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Twenty-three
year-old Abdul Samad arrived in Karachi from the commuter town of
Crawley in Sussex about 18 months ago to study what he calls 'deen'
or 'the purest form of religion.'
Living
and studying at the Jamia Binoria in SITE, Karachi, one of Pakistan's
main Islamic seminaries - Samad intended to continue his religious
education there for another five years in order to become an 'alim'
or Islamic scholar, a title which confers upon the recipient the
right to issue fatwas (religious edicts).
His
plans for the future were, however, thrown into disarray after President
Musharraf declared that all 1405 foreign students enrolled in the
country's religious seminaries were to be expelled. "All of
them have to go," Musharraf announced last month, as international
pressure mounted on the Pakistan government from its western allies
to reform the country's madrassahs.
Samad
became more serious about religion after his mother, Jahanara Begum's
death in 1994, while she was still in her mid-thirties. The Jamia
Binoria seems a far cry indeed from the world of the "football
crazy Liverpool supporter" who once sat on his family's terrace
house in West Sussex praising Britain's "civilised" values.
Today it is those very values he questions. "I'm rather shocked
to hear Musharraf saying such things [against madrasshas],"
said Samad in a his very British accent, as two mullahs from the
school administration strained to figure out what he was saying.
"As President of the country, he should underline who is doing
wrong rather than generalising. I have been studying in this school
for one-and-a-half years. If Musharraf can prove that I'm doing
wrong, yes, I should be thrown out. But he has no right to brand
all foreign students in seminaries militants, and throw them out."
Samad
maintains that seminaries have only one purpose: to prepare Muslim
students for a life of propagating Islam. According to him, "For
anyone who may want to follow Islamic jurisprudence in a traditional
Islamic environment, Pakistan is the best place to come to."
Certainly, religious schools abound in the country. According
to official statistics, there are currently 16,059 high schools
in Pakistan, while religious schools number about 15,000. The country's
total high school student population stands at 1.6 million, while
madrassah students are estimated at 1.5 million. Of the latter,
1405 are foreigners, hailing from 56 different countries.
Eighty-one
of the foreign students in local madaris are from Afghanistan, 42
are from America, 23 belong to the UK, over 20 to France, four are
from Canada and there are an unaccounted number from Malaysia, Indonesia,
Sri Lanka and Thailand. Of the 1405 students, over 650 are studying
in the province of Sindh. In addition to the 1405, there are also
nearly 2,500 Afghan refugees who are enrolled in local seminaries.
Since the 9/11 attacks, Washington has been seeking Pakistan's cooperation
in cracking down on madrassahs that are ideologically, and sometimes
militarily, aligned with the Taliban and al-Qaeda remnants in the
region. Now Britain, reeling from the July 7 suicide bombings in
the heart of London, is also piling the pressure on Pakistan.
After
it emerged that at least one, maybe two of the four 7/7 suicide
bombers had visited one of Pakistan's 15,000 Madrassahs, British
Prime Minister Tony Blair asked Pakistan to "rein in these
schools." And in a recent statement, he condemned madrassah
leaders who espouse extremist views and impart them to young students.
"These roots go deep," Blair said at a Downing Street
meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai last month. "People
are indoctrinated at a very, very early age
[they] go to
some of these schools, these madrassahs, and they are given extreme
teaching
Madrassah students end up in a situation where they
actually believe that they are committing the will of God by killing
innocent people."
However, Abdul Samad, who was designated by the principal
to speak on behalf of the more than 500 foreign students at his
school disputes western notions that madrassahs are linked to terrorism.
"They [the British and local authorities] have not yet established
which school the [London bombers] went to," he said. "Besides,
how can one be indoctrinated within a span of just two months -
the time the two suicide bombers are said to have spent in Pakistan."
Samad maintains the current anti-madrassah propaganda is a western
ploy to tarnish the image of Islamic schools and Muslims. He contends
that the west is not treating Muslims fairly and that non-whites
are being discriminated against in the west. "Nationality is
secondary now; it is only a colour that matters," he maintained.
"Today,
in England when they know you are a Muslim, they look at you in
a negative way, some don't even hesitate to call you a terrorist.
Only recently, one of my friends was detained at Gatwick Airport
for 24-hour questioning only because he is a Muslim," he disclosed.
His resentment against what he sees as increasing discrimination
against Muslims aside, Samad firmly condemns suicide bombing, no
matter where in the world it is carried out. He maintains it causes
Muslims more problems than they can solve. "It is basically
the job of the army to fight [illegal] occupation, not that of individuals,"
he contended.
It
is interesting to observe how British-raised Samad has adapted so
easily to his new environment. "When you see the benefit in
something, it is not difficult to do," he claimed. The bearded,
kohl-eyed young man certainly seems at home in his traditional mid-calf
length Arab-style djellaba, cap on head, saying his five times prayers
and observing all the rituals that are considered Sunnah. "This
is what God has ordained," he maintained.
Samad's stoic acceptance of what he sees as God's commands
aside, the regimen the Jamia Binoria has ordained for its students
is stringently austere. TV and the internet are forbidden for students,
as are newspapers. Boarders are awakened at about 3.00 a.m. for
their tahajjud or midnight prayers, followed by morning or fajr
prayers. Classes are held from 8.00 till 1.30 p.m. Apart from a
recess of about two hours, the rest of the day comprises several
study periods, and the boys go to bed at about 9.00 p.m., after
the isha or night prayer.
Life at the seminary is certainly not for those without single-minded
conviction. Yet hundreds of boys in their early teens to early twenties
can be seen at the madrassah unflinchingly adhering to its discipline.
Said Samad, "It's good to be here, not only because
you are taught about religion, but also because you learn how to
control your desires." Samad, whose father runs a restaurant
business in Sussex, disclosed he has two brothers and two sisters,
but he is the only one in the family who has chosen to become a
religious scholar. According to him his parents are happy with his
decision and support him financially. "I've got a credit card
and draw money whenever I need it. My parents happily pay my bills
because they know that their son will become an alim,"he said.
And if President Musharraf's expulsion deadline for foreign students
at madrassahs does not permit him to attain his goal in Pakistan,
according to Samad, "I will not violate any law; I'll just
go somewhere else to pursue my objective."
Samad is, of course, not the only one whose future is on
the line. According to Mufti Naeem, who heads the Jamia Binoria,
there are nearly 600 foreign students at his school - the highest
number of foreigners at any seminary in the country.
Mufti Naeem said in the past the Jamia Binoria used to house
between 900 to 1100 foreign students of diverse nationalities, but
the number has drastically decreased in the last few years. "The
number of foreign students could go up to 3,500 to 5,000 within
a week's time if permitted, as there are thousands of students from
all over Europe who have expressed an interest in coming here, but
we cannot entertain them due to visa restrictions," maintained
Mufti Naeem. He disclosed that there were at least 350 students
from the UK alone who wanted to seek admission this year, but the
Jamia Binoria could enrol only 15 of them because of visa problems
for the rest.
Asked why he thinks his school is so much in demand, the
Mufti responded, "I have no idea why so many students seek
to come here and study religion. But what I have understood is that
the more restrictions the west is imposing on religious institutions,
the more inclined towards Islam people are becoming."
As for how his school would respond to the call by Musharraf
to expel foreign students, Mufti Naeem was somewhat vague when he
responded, saying they had received some instructions recently,
but would make a decision only after consulting the Shura or council
of religious clergy. "We are basically thinking of how to react
to this unjustified demand by the government," he said, adding,
however, that his school would definitely challenge the government's
policy in court. "It is a black law and we are confident that
the court's decision will go in our favour."
For his part, Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the chief of the Jamaat-e-Islami,
maintained, "If the government wants to throw out the foreign
students in seminaries, they should also throw out all the foreigners
who are acquiring education in other universities. You simply cannot
have two laws - one for the students of religious schools, and another
for those who are in government universities."
Similarly, Maulana Fazlur Rehman, leader of the opposition in the
National Assembly, declared that if the government tried to curb
the liberty of religious schools, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA)
would resign from the NWFP and National Assemblies. "We are
ready to sacrifice everything to maintain the sovereignty of religious
schools," Fazlur Rehman announced.
And the Ittehad Tanzimat Madaris Deeniya (ITMD), an association
comprising five madaris' education boards affiliated with different
schools of thought in the country, has decided to launch a campaign
to mobilise public opinion in its support for countering the government's
new 'anti-madrassah' campaign.
The government, meanwhile, recently circulated a detailed questionaire
through the police seeking information about the names and denomination
of all masjids and madrassahs, their land position (whether they
are housed on government property or private land, how much of the
land is allotted, if there is any illegal possession or encroachment
etc.), whether they have No-objection Certificates, the names, addresses
and phone numbers of those in charge and of the teachers at each
school, the number of students in each institution, with a breakdown
of Pakistani and foreign students, with specific mention of the
latter's home countries, etc.
While the clergy seems to be on a collision course with the government
on the issue, how serious Musharraf is about the implementation
of the orders relating to madrassahs remains to be seen.
In 2000 the government bowed down to pressure from the clergy, because
according to President Musharraf, he did not have the experience
and security cover to take difficult decisions then. Now, as he
himself acknowledges, the problem of 'legitimacy' no longer exists.
So will he deliver?
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