Close to home were Prime Ministers Nawaz Sharif and Narendra Modi. The newly-elected prime minister (PM) of India invited the heads of all the neighbouring states to his swearing-in. It was a clever move. Brotherly love is hardly writ large in the relationships between several of them, and relations between Pakistan and India have been in the freezer since the Mumbai attacks in 2008. The peace process, such as it is, on hold. The two men met, shook hands, and went off for a tete-a-tete that was more about getting-to-know-you than the nuts and bolts of foreign policy — which is not what PMs do anyway. It will be down to their respective teams to work out the detail of what comes next, but it is the PMs who will set those wheels in motion. An invitation to Mr Modi to visit Pakistan was extended and accepted. A bridge not so much built as progressing to the working/drawing stage.
Half a world away, Pope Francis, head of the Catholic church, visited Israel and Palestine, and in doing so inserted himself, presumably wittingly, into that most intractable of modern conflicts. The visit produced two iconic images, one of him at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem embracing faith leaders of both Islam and Judaism; the other, leaning against the graffiti-emblazoned section of wall in Jerusalem that divides Palestinian territory from that controlled by Israel. Pope Francis has invited both Israeli and Palestinian leaders to the Vatican for peace talks. Could he succeed where everybody else has failed? Who knows, but it is another bridge worth scouting out.
Thirdly, and with the least fanfare, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, leader of the global Anglican community, started a week-long visit to Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. To say that the Christian community in Pakistan is beleaguered understates the case by several orders of magnitude. Christians, along with members of other religious minorities, are fleeing for their lives from Pakistan. Scarcely a day passes without a report from somewhere in the country of an outrage against a minority group.
The murder of an Ahmadi doctor in Rabwah has sent a ripple of horror around the world, tarnishing the image of Pakistan. A poor Christian woman accused of blasphemy after a tiff in a field lies almost forgotten in a jail. A lawyer defending a Christian man also accused of blasphemy was killed in Multan. The list goes on.
Those that commit these crimes care little for the reputation of their country or the standing of their faith in the eyes of the world; and they do lasting damage to both every time their hatreds are seen by the world’s unforgiving eye.
Whether Archbishop Welby will be able to build anything that might at a passing glance look like a bridge across the multiple divides has to be doubtful. The mood music of extremism is playing in the ‘Mall of Intolerance’. Moderate voices command little attention, either in the media or on the street corner.
The archbishop is fishing in toxic waters, but so are Pope Francis, Narendra Modi and Nawaz Sharif. Despite the all-too-obvious perils that lurk within the deeps, these men have made the effort to at least envision a superstructure — the supporting arches that have to be made before the bridge emerges. It is rare indeed for the Vatican to put a finger on the levers of global politics, and rare for the men of power in India and Pakistan to shake hands amicably. Yes, bridges can be built even across the darkest streams.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 29th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (7)
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now the World gets surprised when nothing untoward happens in Pakistan...minority killings ,rape and forced conversions have ceased to leave an impact on Pakistanis and others alike.
@sterry There is a difference between a hate crime committed in a moment of passion by a deranged individual and a systemic persecution of a whole community based on their belief and condoned by the state. Pakistani state has declared Ahmedi non-muslims, denying them their right to worship, witholding them from important offices and not being seen as equal under the law. Saying that you are doing better than some stone-age arabs is not good enough. If this Doctor was not world renowned and a US citizen, it might not have even made the news. Can ordinary people go about their everyday business without fear for their life and families?
@water bottle: You may not know that in the West Pakistan has a better reputation than most Muslim states because it is seen as a democracy and not another autocratic Muslim state ruled by a dictator or King. Despite these isolated instances of brutality, Pakistan is getting positive press for a change which is good. The death of innocents is deplorable whether it is an Ahmadi doctor in Rabwah or 7 school kids in Santa Barbara California by a misogynist gunman. Sadly such criminal acts go on all over the world but mature societies try to fix things but it's tough.
@naeem. Modi has been investigated many times by the courts and the police in the past 12 years and they could not come up with anything to stick on him. The Congress party, which ruled India throughout this period tried it's best too but could not succeed. At least 30 people have been sent to prison for the Gujarat crimes from both communities, Modi is not among them. One has to be tried in a court of law and convicted, not by conjecture and people with an ax to grind. Pakistan has seen it's minority population shrink from 20 % to 2 % over the past 67 years. Where are these missing people? Now Pakistan is turning on Shias and Ahmedis. Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the father of your nation was a Shia!
I forgot one more point if a person like Modi has been elected by the people of Pakistan he was going to be called Islamic extremist, terrorist and threat to the peace in the world but now he is acceptable to all so called civilized world.@water bottle:
What happened to Ahmedi doctor was absolutely wrong and I condemn it. Question is why only when some thing bad happens bad in Pakistan sends a ripple and horror in the world but not from other countries. Because Pakistan is the target at the moment. @water bottle:
"The murder of an Ahmadi doctor in Rabwah has sent a ripple of horror around the world, tarnishing the image of Pakistan."
Can the journalists try to be novelists once a while?
Tarnish the image? Please find a different phrase.
Pakistan's image is in the gutter since 40 years and especially since 10 years.