When Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti was martyred, Lahore remained unmoved. In the case of the Hazaras, I doubt that a few outside the circle of the educated intellectuals (both real and pseudo) have any meaningful realisation of the extent of the barbarism being perpetrated upon the Hazaras. Even within those who at least acknowledge the existence of the violence, there is ambivalence in unequivocally condemning the violence. The principal debate it seems is on semantics and nomenclature, e.g. if the killing spree should be termed as ‘sectarian conflict’, ‘ethnic strife’ or the more graphic ‘genocide’, as if language and not murder is the primary issue here. The careful and meticulous usage of language is admittedly very significant in situations like this. Sectarian conflict is a hopelessly inexact term in the particular context. ‘Conflict’ summons to mind the existence of at least two opposing factions fighting it out, which is simply not true here. It is similar to using hollow terms currently en vogue such as extremists and fascists, both liberal and religious. The impetuous to using such gibberish is provided by the desire to remain ‘objective’ and not come out as an ideologue. I am afraid the luxury of maintaining a pretence of neutrality is no longer available to us. When one side is bullying, intimidating and murdering the other, it is not a conflict. It is an assault, and in cases of ethnic groups, the only appropriate terminology is either ‘cleansing’ or ‘genocide’. In the case of the Hazaras, there is clearly and unambiguously one side that is doing all the killing and the state establishment is either unbelievably incompetent or more likely complicit.
Christopher Hitchens, writing about the Armenia genocide, quotes the US ambassador in Constantinople in 1915, Henry Morgenthau. The term ‘genocide’ had not been coined yet in 1915, but Ambassador Morgenthau wrote to his government, describing the systematic slaughter of the Armenians as a ‘race murder’. At some level, ‘race murder’ is a more vivid and intense term than the now legally neutralised and objectified ‘genocide’. The precise connotation of what constitutes ‘genocide’ is important at a policy level, but that still does not explain why 25 people would show up at a vigil held at the Liberty Roundabout in Lahore. The rest are certainly not waiting for it to become genocide in the strictly legal sense before they decide to protest, at least I dearly hope not.
The intellectual elite presumably maintain their ‘objectivity’ because they do not have a dog in this hunt. Speaking for the Hazaras is not the cause currently deemed fashionable enough. The primary reason for that seems to be that they are too far away to make us really agitated as opposed to loadshedding, which is here and now. Let me assure you that if we are worried about descending into the prehistoric Dark Ages, it is not the electricity that we need to really fret about, it is the cowardly, criminal silence on the ‘race murder’ of the Hazaras. Earlier this month, the anniversary of the October 2005 earthquake passed. I know this seems outrageously callous and cruel, but the collapsing of the Margalla Tower in Islamabad probably helped millions in Kashmir and the north (not for long though). Margalla Tower and the infinitely tragic loss of innocent lives there immediately brought the stinging realisation that this not a calamity on other people, it is a disaster for us. Hazara and Balochistan unfortunately do not have that quality, yet. I quiver to think of a similar scenario happening in Islamabad and Lahore which would wake us up from our abysmal, apathetic slumber.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 23rd, 2011.
COMMENTS (36)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
Your article gives us hope sir that all could be well again if a few more people were to follow your advice and changed their mindset.
something worth mentioning, heart touching and fascinating is the realization of sacredness of human values and dignity of human life; shattered a midst humans masked with maliciousness and prejudiced religious perception.The sustained silence on the part of intellectuals, at the barbaric human genocide reflects; Pakistanis, as a nation are devoid of collective vision and requisition of national integrity. Mind striking; the religious radicalism has widen the gap between compatriots, by misinterpretation of holy verses, a group is fostered with narrow mindset. It needs to advocated immediately before it prevails. Following Saroop Ijaz, let us reinforce the promulgation of reality and truth.
very well written sir...thanks for bringing it up
The other day I went to the chicken shop to purchase a couple of birds,as it was early morning the coop was full due to fresh arrivals.The shopkeeper got hold of two of them and slaughtered them right in front of the others,none of the other birds paid any attention to what was happening to two of their flock.I brought the meat home,In the evening I happened to pass by the same shop,the coop was empty as each bird had gone one by one...........without making any protest or anything.Motto:-If you think it will not happen to you you are sadly mistaken.
brilliant article!! this is a national tragedy and represents the death of humanity. sad and shameful.
thanx sir to write abt hazara killing in quetta.
You can kill a person, of any race,religion,nationality,caste,whatever. But you can't kill an idea, again whether noble or abhorrent. So whatever ideals you want to propagate, again whether noble or abhorrent, killing of your opponent doesn't help your cause. Fight an idea with another idea. Make it an war of intellect,not a mortal one.
A wake-up call for the people of Pakistan, who loves the motherland, humanity and justice. It is high time that the Government functionaries took actions against those involved in genocide of the Hazaras at Quetta, unless it is too late. Hazaras have scarificed for the country on the eve of every war, ranging from 1965 upto Kargil. The hero of 1965 war General muhammad Musa Khan, a Hazara, taught a lesson to the Indians, that Paistan can never be challenged until and unless a Hazara is in the Pakistan Army. The question is whosoever is involved in the killing of the Hazaras are anti pakistan.
@C M Naim: Sunni response ! To make them equal to Sunnis which they are not ! Why prayers again , when all the prayers are eloquently answered ?
A Life lost forcefully can not have compensation until and unless the killers are brought to justice. I am afraid that Justice is absent completely in Pakistan. It will be appropriate to term the Justice System a "Biased-Justice System" from prevailing circumstances.
More than 700 of ethnic Hazaras have been murdered in Quetta in the recent years. The Genocide has left many of the Victim's families socially and economically paralyzed, having no bread winner. Growing sense of insecurity on part of Hazara tribesmen has made them hostage in the vicinity. The apathy of the provincial government has marginalized the particular mass. That is why, I call it biased Justice system which is not for the weak, the poor, the minority.
While my each sentence depicts a complaint to the State for completely ignoring Hazara Community and leaving them in the hands of Genocide-rs to kill at will, I still have hope that Pakistan's silent majority will rise to help their Hazara brothers in Quetta through the media campaigns by our Journalist brothers and intellectuals. This article is a great symbol of such initiatives for all the oppressed communities in Pakistan.
There is hope yet : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ib3uUJKDm8Q
Also, "impetus".
Allow me to make a small suggestion. Instead of holding vigils, which is an idea limited to the westernized element of the society and makes no sense to the ordinary Pakistani, it may be more meaningful and also more effective to announce and hold "gha'ibana" prayers for the dead in such incidents. Do it at your school or college, in your colony, in a more open and public place if enough preparation is made. Do it again and again as these horrible incidents occur. It will allow many more common Pakistani Muslims to express their abhorrence of what the sectarians have long preached.
I firmly believe that when many years ago the first attacks on the Shi'ahs began in Karachi and six or seven men were killed in a Shi'ah mosque in the month of Ramzan, had there been an attempt to hold such prayers for the dead by many Sunni congregations all across the city and the nation the attackers, or at least their instigators, would have been deterred to some extent.
Thanks for being 'alive'. The ongoing execution style murder of Hazaras will not diminish their passion and love for Pakistan. They and their fore fathers have fought on Pakistan's borders to defend its people and soil. Many of them did not return home. They migrated from Afghanistan a hundred years ago due to their genocide by the same kind of religious fanaticism. In a province known for its repeated revolts against the state of Pakistan, Hazaras have been model citizens, so patriotic that no one would say any thing against Pakistan in their presence. Who is killing them? Who is murdering Pakistan's friends?
Pakistan was formed in the name of Islam. Since Pakistan is now an "Islamic Republic", it has to define the right "pure" type of Islam for which Pakistan is the republic. The state and the majority have decided that the form of Islam practiced by Hazaras, Ahmadis, Shias, and now even Sufis, is the not the right kind of Islam. Now to ensure that this is the land of the pure, either the Hazaras, Ahmadias, Shias, etc must practice the "pure" type of Islam or they must not be in the land of the pure. Christians, Hindus, etc have thus long been disenfranchised and marginalized. It is now the turn of the non-Sunnis. This is part of the purification process in the land of the pure. Of course, there is no perfect purity, so the process never ends - next the state will have to define which Sunni sect is the right sect -- Wahhabis, Deobandis, etc.
This article is a cry in the wilderness to a nation that has lost its Soul and Conscience. When the %age of minorities has been reduced from over 10% to around 3%, it has never been called a genocide. How can the slaughtering of a few Hazaras wake anyone from slumber ?
You hit the nail right on the head, Sir.
By and large Hazaras seem to be just insignificant statistics who are barely covered in the news - and even when they are, their plight does not arouse much emotions.
There is an Urdu saying - tried translating it:
'Only the place which is on fire knows the real intensity of the heat, others merely warm their hands with it'
Hazara killing is ignored because there lands have no Oil ( neither in pakistan nor afghanistan ) and they are not Located next to Israel ..... neither it is the talk of Hazara Province .. CM Raisani can only help Hazara's with a container of tissue paper .. and Humanity ........ what Humanity which humanity ... it is long dead ..... Hazara killings are just to give cover to baloch extra judicial killings ( maskh shuda lashaay ) ..... where every incident is taking place in baloch neighborhoods ..... to indirectly name them as killers of Hazaras ...but these faceless / never arrested creatures are not balochs nor pashtuns but state owned assassins .....as a Hazara and Balochistani i mut say that balochs are facing the worst than any one in the region and in world after somalis but baloch miseries are man made , muslim made and i should say that pakistanis made .......... the psychos who are still following the strategic depth and Ummah mind set . for them it is necessary to kill balochs and Hazaras .....
@Ayesha : this is the main problem of our society which you have shown, rather than talking about what we should talk about we just move here and there and start making comparisons. There is no comparison between the killing of Ahmadi's and the killings of Hazara's. Killing of ahmadi's was purely a state enemy's act.. which was talibaan and alqaida. We relate it to international terrorism, it was more like mumbai attack. whereas the Hazara's have been killed in large numbers in the name of their religion/belief by our own pakistani men who re on the extreme side of religion. We all know who they are n yet we stay quiet and doesn't raise the voice? There would be an argument that ahmadi;s re non muslims so no one would raise their voice for them...but what about hazara tribe's people? they are muslims and re citizens of Pakistan.. they re not being killed by any taliban or anyone else, our own punjabi based terrorist organization is doing it. We should for once and forever throw out violence out from our society. Killings re not permit able or acceptable at any cost for anyone..no matter what, we have to educate our people for this and make them learn..
Very Good article, the killing of hazara and baluchs is not highlighted by the fake liberals since it does not bring publicity and money.
The hazara violence is not being ignored by people in Lahore and Islamabad because it is too far away. It is being ignored because intolerance of 'others' is growing. After all the 60 thugs who burst into a girls school with sticks and rods and beat up girls did it in Rawalpindi. How many people protested that? When the Ahmadi mosque was attacked how many people protested? Is it in far away Quetta that the hate literature against Ahmadis is being circulated and where Ahmadis were killed because a popular televalngelist called them Waji-ul-qatl?
No . Distance is not the cullprit. Growing intolerance is.
I know that many people will chide me for sating Ahmadi mosque. My stance (and I am not an Ahmadi) is simple. I believe in freedom of worship. If Ahmadis describe their place of worship as a mosque, then that is what it is.
The murder of the Hazara people was a horrific episode. Those who did it deserve nothing less than the death sentence. That aside, the writer's use of the words 'clear' and 'unambiguous' to define the 'side' that is doing all the killing, I beg to differ. There is no side here. The Ku Klux Klan committed numerous murders in America of the Black people. However, those inhumane acts do not incriminate the entire Caucasian race. Similarly, the retarded group that committed the cruel act against the Hazaras does not represent any 'side'.
He is very right about the state of indifference of our people and especially the intellectual elite. However, given the sheer number and level of injustices taking place all over the world and within Pakistan, the only way to do justice to them is to live in a constant state of indignation. I don't know if that is humanly possible or not.
The stand you take today for injustice anywhere will be rewarded to your future generation when they desperately need one. If you stay silent at neighbor's misery don't expect anyone to stand for you either. We don't have to check some race or ethnic background every time there is call for help.
Very good article and beautifully argued. Just reminds me that some friends did organzie a vigil in Islamabad for Hazara community - only four non-sense five non-sense activist with two children (non of them Hazaraites) showed up at Civil Junction in Islamabad. All the 'zaban daraz' activists stayed away from it presumably remained busy in solving more urgent and important problems facing humanity. .
I appreciate the writer for trying to give a wakeup call to the citizens of Pakistan who are in deep sleep. In fact we never considered such an intense issue on a national level. It is unfortunate but rather bitter fact that we are deeply divided into castes, sub-castes, clan, sects and so on. There is no consideration of nationality among us. Who cares if hundreds of Hazara or shia community are brutally killed in Quetta, Karachi or any other part of the country. State has already lost her credibility for protecting minority communities. When the Balochistan Provincial Chief himself instead of condemning the incident and condoling with victims’ families, humiliates the victims and their family members by offering truck-load of tissues, than who should be blamed. Dr. Rehman Malik terms these incidents as sectarian violence and going to call for an international peace conference, bravo !! Someone should let him know the difference between “sectarian violence” and genocide.
Its good that Pakistani people have feeling for Hazaras which itself is a good thing. Today if we have feeling for each other, we should have better tomorrow. The future is in our own hand. We can bring change if we come together.
I find it utterly intriguing that there are still a few moral-men alive in Pakistan. As a Hazara I am used to these kinds of barbaric actions against my fellow Hazaras. But what hurts me the most the extant of absence of moral, humanity, and most importantly common values in Pakistan. The Pakistani intellectuals and civil society are worried about “correct terming” of these atrocities while they are planning their next targets. Call it whatever you want and what if the Hazaras do not have the quality of magnifying our disasters. But make no mistakes tomorrow it will the Baluchs and day after that the Pashtons the Sindhis and the panjabis turn. This way we will lose Pakistan. History shows the minute a community lose the sense of common values, they will start living individually and when they live individually they will stand against the enemies of their country. We say fight India if we have to, we say fight U.S if we have to. I don’t think we could fight and defeat them with this attitude.
Regretfully, the creation of the country lies entangled with hate, mockery, and religious intolerance. That was the beginning. Things have happened since then and expect more to come. I wish this may not happen but the seeds were sowed and now the trees are bearing the fruit.
Brilliant article once again. Let us hope that people of punjab wake up before it is too late.
There are two categories of people in the world, "the right kind" and "the wrong kind" and who falls in which of these categories is decided by the "right kind".
Respected Saroop Izaz,I feel for you,the poor sloughterd Hazaras,why,we have become so heartless,callous,and cruel?Does a different sect of Islam is so bad that they are deserving of "Quattal'?This is the meaning'mutlab' of Pak,the land of pure,literally,where if you are not right kind of muslim,deserve death?A sad way to observe and live life.Just 25 people?A 'bandar ka nach'will get easy 100 on any other after noon,I guess Hazarras are not worth as much,may be.
indeed a very concerning issue,but yes its certainly not in fashion still now to condemn or even discuss it
You have made me feel ashamed - powerful stuff and brilliantly written.