained. "We argued back and forth for days, but eventually the boys learned that their concept of jihad was all wrong." The session was informally taped and shared with other at-risk youth.
In addition to this ad-hoc approach, many schools are beginning to institutionalize their counter-radicalization curriculum. In the city of Okara, now infamous for producing several of the 2008 Mumbai attackers, the Dar ul Uloom Ashraf al-Madaris Okara organized a two-week seminar on Quranic principles of peace and conflict resolution. The school has about a dozen sister schools within Okara and hundreds of schools within its network across Pakistan, through which they intend to disseminate CDs of the program.
In Muzaffargarh, many secular universities and moderate madrassas have also used their social networks to coordinate food and emergency health kit distribution. Imam Gilani, from the village of Khangarh, tapped into his madrassa and familial networks to provide assistance to villages off the grid, beyond the scope of most NGOs. Elsewhere, anti-Taliban factions are working through social welfare and relief organizations like Muslim Hands and the Al Mustafa Welfare Trust Society to ensure that those suffering from disasters are not reliant on militant groups for support.
Third, public lectures (dars) and community debates (muzakara) have proved critical in creating a counter narrative to extremist groups. Last month, a charismatic young imam, who preferred not to share his name because he has been targeted by banned organizations, delivered a Friday sermon on how to engage non-Muslims with tolerance. His recent book features a chapter entitled "Islam does not ask us to hate non-Muslims." Just blocks away from militant mosques, we also attended a dars in Bahawalpur for over 400 men and women, which focused on character building and controlling one's temper. In these venues, extremist groups are identified by name and their arguments are countered point by point by well regarded religious scholars. These lectures are held on a weekly basis, and some featuring prominent speakers are televised.
Fourth, there has also been an increase in public rallies against extremism. Conventions often feature printed banners with slogans such as "Qalam, Kitaab Zindabad! Kalashnakov Murdabad!" ("Long live the pen and the book and down with the Kalashnikov!") Mawlana Fazal Karim, a member of Pakistan's National Assembly from Faisalabad, has organized a number of rallies despite receiving regular death threats from the Taliban. He is organizing a "Train March" in which thousands of activists will be traveling by train from Karachi to Rawalpindi to raise national awareness of extremism. The organizers will host events in each stop, distributing pamphlets and delivering public speeches.
Fifth, some groups directly under attack have resorted to more forceful resistance. When 30-40 armed gunmen occupied two mosques and a madrassa in Bahawalpur, the community retaliated by first contacting the media, public officials, and law enforcement and staging a public rally. Later, 150 community members decided to confront the militants in a standoff-armed mostly with sticks. Other communities are taking more drastic measures. In the tribal areas, for example, many villages have created their own "minuteman"-style lashkars to fend off militants. In major urban centers, mainstream groups are now turning to organizations like the Sunni Tehreek for armed protection. Founded over 20 years ago to prevent mosque takeovers by radical militants, the Sunni Tehreek has over 6,000 branches across Pakistan today. While some terror analysts contend that increasing support for such groups could further destabilize the region, some locals believe instead that the Tehreek provides a bulwark against pro-Taliban groups.
At the end of the day, these anti-Taliban campaigns in Southern Punjab and elsewhere have been effective at the local level, but still lack coordination across cities. Activists lament their lack of funds and official support, unlike militant factions that are thriving through illicit funding and foreign financing. Despite the challenges they face, though, community leaders have pledged to carry on this struggle for the identity and ultimately the future of Pakistan, a subject that will be discussed in part two of this series.
Waleed Ziad and Mehreen Farooq are leading a project to analyze the role of Pakistan's civil society in countering extremism for the Washington DC-based World Organization for Resource Development and Education (WORDE).
ASIF HASSAN/AFP/Getty Images
The battle for Pakistan's soul
The battle of Pakistan's soul is like two supermodel's battling for who's going to get to wear the last of the Best Beauty Products on runway day. I think Pakistan will be taken over once again by the Al Qaeda because our troops are steadily getting killed over there but we are supposed to be almost finished with helping them establish themselves as a country. It just show what lies ahead for the system It's not gonna work, If you ask me.
Poverty is NO excuse to spread terrorism worldwide
When it comes to terrorism in Pakistan, Pakistan has invited jihadi violence upon itself. Pakistan is suffering from self-inflicted wounds.
Instead of calling spade a spade, these Pakistan-apologists keep offering ’poverty, lack of economic development or lack of education’ and ’wanting strategic depth against India’ as alibis for Pakistani State’s terrorist behavior!
The Pakistani parliament’s joint session convened on 5/13/2011 after Osama’s killing and ended after adopting a unanimous resolution condemning the American raid on the Abbottabad compound in which al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden was killed.
Pakistani parliamentarians did not appear to be bothered about Osama living in Abbottabad for the past five years and in other parts of the country since 9/11.
Osama was a hero in Pakistan even prior to his death and remains one even now.
Nobody forced Pakistani government to facilitate relocation of Osama bin Laden from Sudan to Afghanistan in 1996. Democratic government of Pakistan chose to do so of its own free will.
Nobody forced Pakistani Army and Intelligence to create what ex-CIA official Bruce Reidel called ‘this jihadist Frankenstein’ monster in 1990s. Pakistani Army and Intelligence chose to do so with the full financing provided by Pakistan’s democratic governments at the time.
Pakistan boldly holds the Western world to ransom. It garners generous financial aid and military supplies from the US and has successfully projected itself as recourse of last resort in its geographical theatre. It runs circles around international sanctions and bans by nurturing a large number of home-grown terrorist outfits forever changing nomenclature. In addition, it maintains seemingly endless supply of freelance non-state actors that allow it the fig-leaf of plausible deniability.
Is ’poverty, lack of economic development or lack of education’ a valid excuse to promote, spawn, shelter and support umpteen terrorist outfits on Pakistani soil by Pakistani governments?
Is ’wanting strategic depth’ a valid excuse to terrorize neighbors like Pakistan terrorizes Afghanistan and India or even take over a neighbor like Pakistan took over Afghanistan in 1996 and wants to do so again once U. S. troops depart? Should India create terrorist outfits to terrorize Pakistan and take it over because India feels sandwiched between China and Pakistan?
US ambassador Anne Patterson to Pakistan, wrote in a secret review in 2009 that ‘Pakistan's Army and ISI are covertly SPONSORING four militant groups - Haqqani‘s HQN, Mullah Omar‘s QST, Al Qaeda and LeT - and will not abandon them for any amount of US money‘, as diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show.
Now how can Pakistan feel threatened by ‘those domestically ensconced terrorist groups’ if Pakistani Army and ISI will NOT abandon them for any amount of US money as reported by ambassador Patterson?
There is no doubt that Pakistan has brought a lot of the problems on itself. However one has to look at the circumstances and history.
One cannot simplify this in a few words or paragraphs. But the responsibility lies not only on Pakistan but also on the western world to have backed the corrupt pakistani leaders and used them to the benefit of the west without thinking what the common man in Pakistan will suffer and what the consequence of their support will be in the future. The Creation of Taliban itself is a brain child of the west. The blame is also on the Leaders of the other muslim countries - eg Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait etc etc who have poured Billions of dollars into the coffers of these corrupt leaders to gain their aims and brands of religion.
Who Suffers???? The people of Pakistan who have no say - The Country has become a playing ground for all the world - Western Powers using for their convenience and funding the corrupt leaders, Middle East using it to enhance their stupid brand of religion ( sorry to use this terminology as Islam is far away from what they are teaching and following and using for their benefit), India to gain its own security, Far East - to gain the hot waters of Arabain Sea, and a very special country to gain the assets of Pakistan - the country with rich resources which still has not been explored. How can a country who has Billions of tons of coal in its ground suffers from electricity shortages daily for anywhere 5 to 20 hours a day ?
What a mess. !!!!!!
This is a humble appeal to the younger generation of Pakistan !!!! Take over the country - NOW and get rid of all these people - Dump them into the Arabian Sea - local leaders, foreign powers and all - and rebuild from scratch - the way we were and meant to be
Pakistan Zindabad !!!!!
Western Interests and Pakistani Leadership
Every country gets the leadership it deserves.
Generally it not the job and responsibility of other nations to change and install new government in a country as per their needs and benefits. But that has also happened in era of neatly defined cold war environment and still continues mostly with disastrous results and mayhem. .
If Pakistan could never produce modern leadership, the fault lies largely with in and not outside. The acute adherence to religious obscurantism along with pursuance of some of the most lunatic national goals has brought Pakistan to current situation.
The example of ZA Bhutto is symptomatic of the deep malaise, obsessions with ideology of war, hate, antagonism and expansionism.. He was the last foreign minister having control over foreign policy decision and administration.
But what he did?
He convinced Dictator General Ayub Khan to attack India and complete the unfinished Kashmir agenda of 1947. Highly ambitious and Megalomaniac Bhutto was emboldened by defeat of Indian in 1962 war with China and death of Nehru in 1964. Further he made great fun of Lal Bahadur Shashtri, the new diminutive, frail, Gandhi cap-dhoti-kurta-sandal supporting vegetarian Prime Minister of India.
Bhutto along with westernized rich well dressed Pakistan Army and civilian elite made great fun of new Indian Prime Minister and his leadership abilities
Eventually Operation Gibraltar was mounted by Pakistan in 1965 which led to humiliating defeat and setting in motion various forces and actors, which resulted in suppression, rape, plunder and massacre of millions of Bengali's and eventual birth of Bangladesh.
Bhutto also promoted an illiterate Jihadi general Zia Ul Haq as army chief bypassing many others, because he though an lackey like Zia would always obey him.
But Zia eventually Hanged him and accelerated highly regressive religious agenda started by Bhutto.
When Russian invaded Afghanistan, wide eyed and greedy Zia told Americans-My Army is your army.
The real issue is lack of good leadership and its continued absence in a country which has allowed its society to be either silent support or a participant in violence, terrorism and crime.
Omar Shaikh the lead planner of 9/11 was freed from Indian jail alongside other terrorist by an ISI supported hijacking of Indian Airlines flight from Kathmandu to Delhi.
Later an ISI honcho facilitated actions of Omar Shaikh to send 100,000 US Dollars to Mohammd Atta, who led 9/11 attack on WTC.
Even today, Pakistan has willingly given safe sanctuary to hundreds of terrorists, war lords, drug lords, sea pirates, plane hijackers, killers, criminals, hate preachers, arm dealers and terrorists who are given all they want to extend their Jihad the world over.
if it took 64 years for Pakistan to reach this glorious stage of being an e[epicenter of global terrorism, it will certainly take few decades to be a normal peaceful country, a concept the Pakistani decision makers hate like they hate a poor pig.
The real culprit is Megalomaniac Pakistan army and its ability to hoodwink people with their hate India and take Afghanistan as a colony- agenda.
Good summary and true conclusion. Until the Pak Army is dismantled, by hook or by crook, the violence in, and degeneration of, the country will remain.
Which is why, either the US and Allies need to confront the Pak Army, or the State of Pakistan needs to be disaggregated (it is already falling apart).
The headline i would like to read is;
"US TROOPS MAKE AMPHIBIOUS LANDING AT GWADAR, NATO DECLARES PAK NO-FLY ZONE"
That'll do wonders for the soul of Pakistan!
i see that, after taliban move from afganistan to pakistan, they bring a new concept and culture of islamic. they run islam same the way in afganistan. (gliderforbaby, glidersfornursery), there new masjid, madrasah and it make new movement of islam itself. they teach about jihad(
littlecastlegliders), (beststeamiron), please do not blame if low income families support taliban because they providing free food, medical facilities and education, something that can not provide from pakistani government( electricteapot, biometricsafe ), please do not be wrong if Inside radical madrassas, students are first taught that those who do not conform to their particular brand of Islam are wajib al-qatl (worthy of being killed). According to a former official of Pakistan's Counter Terrorism Authority, militant outfits like LeT and Lashkar e-Jhangvi (LeJ) send recruiters to these Southern Punjab feeder schools two months before summer break begins to sign children up for summer jihadi camps in the tribal frontier. in my opinion it is not like that. islam love peace, islam only war when infidel strike them. so it call jihad (gedehumidifier, lgdehumidifier,
An excellent report. I have one question to the budding young authors: Can you pinpoint to me where exactly the famed Punjabi Taliban exist in southern Punjab?
The fact is the term 'Punjabi Taliban' was invented in the mainstream US media, especially in those publications that are renowned for publishing conspiracy theories that quote no names and are often the work of focused minds in US intelligence.
It is academic dishonesty on the part of the authors of this piece to talk about 'Punjabi Taliban' without mentioning to the readers that you won't find a single person in entire Pakistan who says, 'Yes, I am Punjabi Taliban.' There is no such thing. CIA analysts and a few American think-tank types have come up with this term to basically malign pro-Kashmir activists and groups that are based in Punjab. They are there for natural reasons. Pakistan's Punjab province is geographically contiguous to Indian-occupied parts of Kashmir and a large number of Kashmiris have settled in these areas after they escaped Indian atrocities on the other side over six decades.
The US has taken upon itself recently to drag pro-Kashmir groups into its Afghan 'war on terror' as a favor to India. US diplomats and media has been feverishly trying to incite the peaceful Sufi denominations of Islam in southern Punjab to go to war with other denominations that are involved in volunteering to fight foreign occupiers in Kashmir [and Afghanistan].
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