The recent case of Asif Mahmood, a Christian member of the Punjab provincial assembly, and the row over the record of his religion in NADRA reminded me of Pickthall. As reported in the press, Mr Mahmood asserts that he has always been a Christian but that NADRA erroneously recorded his religion as ‘Islam’. Even after repeated requests, NADRA has refused to rectify the mistake, claiming that once the religion of a person is recorded as ‘Islam,’ it cannot be changed.
If Mr Mehmood claims that he is a Christian, NADRA should accept it at face value. The state should not venture into deciding a person’s religion.
However, this issue raises an even deeper issue. When asked, a NADRA official claimed that the mistake was perhaps the result of the fact that Mr Mahmood had a ‘Muslim-sounding name.’ Should names of people be distinguishable according to religion? And if this is not done, should people be considered members of a religion based on their name ‘sounding like’ it is from that religion? If this should be the case, then poor Mr Pickthall should have been considered a Christian throughout his life, unless he changed his name to something Arabic, which is considered to be ‘more Muslim’. This also means that, somehow, English Muslims must Arab-ise since being English is simply being Christian. Obviously, a lot of us would object to linking Islam to a particular race since it is a religion for the whole world, equally for Arabs as well as the English.
Further, in the context of Christianity, the issue of a different name is even more complicated. After all, Musa, Ilyas, Daud, Suleman are common names in Christianity, Islam and, of course, Judaism. In the context of Pakistan, almost all Christians in the country are descendants of Muslims or Hindus in the region and, therefore, reflect their ancestry. Thus, a Christian ‘Hussain’ or a Christian ‘Ali’ is not unheard of, just as a Christian ‘Shanti’ or a Christian ‘Bimla’ is not impossible either. People choose names from their culture and/or ancestry.
There are many among us who are only comfortable, if a Christian is called ‘Michael’, ‘John’, or ‘James.’ One explanation could be that these people perceive Christians to be ‘outsiders’ and so they must have names which are in a different language. Finding an Asif, Rashid, or Bashir among Christians makes them uneasy and blurs the distinctions they want to maintain. All Christians in Pakistan have been in the region for centuries and are not ‘foreign’. We should also not forget that Christianity came to India –– in what is now the Taxila region in Pakistan –– in the 2nd century, hundreds of years before Islam came to the region.
Beginning from Jinnah himself, every leader of Pakistan has maintained that they want the religious minorities to feel comfortable in the country and work towards their betterment as full citizens. So why should we want to perpetuate conditions which create further divisions between the people of Pakistan? We should be proud that Christians in Pakistan want to be ‘Pakistani Christians’ and not create hurdles for them.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 1st, 2012.
COMMENTS (30)
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YAQOOB sAB;It is not a single matter and issue regarding Monitory. while in this chaos and tension-ed society there is no value of human. the human means Pakistani that's might be minorities almost are killed with out any hurdle and problem.there is no role of Govt institutions to maintain the peace and provide their due right in any case.currently ,in our country,the minorities are danger such as killing of hazaraz in Qeautta, Baluchistan, the Hindu girls are forcefully converted to Islam in Karachi,and shias killing in Gilt-balltistan area without any sin and so on.so, the state institutions are requested to take measures to porvide the due right of minorites including Asif mahmmad to change their religion without any problem as our Qua-id stated about the status of minorities in Pakistan.
@Arif Belgaumi
Very well said.
The question to ask is how many contemporaries of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) changed their names after conversion to Islam. After all, their names were from a pre-Islamic pagan culture and reminiscent of all the negative associations of that era. The answer is almost none. If there was no need in the Holy Prophet's time to craft 'Islamic' names to identify one's religion, then there is no need to do so now. Names are culturally and regionally specific, not necessarily religiously.
I agree with @kaalchakra. Having an arabic name is a sign of our love for the 'Best and only best of man' ever walked on this planet,his culture,his tradition and finally his language.'
This is the 21st century. Religion should be kept at home and not for intimidating minorities. They are human and made by rab. Sat Sri akal, salam peace.
First of all i want to say thanks to you on behalf of Pakistani religious minorities .what so ever you have said truly reflects what happens with religious minorities in Pakistan . The incident you have related about discrimination is one of many such happening which religious minorities face daily..
All names used by muslims are not arabic. Some are turkish. Some are persian. Besides, even before there was Pakistan..during the times of the mughals and before...didnt the rulers also have names that were Aurangzeb, Akbar, Babar, Humayun, Jahangir etc etc.
Please understand that Arabic names are not necessary to follow Islam. It's just that Prophet Muhmmad (PBUH) was the most perfect man ever and Muslims love him more than they love their parents, brothers, and sisters. So wanting to be like him, look like him, and have arabic names is a sign of love, affection, dedication and devotion to the Prophet.
@Kaalchakra:
What are you talking about? People and the Gov't follow "Islamic Principals" in Pakistan? What's in a name, of a country that is? What do you see "Islamic" in Pakistan. I say U.S., Europe & the Modern world is more Islamic than any of the so-called Islamic countries when it comes to basic human rights, liberties and justice for all. Until we establish that we must not "bad-name" the word "Islam" by attaching it to Pakistani system or culture.
There are other nations who wear more covering clothes in Africa and elsewhere if that's what you mean or have Masajids, Eid and Ramazan if that what you call a sign of Islam. Well, that is also observed in India, China, U.S., U.K, EU, S.A, Russia, Japan and almost everywhere, actually more freely and peacefully than in "Islamic" Pakistan.
"If Mr Mehmood claims that he is a Christian, NADRA should accept it at face value. The state should not venture into deciding a person’s religion."
I think we may have missed the boat on this one.
Anyone remember 1974 and the second amendment ?
Pakistan was created for Muslims and is an Islamic nation. If others are uncomfortable with that, then they are welcome to leave or should have stayed in India in the first place. And Mr Babloo, there is no harm if people have decided to convert to a more peaceful and enlightened religion (Islam)
thanks to take initiative because minorities specially Christians have strong history to built Pakistan. every one know the character of S.P Singha and others. even existing minorities working hard for the betterment of Pakistan
islam does not permit discrimination. So your unproven allegation that minorities face any problems in Pakistan is without any factual basis.
What is in a name ? It is the attitude of Muslims towards their fellow human beings that needs to change. The propaganda of the State that Islam and Pakistan are under threat from other Religions and external enemies has created nothing but insecurity in the minds of its citizens. The after affects of this destructive narrative cannot be erased in a hurry, now the fallout has to be managed.
As far as muslim names are concerned, it is custom to usually take Arabic or Turkish names but people often keep there hereditary tribal name as well. eg. Manzur Wassan the Home minister of Sindh, Wassan being a sanskrit word. Similarly there are Rajputs, patels etc etc...
@Babloo...this decline in % of non muslim population in Pak from 1947 to 2012 that you have mentioned, conveniently ignores 2 basic facts. 1) Hindu migration to India and 2) separation of east and west Pakistan. . . Most of the arguments formed on this issue, come from a census that was done pre 1947 partition. And the argument also ignores the fact that there was a much larger non muslim population in East Pakistan compared to west Pakistan..so when we lost the east...the % in Pakistan obviously declined. . If you find a mistake here...please correct me.
Yes, what is in a name, free Aasia Bibi-after all the name sounds Muslim.
@Babloo: can you please comment why % of Indic minorities ( Hindus, Jains, Sikhs etc ) have shrunk from 20-22% in 1947 to 1-2% today.
You have been saying this from a while now .. can you please provide a source for your figures? Pakistan's first censes was in 1951 not in 1947 (time of partition when millions of people migrated to India) According to 1951 census minorities were around 3-4 percent .. majority of minorities were living in East Pakistan (Bangladesh). By your figures it seems many millions flooded indian side ? I have never heard of that happening in any international media, have you? Yes, there is discrimination from the state in some areas but that doesn't mean we think of them as inferior .. they are Pakistani citizens just like any one else. Many of them have served this nation in armed forces on high posts and many of them have been our father/mother like figures while teaching us during our schools/colleges and Universities.
One of the roots of the problem is the insistence of the state to record a person's religion. This is not useful in anyway for prosperity. The practice should be discontinued.
NADRA has become an organization devoted to perpetuating bigotry and bias against minorities in Pakistan. From the denial of the CNIC id card to Hindus and Sikhs by not recognizing their marriages, to now mis-recording the religion of Christians and intimidating them in the name of Islam, it reflects everything that is recidivistic about Pakistan -- from our blasphemy laws to our oppression of minorities. NADRA seems to be a Sipah-e-Saheba wing, rather than a GoP entity.
NADRA defies all the parameters of sense & logic? is this not the mantra of all government agencies in Pakistan? If speed-sense-logic was practiced in Pakistan how do you think we Pakistanis would react. Enough of day dreaming....on to reality!
You could have not said it better.Thank you.
Arab names have nothing to do with Islam. There are many more non Arab Muslims than the Arab Muslims. Changing of Islamic/Arabic sounding names is a recent phenomenon and has nothing to do with 1400 years old Islam.
The reason converts to Islam take Arabic sounding names is because Islam is a philosophy rooted in and appropriate to , medieval Saudi culture.
Even after repeated requests, NADRA has refused to rectify the mistake, claiming that once the religion of a person is recorded as ‘Islam,’ it cannot be changed.
By all means and sense it defies all the parameters of sense and logic, how can any one justify it ? Its like you have been robbed of your identity in a broad daylight.
This is a feel-good article with no factual basis. Christians in Pakistan clearly assume Muslim sounding names so that they can avoid disclosing their religion unnecessarily and avoid discimination and bigotry rampant across the country - but the resulting misconception by actual muslims is understandable. Second, while you state that Islam is a religion for all of humanity, the customs that are followed are those that glorify Arabs and their customs - whether in recommended clothing, language of the holy book, direction of worship etc - in fact, many of the practices that muslims adhere to rigidly pre-date Islam and have more to do with living in the desert in a tribal society than with any religious fundemantals. However, the adoption of Arab sounding names is not standard practice across all muslim nations - the largest one (Indonesia) has names that clearly reflect the Sanskrit base of the Indonesian culture and language (Meghawati, Yuyudhono etc).
Sir, can you please comment why % of Indic minorities ( Hindus, Jains, Sikhs etc ) have shrunk from 20-22% in 1947 to 1-2% today , which is an astounding change, while the % of minorities ( Muslims, christians ) in India has stayed stable on increased in the districts that make India since 1947 ? Why this himalayan difference ?
Beginning from Jinnah himself, every leader of Pakistan has maintained that they want the religious minorities to feel comfortable
how ?by running for their lives ?