Author: Balbir Punj
Publication: The Pioneer
Date: October 3, 2008
URL: http://www.dailypioneer.com/125213/Perpetrator-as-the-victim.html
How do we define the identity of a terrorist?
How do we characterise his creed that motivates him not only to kill but also
undertake suicide missions to achieve 'holy' goals? The answers to these questions
can help us understand the phenomenon of terrorism and plan a suitable counter-terrorism
strategy.
Is it correct to term serial bombings across
India as part of globalised Islamic terrorism? Why should these terrorists
be known for their Muslim identity and the equally violent Maoists not for
their Hindu identity? Do we attach the 'Islamic' tag to these bombings because
of our prejudiced, anti-Muslim mindset?
The Maoists are not known as 'Hindu terrorists'
because they do not identify themselves as Hindus, though most of them are
born Hindu. The creed that inspires them to take to violence and wage against
civil society is not Hinduism or Gita, but Marxism-Leninism as interpreted
by Mao Tse-tung and other ideologues of the far-Left. Since being born in
a Hindu family is inconsequential to the Maoists, they are identified by their
political creed and not their religious faith which they have repudiated.
On the other hand, Muslims who have taken
to jihad proclaim that their "war" is against kafirs, in defence
of Islam, and for the restoration shari'ah. Kafirs include all non-Muslims
as well as Muslims who, according to them, are not true to their faith and
thus not 'good Muslims'. That explains jihadi violence in Pakistan and Afghanistan,
both declared Islamic countries.
The 14-page e-mail sent out minutes before
the September 13 serial bombings in Delhi begins with a quotation from the
Quran and vows "to carry on the struggle and fight against Kufr (disbelief)
till our last breath". From Mohammad Ghazni to Aurangzeb to the present
day terrorists, all have invoked the Quran and claimed inspiration from Islamic
theology. Gory details of razing temples and forcibly converting Hindus to
Islam are available in plenty from the accounts penned by court historians
of Muslim rulers. Can we (non-Muslims, including secularists) claim better
understanding of Islam than those who have been killing and getting killed
to uphold the fundamentals of their faith for more than a thousand years?
Darul Uloom Deoband is one of the principal
seminaries of Islamic theology in the world. Established in 1866 by the ulema
in the aftermath of the debacle in 1857, the seminary, less than 200 km from
Delhi in Uttar Pradesh, has affiliate institutions in Pakistan, Afghanistan,
the UK, South Africa and hundred other places of all over the world. Its official
Website proclaims in flowery language, "The whole of Asia is redolent
with the aroma of this prophetic garden."
The Deoband syllabus states, "When the
Muslims enter the enemy's country and besiege the cities or strongholds of
the infidels, it is necessary to invite them to embrace the faith, because
Ibn Abbas relates of the Prophet that he never destroyed any without previously
inviting them to embrace the faith. If, therefore, they embrace the faith,
it is unnecessary to war with them, because that which was the design of the
war is then obtained without war. The Prophet, moreover, has said we are directed
to make war upon men only until such time as they shall confess, 'There is
no god but one god'." Can one ignore the Deoband message and then claim
to understand the phenomenon of jihad?
What is the extent of Deoband's influence?
In a recent article, scholar and former Cabinet Minister Arif Mohammad Khan
has quoted a study by Sohail Abbas, a leading Pakistani psychologist. The
study, based on personal interviews of 517 mujahideen arrested in Afghanistan
and later lodged in two Pakistani jails, asserts that "the figures on
rural / urban jihadis become even more interesting as all the jihadis, barring
just a few, belonged to the Deobandi school of thought". Is this mere
coincidence? Is there no co-relation between Deoband's curriculum and the
results of this study?
Will negationism and denial of reality help
us combat the threat of terrorism? To demonstrate the patriotism of the entire
Muslim population of the country, it is repeatedly said that they proved their
love for India by opting to stay back at the time of partition. While most
Muslims in India are indeed patriots, it is also an unpleasant fact that the
agenda for the creation of Pakistan was aggressively pursued not by Muslims
belonging to the areas that constitute Pakistan today but almost entirely
by those belonging to Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
Kashmiri Muslims, who now constitute nearly
the entire population of the Valley after the forced exit of Pandits to the
last person, did not migrate to Pakistan. They continue to remain in India
while openly working for Pakistan. At the slightest provocation, thousands
of them come out of their homes, chanting "Death to India" and waving
the Pakistani flag. So merely staying in the country is no guarantee of loyalty.
It's because of the confusion on such fundamentals
that our response to the threat of terrorism is muted, ineffective and befuddled.
In spite of all the periodical 'red alerts' and 'bold statements' against
terrorism, we are able to neither stop terrorist activities nor secure convictions
against terrorists. The reaction of several sections of society to the police
encounter in Jamia Nagar underlines this confusion.
A familiar litany is now being heard in Jamia
Millia Islamia -- that it was a 'false' encounter and innocent Muslims have
been targeted. The post-script of such litany is that the police and others
want to target Muslims and hence stage such 'false' encounters. Their fevered
imagination has also invented the theory that the Delhi Police officer, MC
Sharma, who died in the encounter was killed by the police to make the episode
appear real!
After every encounter, policemen are painted
as communal, cold-blooded killers and terrorists as innocent young men. Or
it is claimed that the system is unfair to Muslims, leaving them with no option
but take to such devices that are available to them.
Terrorists believe that god has given them
the mandate to establish a Taliban-like Islamic rule through whatever means
available; master terrorist Osama bin Laden is their hero. Why cannot we see
this reality? Have we started suffering from the 'Stockholm syndrome' -- and
begun sympathising with our tormentors?
- punjbk@gmail.com