Brewing storms
Raza Rumi laments the tragedies of our times, and says that the state cannot be absolved of its responsibility to protect citizens against terrorism (The Friday Times)
Lahore has finally been encircled by the layers and tremors of violence. If the events of March 2009 were not enough, there is now a concerted effort to create panic in the city. In the past few weeks, girls’ schools have been threatened that they would face the music for educating girls and promoting co-education. How can children and their middle-class urban parents survive these gruelling times? (pic left:Pir Baba’s shrine is now closed to visitors )
I have been naively protecting my children from the gory news. This is an age of violence. If a news channel displays human limbs and heads and the shrieks of a flogged girl, the cartoons present extensive violence and deadly, sadistic stunts for entertainment. Indeed, these are strange times to live in anywhere, especially in the land of the pure. Violence is a commodity; each news item carries an advertised price tag, and of course the cultural experience gets brutalised in this maze of uncertainty and confusion.
Lahore’s Police chief said in March that those who caused carnage in Mumbai created havoc by attacking Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore. With the change of government, a city police chief has shifted the blame to the favourite nemesis of the Pakistani state: India. Surely, there can be foreign involvement, but what about those whom we saw escaping with impunity in a rather relaxed, Hollywood style escape from the terror scene? They were not alarmed or afraid of being caught. Has anyone been ‘captured,’ to use the term repeated on TV screens for days with little results? No, we the silent spectators, called citizens elsewhere in the world, are interested more in where the terror-boys disappeared, rather than which regional power caused this incident to ‘destabilise’ an otherwise stable, well functioning society called Pakistan. (pic above right: The unfortunate road between Buner and Swat )
Islamabad is already gloomy under a besieged Presidency, innefective parliament and its woeful citizenry is clueless as to what is happening. Barricades stare at you everywhere you move, and there is an unprecedented level of uncertainty everywhere. The state announces that there is a terror threat and the Capital shuts down. Schools, colleges, shops and offices are locked, and so is the bruised public imagination that stops questioning in the need to survive. The question is that if the mighty state cannot protect its citizens, what good are the nuclear weapons, missiles and layers of security and administrative apparatuses?
Such questions become even more pertinent the moment you cross the Attock and see the waters of the Indus and the Kabul speak of the gruesome blood-letting in the northwest. The proud Pakhtuns have been betrayed by their elected representatives and their state agencies for capitulating before carefully crafted Frankenstein[s]. Peshawarites have already given up and are bracing themselves for the inevitable – as some would put it –‘takeover’ or covert control as has happened in Swat and more recently in Buner. My friends in Peshawar are petrified, for they might just live with a sectarian version of Islam, but they cannot risk the destruction that might precede that eventuality. But what can people do, especially those who have to live here?
It was Rehman Baba’s shrine the last time, and now it is Pir Baba whose tomb is locked and under the unholy control of the Taliban. Hazrat Sayyed Ali Tirmizi, or Pir Baba, was a 16th century Sufi whose family migrated from Afghanistan to Delhi when his father joined the army of the Emperor Humayun. A travelling sage like most Sufis, Pir Baba in the last years of his life, settled in Buner permanently. This was during Akbar the Great’s reign.
Centuries later, Pir Baba’s shrine became the fulcrum of resistance against British imperialism. This was the time when nationalists of the secular and religious variety co-existed and fought for their rights. Pir Baba’s name runs across the geography and culture of Pakhtunkhawa. Following the importance of the shrine, the host village is also known as Pir Baba. This peaceful mausoleum is visited by thousands of people each spring. There is hardly a Pakhtun who does not know of Pir Baba, whether he/she believes in miracles or not. A friend tells me that the inhabitants of the southern districts of Kohat and Bannu believe that a prayer offered at Pir Baba’s shrine for marriage is almost always fulfilled. Many dejected and yearning lovers frequent Pir Baba to gain solace or pray for a union. This has been a space for love, fulfillment and hope for centuries. Today, it is locked shut. Love is on trial in the state of Pakistan.
Earlier, a few weeks ago, the marching hordes moved into the Buner valley situated on the north-eastern side of Peshawar. At first, the Talibs agreed on April 9, 2009 to leave the valley. But they reneged on this commitment and by Friday afternoon on April 10, they had captured main Buner without any resistance from the law enforcing agencies. The people of Buner say that the Taliban and their troops are roaming in the valley scot free, while the police and the Frontier Constabulary are prisoners in their check-posts. It is now an old and familiar story.
Buner is not far from Mansehra and Abbottabad, the latter an important outpust lovingly created by the British Raj. The colonial experience, despite its destructive patterns, ushered in the forces of modernity. God forbid, if these cities and towns, the verdant villages of Pakhtunkhawa, keep on falling, Islamabad is not far away. This is what most of us fear. If this was the Islamism of the Turkish or Algerian variety or a result of a democratic process, the cause of worry would have been different. This is about losing civilisation, of negating modernity and Pakistan’s bright chances of progress and integration into a twenty-first century globalising world.
Above all, it is about our children, their lives and future. They cannot be residents of a polity without hope, where mosques and Imambargaahs are bombed, Sufi shrines are locked, public spaces become opportunities for violence, and where panic and fear permeate our consciousness. It is about keeping Jinnah’s ideals alive. It is Jinnah’s war against theocracy. It is Pakistan’s war for survival. A battle of hope against despair. Of love against hate.
This is the land where Buddha lived and where Nanak spread his message of love. It is also the garden where the Sufis weaved their songs of tolerance and inclusiveness. What a shame that we have come to this pass – straddling a tunnel and searching for light. And all we find are more tunnels of darkness, conspiracies and confusion.
Lahore, Islamabad, Karachi and Peshawar are directly and indirectly in the grip of extremism. This is the writing on shaky Pakistani walls. Let those who took oath under the Constitution, the legislators and the rulers, read the Articles where citizens’ life, liberty, property and freedom to worship are guaranteed by the state. No excuse, no foreign hand and grand narrative of a Jewish conspiracy will do. We want peace and our nuclear-armed state must deliver it to us. Or else, it should take a sombre view of its capacities and correct them before the enemies annihilate its writ altogether. There is no other way out.
We cannot afford to fail. Thirty eight years ago, we lost half the country. This time around we might lose it all. Let us hope not.
All My Posts, Central Asia, fundamentalism, human rights, On Pakistan, Published in The Friday Times














Scary post – more so because it is plausible.
It is true that the process that appears to be unfolding now in Swat and other areas is about “negating modernity.” It is also, as you say, about “losing civilization.” Although Pakistan as Pakistan is a relatively new country (in historical terms), it is situated in an ancient – an civilized – land. For Pakistan to accept an ideology that denies education, progress and tolerance would surely also mean turning its back on its own history.
This is a very scary post about a very sobering prospect…
I like your way of writing, the insights you bring. I am worried for Pakistan too & the world as everyone in the whole world is linked in some way. Extremism of any kind isnt peaceful as it excludes others and creates divisions. For peace is necessary all to cultivate respect for others whom are different to us and also keep our environment peaceful and encourage others to do the same. It is necessary to find common ground and to unite.
PIR BABA : GHAUS-E-BUNER HAZARAT SYED ALI SHAH TIRMIZI ALAIS PIR BABA R.A. BUNER N.W.F.P.
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Pir Baba Village is a mountain village in the Buner District of the North-West Frontier Province of Pakistan. Pir Baba Village is named after the great sufi saint “Hazrat Syed Ali Shah Tirmizi Gaus-e-Bunair alias Hazarat Pir Baba R.A.” { Hijri 908 to Hijri 991 }Son of Hazarat Syed Qamar Ali Tirmizi R.A.” born in 908 Hijri at Ghaltanabad in Tirmiz. He had two sons . Details of his family tree [ Syed Ali Shah Tirmizi Bin Syed Qamar Ali Shah Bin Syed Ahmed Noor Bin Syed Yousuf Noor Bin Syed Muhammad Noor Baksh Bin Syed Ahmed Naeem Bin Syed Baraq Bin Syed Ahmed Mushtaq Bin Syed Abu Turab Bin Syed Hamid Sahab Bin Syed Muhammad Sahab Bin Syed Ishaq Bin Syed Usman Bin Syed Jaafar Bin Syed Umar Bin Syed Muhammad Bin Syed Hussam-ud-din Bin Syed Nasir Bin Syed Jalal Bukhari Bin Syed Ameer Ali Bin Syed Abdul Rahim Bin Syed Mahmud Makki Bin Syed Muhammad Samarkandi Bin Hazrat Imam Ali-al-Naqi Bin Hazrat Imam Muhammmad Al-Taqi Bin Hazrat Al-Raza Bin Hazrat Imam Musa Alkazim Bin Hazrat Imam Jafar Sadiq Bin Hazrat Imam Muhammad Baqir Bin Hazrat Imam Zain-ul-Abideen Bin Hazrat Imam Hussain Bin Hazrat Imam ALI-Al-Murtaza (Razi Allah unhu(May Allah be Happy with him))
In the heart of Pir Baba valley lies the beautiful mausoleum of Hazarat Pir Baba R.A. along with his son Hazarat Syed Mustafa Shah Tirmizi R.A. [ Who was un-married]{ His another son was Hazarat Syed Habibullah Shah Tirmizi R.A. whose mausoleum is in Kunar Afghanistan } where people from every corner come to pay their homages to the respected saint and ask for blessings. It has a green tomb as found in the mausoleums of many Muslim saints. The stream started by Hazarat Pir Baba R.A. by piercing knife is flowing with water till date and people are using it.Hazarat Pir Baba R.A. first went to [India] from [Tirmiz -Afghanistan] in 943 Hijri [ The Islamic Calender Year] for learning and as well as preaching Islam along with his Respected Father who was in the Army of Babar and related to his son Humayun , then he moved from Delhi to Maankpur in Punjab to learn from Hazarat Sheikh Saloona and then moved to Ajmer Shareef and stayed with Hazarat Saalaar Roomi R.A. and became his disciple [Mureed] and was bestowed with Khilafat by him then after the death of Hazarat Saalaar Roomi R.A. again visited Ajmer Shareef and on instruction of Hazarat Sheikh Hussain R.A. son of Hazarat Saalaar Roomi R.A. to continue preaching of Islam moved to Buner [Kohistan]to preach Islam and wipe out the anti-Islam teaching propogated by the Roshaniya sect their.Hazarat Pir Baba R.A. guided his favourite disciple and Khalifa “Hazarat Akhund Darweza R.A.” , Deewanana Baba R.A. and others and they took the special task of uprooting of the heretical anti-Islamic Roshaniya sect which flourished in Kohistan and the sourounding areas .Hazarat Pir Baba R.A. was married to ” Respected Bibi” sister of Daulat Khan a respected person of Buner. Syed Mohammed Ibrahim Shah alias Hisar Baba was also one of the Khalifa of Hazarat Pir Baba R.A., Hazarat Pir Baba’s descendants wielded great influence among the Pathan tribesmen, and three centuries later Hazarat Syed Akbar Shah R.A.[Born in 1793] provided a rallying point against the Sikhs and the British during the Anglo-Afghan Wars .. 11th of May 1857 [Christian Calender Year] This was the day on which Mujahed-e-Islam Hazarat Syed Akbar Shah R.A. left this world to meet the Creator in the heavens. Incidentally, news of the War of Independence reached Peshawar on this day. The British Commissioner of Peshawar at that time commented upon the death of Hazarat Syed Akbar Shah R.A. that, “If he were alive by this time, than the political scenario of the Frontier would have been much different.”
The Wali (ruler) of Swat constructed a dispensary and homes for those suffering from leprosy near the Mausoleum.[1] A bazaar is adjacent to the mausoleum; most of its customers are tourists or pilgrims who come to visit the grave of Hazrat Pir Baba throughout the year.Most of the population is of Pashtun families, who are mostly Muslims, however some Hindus and Sikhs also live in the area.
Sadaats the descendants of Pir Baba are said to have moved to Buner, Swat, Dir, Bajaur , Chitral, Mardan, [[Swabi] Karachi , Lahore, Peshawar, Islamabad with in Pakistan ,and are also settled in Europe USA MiddleEast India Thailand ]. Hazarat Pir Baba R.A. second son’s { Hazarat Syed Habibullah Shah Tirmizi R.A.} mausoleum is in Kunar Afghanistan . The three sons of Hazarat Syed Habibullah Shah Tirmizi R.A. were 1. Hazarat Syed Mian Hassan Shah Tirmizi R.A. , 2. Hazarat Syed Mian Qassim Shah Tirmizi R.A. and 3. Hazarat Syed Abdullah Shah Tirmizi R.A.