Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining PDF 1995
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1995
Ayesha Jalal
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This article examines how history is used to construct national identities, particularly in the case of Pakistan. It explores the interplay between power, creativity, and the construction of national narratives, highlighting the potential for bigotry in such processes.
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Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining Author(s): Ayesha Jalal Source: International Journal of Middle East Studies , Feb., 1995, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Feb., 1995), pp. 73-89 Published by: Cambridge University Press Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/176188 JSTOR is a not-for-profit ser...
Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining Author(s): Ayesha Jalal Source: International Journal of Middle East Studies , Feb., 1995, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Feb., 1995), pp. 73-89 Published by: Cambridge University Press Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/176188 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms Cambridge University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to International Journal of Middle East Studies This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Int. J. Middle East Stud. 27 (1995), 73-89. Printed in the United States of America Ayesha Jalal CONJURING PAKISTAN: HISTORYAS OFFICIAL IMAGINING Even before an anthropologist's tour de force1 underlined the p as creation in narrative constructions of the "nation," memory had been triumphantly parading the realm of historical scholar objectivity did not have to go cold for the heat of subjectivity mand audiences through print and signs, visual or aural. It is s modification of the past by the marketplace and the expansive have combined to reduce the once revered craft of the historian to a battlefield where mired imaginings posture as interpretations in a contest in which there ar no umpires, only-partisans. So it is not necessary to claim objective ground w presumably no such domain exists or even to spin yarns about "authenticity" "falsification." But it is possible to make an analytical distinction between the pas as invention and the past as inspiration without denying the role of creativity or power in either conception. Just like works of art, not all styles of creativity are edifying. The subjectivit inherent in appreciation does not foreclose critical evaluation. At a time when the virus of national bigotry-religiously or territorially defined-is assuming e demic proportions, it is worth rethinking the terms of a discourse which gra itously celebrates collective imaginings that flourish by muzzling challenges from within and by threatening to crush, conquer, or convert targeted others. The par dox posed by the politics of identity and difference cannot be addressed, much le redressed, without recognizing the potential of the creative principle in commun construction to descend into the most unpalatable displays of national bigotry. This is not to suggest that all collective imaginings are, in a manner of speaking forms of bigotry. Yet insofar as identities are relational and historically continge their articulations rely on differentiating right from wrong, just from unjust, a the good from the bad. Projecting the "us" as the positive self in creative imagin- ings entails slating "them" as the negative other. In contexts of competing a multiple identities-and there are hardly any free of contestation and diversit the narrative of "us" in its myriad imaginings requires a parallel construct of equally imagined "them." Although the past as inspiration might invoke images of a better future in response to a particular nexus of power, the past as invention i Ayesha Jalal is an Associate Professor in the Department of History, Fayerweather Hall, Columbia U versity, New York, N.Y. 10027, U.S.A. ? 1995 Cambridge University Press 0020-7438/95 $7.50 +.10 This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 74 Ayesha Jalal the pursuit of power rarely avoids the tendentious imaginings that breed bigotry. Proximity to political or state power, potential or actual, frequently drives creative imaginings to cut the corner into bigotry. The more ferocious the contest for power over representations of the "us" the more likely the strains of bigotry toward not only "them" but also the recalcitrant "us" within. Situating power in its dialectical relations with the creative component in imaginings can demonstrate how and when the self-definitions of collectivities slither onto the path of an implicit, if not always explicit, agenda of bigotry toward internal selves as well as external others. Pakistan, with its artificially demarcated frontiers and desperate quest for an officially sanctioned Islamic identity, lends itself remarkably well to an examina- tion of the nexus between power and bigotry in creative imaginings of national identity. Proclaiming itself an "Islamic state" created on the bedrock of a nonter- ritorially defined Muslim nation or umma, the architects of Pakistan embraced the idea of the nation-state without conceding space to territorial nationalism in their official ideology. Yet that has not resolved the problem of identity posed by the demographic fact of more Muslims in the subcontinent living outside the territory of the much vaunted homeland for India's Muslims. Although the lack of conver- gence between Muslim identity and Muslim nationhood invited ingenuity in argu- ment, the struggle for formal self-definition has been conducted in pitched battles between a vocal Islamic lobby and their "secular" and "modernist" opponents. The dilemmas of imagining a coherent Pakistani nation have been compounded by re- gional and linguistic diversities that have resisted being melted down to fit the monolithic moulds of the state's Islamic identity. With political geography cutting against the grain of the ideological protestations of the Islamic state, it has required an improbable array of conjuring tricks, and some somersaults on the tightrope of historical memory as well, to try and nation- alize a past contested by enemies within and without. Representations of "us" and "them" in Pakistani official discourse are instructive not in what they seek to falsify or authenticate but in the sheer blatancy of narrative styles employed to privilege or discredit particular interpretations of history. The task of this article is twofold: (1) to illustrate the ways in which the history of Pakistan has been conjured and dis- seminated by the state-controlled educational system, especially during the era of Zia-ul-Haq's military dictatorship (1977-88); and (2) to highlight through a reading of regional counternarratives the failure of a forty-seven-year-long officially in- spired effort at recording history to create any sense of a coherent, much less shared, imagining of a "national" community. IMAGININGS WITHOUT STATE POWER Recent historical research has underlined the extent to which the All-India Muslim League's demand for a Pakistan was unable to square the circle of the contradictor interests of Muslims in the Indian subcontinent.2 The demand was raised on behalf of all Indian Muslims, who were deemed to be a nation. Yet the creation of Paki- stan effectively foreclosed the possibility of any neat equation between Muslim na- tionhood and statehood at a subcontinental level. This did not deter the architects This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 75 of Pakistan's post facto national ideology from claiming the creation of the Muslim state as the logical culmination of the two-nation theory. But the selective uses made of history after the acquisition of state power differed in important respects from the creative imaginings that had sought to transform a minority community into a nation. So it is important to consider how the Muslim case for nationhood that was more nonterritorial than territorial in its imaginings came to be appropri- ated by a nation-state whose geographical limitations contravened the creative ex- pansiveness of its ideological frontiers. The genealogy of the two-nation idea is generally traced to Sayyid Ahmed Khan. For a man who at one time spoke of the Indian nation in the singular, Sayyid Ahmed's conversion to the idea of the Muslim minority constituting a separate na- tion-irrespective of class, linguistic, and sectarian differences-coincided with the introduction of a representative system based on the majoritarian precepts of Western liberal democracy. In much the same vein, Mohammad Iqbal's political vi- sion of the future for Indian Muslims was more a pragmatic response than an ex- ercise in pure imagination. Iqbal, however, did seem to suggest the existence of multiple nations in India but tailored his political ideal to fit the established param- eters of colonial discourse. This discourse had, in 1909, conceded separate elector- ates to Muslims, thus creating the political space without which invoking the nation from the podium of the All-India Muslim League would have been an exercise in futility. By taking the constraints on creativity imposed by colonial policies and membership of a geographically disparate political community a step further, both the crusader and the poetic visionary of the Muslim nation avoided all comment on India as a conglomerate of multireligious and multinational states. No such restrictions operated for that most fertile of Muslim minds, Choudhary Rahmat Ali, the inventor of the word "Pakistan," literally the land of the pure. Based in Cambridge and without any established standing in either elite Muslim circles or the colonial political system, Rahmat Ali made up for it by giving un- bridled play to the creative power of imagination. Unlike Iqbal, Rahmat Ali con- ceived of a wholly sovereign and separate state of Pakistan. The scheme was dismissed out of hand by most Muslim politicians, some of whom described it as chimerical and impracticable. Despite Rahmat Ali's emphatic denials and his char- acterization of the Muslim League's leader as the "Quisling-i-Azam Jinnah,"3 the league's demand for a Pakistan became unfairly linked with his grandiose idea of a Muslim state of the same name stretching all the way to the Ottoman domains. Historical memory, despite its expansive thrusts into the past, is often cruel to those whose creations it appropriates. Sadly for Rahmat Ali, no one remembers his intriguing pamphlet India: The Con- tinent of Dinia or the Country of Doom. First published in May 1945, it ran two additional editions. Rahmat Ali's main concern was to demolish the "myth of In- dianism" as nothing more than a treacherous attempt by caste Hindus and the British to enslave seven "non-Indian nations"-Muslims, Dravidians, Akhoots (Depressed Castes), Christians, Sikhs, Buddhs, and Parsis-and deny them sovereignty in the continent of "Dinia," a construction he arrived at by transposing the central "D" in India to first place so that it could literally mean the "abode of religions." This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 76 Ayesha Jalal Rahmat Ali's supracommunal Dinia Continental Movement aimed at reversing the processes of Indianism and helping non-Indian nations establish their sovereignty. The Muslim components of Dinia included a "Pakistan" consisting of the Muslim- majority provinces in the northwest, "Bangistan" or "Bang-i-Islamistan" (Bengal) and several innovatively named Muslim sovereign states. Although Rahmat Ali's rollicking imagination confined "Hindoostan" to a shrunken space in northern India with a vengeance, it allowed for non-Muslim countries like "Sikhia," "Akhoostan," "Dravidha," and such sovereign linguistic states as Andhra, Karnatar, Mahrashtar etc.4 It is perhaps because the imaginings of power decree limits where the power of imagination knows none that Rahmat Ali's Pakistan scheme has been his main claim to fame. Yet it took a pragmatist who had set his sights on tipping the scales of power to immortalize a man who might otherwise have fallen through the trap door of historical remembrance. For someone who liked to describe himself as a "cold-blooded logician," Mohammad Ali Jinnah made no pretence of imaginatio or creativity. He left all that to his followers. Concerned only with giving practica shape to a welter of Muslim imaginings about how power was to be shared in a independent India, Jinnah surveyed the contours of the possible and staked a claim that landed him with much less than what he had bargained for, but it was some- thing on which his disparate followers could try building the castles of their respe tive dreams. If the ambiguities of the Muslim League's demand had irritated and baffled its opponents, the unambiguous language in which Jinnah spoke at the first meeting of the Pakistan constituent assembly on 11 August 1947 was to utterly confound the adherents of bygone Muslim imaginings. Having ostensibly attained the goal of a Muslim homeland on the basis of his advocacy of the two-nation theory, Jinnah un- haltingly called for a separation of state and religion as well as equal citizenship rights regardless of communal affiliations. Discerning the tensions inherent in Pakistan's geographical and ideological frontiers, the pragmatist in Jinnah tried placing a different accent on Muslim imaginings now that state power had been won. With freedom finally around the corner, Jinnah declared: You are free; you are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other place of worship in this State of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste or creed-that has nothing to do with the business of the State.5 Although the speech was promptly suppressed by the official guardians of Paki- stan's ideological frontiers, it has served as the magna carta for those who, in spite of being worsted in successive skirmishes, style themselves as the true inheritors of Jinnah's political legacy. But with the appropriation of Jinnah by all and sundry, nei- ther the speech nor the legacy of which it is a part, has mattered very much in filling the deep crevices that constitute the contested narratives of Pakistani history. The confinement of geographical space, contested from within and besieged by a pow- erful enemy without, was not conducive to the creative imaginings of which shared histories are made. So state power had to be called in to inject a new kind of cre- ativity into the enterprise of collective remembrance. This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 77 INVESTING THE NATION-STATE WITH HISTORY A leading feminist poet of Pakistan was alluding to the st when she spoke of the stifling ambience in a government the monthly payroll means the daily slaughter of conscien lies. When "a sword taller than ourselves we claim as our inheritance," we must "decorate our tongues with our ancestral colours." So the language of officialdom is unspeakably blunt, but only in the sharpness of credibility it lacks: Those living with rusted tongues in rusted times are the office babus: "the accounts of the departed are all wrong the accounts of the incomers all right" Only rusted tongues could say that! Now the ironmonger, who is the maker of the sword, believes it is he who writes victory.6 When petty officials carry the brief of writing history as victory, the imaginings of power can discard the stray truths of pure inspiration and pretend to monopolize the enterprise of creativity. A sort of selective amnesia descends which can be resisted and breached but never quite dissipated. The unequal division of labor between state and civil society that has character- ized the construction and dissemination of knowledge in general and the writing of Pakistani history in particular has thrived on deteriorating educational standards. Twisted this way and that, the educational system became hooked to officially con- cocted national soporifics very early on. The rewriting of history from an Islamic point of view, however defined, was given the highest priority by the managers of the state and has since been refined to a bureaucratic art by national research so- cieties and central or provincial textbook boards. A state-controlled curriculum guarantees a captive market for the history textbooks. These are the official gospels teachers advise students to learn by rote if they want to make a decent showing in examinations, especially those leading to the matriculation, intermediate, and bach- elor's degrees. The gems of wisdom contained in textbooks rarely survive the writ- ing of the exam. But with help from the state-controlled media, the lessons learned in school and college serve as the alphabet and the grammar that makes psyches lit- erate in the idioms of national ideology. To know the alphabet and grammar of the textbooks is to uncover the idioms em- ployed to nationalize the Pakistani past. A comprehensive analysis of these idioms at all levels of the educational system is beyond the scope of this paper. So the spot- light is focused on the newly invented subject of Pakistan studies7 and what appear to be two of the more troubled themes in the writing of the textbooks, origin and sacrifice. Although consistent in presenting a generally jaundiced and jumbled view of the past, officially approved textbooks display an exasperating degree of confu- sion as to when and where to begin cataloging Pakistani history. Much the same un- certainty surrounds the question of sacrifice for the cause of Pakistan in which some self-styled nationalists display their provincial and linguistic affiliations even as This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 78 Ayesha Jalal they attempt to advance the cause of the state's official ideology. So although there is no apparent disagreement on the ideological foundations of the state, the twin is- sues of historic origins and national sacrifice lend some variety to the official and associated imaginings that contribute to the writing of history textbooks. Diversity born of confused origins and contested sacrifices straitjacketed by a teleological ap- proach is what places Pakistan's history textbooks among the best available sources for assessing the nexus between power and bigotry in creative imaginings of a na- tional past. ORIGINARY MYTHS Official historiography in Pakistan traces the origin of the id self, to at least half a dozen different dates and places. There pansive Pan-Islamic imaginings detect the beginnings of P Islam on the Arabian peninsula. Those more geographically fo tinent have their own pet ideas on the precise moment of Pa problem of origin informing the narrative style, the range that serve as official discourse on the past are priceless ex confusions flowing from tensions between the ideology of M the geographical limitations of the Pakistani nation-state. Writers chasing Pakistan's mirage in the Arabian desert bri spatial distance between the origins of Islam and Pakistan in a by an ideology of Muslim supremacy in the world and a geog Pan-Islamic in scope. One writer traces the ideological inspira imaginatively reclaimed pre-Islamic Muslim world: "we know and the Hadith that in the early past ages of Islam and the Mu Prophets and Muslims who brought victory to Islam and the dants of "Prophet Yaqub (peace be upon him) were called conferred the title of "Israel" meaning "Abdullah" or "obedie him. "The Prophets and the people of Bani Israel were all Mu One of the more influential books in the Pakistani-studies curriculum errs on the side of caution, avoiding recourse to pre-Islamic or Islamic history and instead re- lying exclusively on Islamic doctrine. M. Ikram Rabbani and Monawwar Ali Say- yid's An Introduction to Pakistan Studies, in its fifth edition in 1992, is compulsory reading for the first- and second-year college students studying for an F.A. degree in history and aims at meeting the requirements of the syllabus prescribed by the University of Cambridge for senior Cambridge and secondary classes in Pakistan. The latest edition begins with a chapter on the establishment of Pakistan based on a concept of Islamic sovereignty. Allah alone is sovereign and the "ruler of the Is- lamic State does not possess any authority of his own." The coming of Islam to the Indian subcontinent was a "blessing" because Hinduism was based on an "unethi- cal caste system." Once the boundaries of "us" and "them" are drawn, the history of the Subcontinent is transformed into a battle of the spiritual and the profane, of the righteous Muslim and the idolatrous Hindu. Rabbani and Sayyid then try squaring the circle of Pakistan's ideological and geographical origins with breathtaking logic. Islam was the "crowning factor" in This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 79 the establishment of Pakistan, which is "not a geographical entity but an ideology which reflects a unique civilization and culture." It was a "revolt" against insidious efforts to impose "Hindu nationalism... on the Muslims and their culture." All this leads to the conclusion-by now self-evident-that Pakistan has to move to- ward becoming an Islamic state because that was the "sole purpose of demanding a separate homeland for the Muslims."9 Given the teleological approach, inconsistencies on the theme of origins still lead to an unequivocal endorsement of Pakistan's official ideology. A scrutiny of text- books treating the theme of origins from a Subcontinental rather than a Pan-Islamic perspective to arrive at a common destination furnishes further insights into the myriad ways in which reconstructions of the past deploy the idioms of the Pakistani state's homogenizing agendas. M. D. Zafar's A Text Book of Pakistan Studies is one of the more entertaining ex- amples. For Zafar, Pakistan "came to be established for the first time when the Arabs under Mohammad bin Qasim occupied Sind and Multan"; by the 13th century "Pa- kistan had spread to include the whole of Northern India and Bengal" and then under the Khiljis "Pakistan moved further southward to include a greater part of Central India and the Deccan." Pakistan's habit of showing up after every second or third sentence makes this a truly remarkable publication. So for instance, after mentioning Akbar's Din-i-Ilahi and Sirhandi's resistance to it Zafar notes that "the spirit of Pa- kistan asserted itself." Under Aurangzeb the "Pakistan spirit gathered in strength"; his death "weakened the Pakistan spirit." The pervasiveness of Pakistan established, this prized stalwart of the two-nation idea proudly informs his captive, if not cap- tivated, student readers that it was the Muslims who "introduced historiography in the real sense of the term to the Sub-continent."10 Despite a shared teleology of approach there is a ferocious controversy over bas- ing Pakistan's origins in the Subcontinent's pre-Islamic and ancient past. Even an acclaimed scholar like Jamil Jalibi questions the validity of a national history that seeks to claim Pakistan's pre-Islamic past in an attempt to compete with India's his- toric antiquity. The underplaying of Pakistan's more obvious Indo-Muslim heritage was based on a "sentiment of hatred for India and things Indian." It is a monumental error to advertise the "archaeological remains within the geographical boundaries of our own country" and "snap all our spiritual relations" with the centers of Muslim culture simply because they are "no longer our property." In doing so, Pakistanis had negated the "importance of spiritual experience and forgotten the fact that Harappa or Moenjodaro, even though within our geographical boundaries, does not have the same meaning for us as does the Ka'aba in spite of its being outside those boundaries."" The laments of a scholar are echoed in a textbook in the Pakistani- studies curriculum. Underlining his resistance to including a chapter on the country's archaeological heritage the scholar declares that "being an ideological state" Paki- stan has no "spiritual link with any non-Islamic culute [sic] or civilization" because those "roots only strike into Islam and Islamic culture."'2 Writers who wax eloquent on the country's ancient past do not see this as under- mining Pakistan's ideological foundations. K. Ali's two-volume history designed for B.A. students is a good example. It traces the prehistory of the "Indo-Pakistan" Subcontinent to the Paleolithic age and consistently refers to the post-1947 frontiers This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 80 Ayesha Jalal of Pakistan while discussing the Dravidians and the Aryans.'3 At the end of his ex- tended narrative, Ali emphatically endorses the official ideology. In a chapter en- titled "Why Pakistan," he declares that anyone searching for the answer has only to "look up the pages of history of the Indo-Pakistan Sub-continent."'4 In Ali's view it is impossible to "forget that the Muslims ruled over the Sub-continent for cen- turies." After the suppression of the 1857 Sepoy Mutiny, Muslims were hard hit and became the victims of a "national sleeping sickness." Muslims of "birth and breed" took matters in hand. Sayyid Ahmed's exhortations to Muslims to remain aloof from the "Congress was not a cause but a result of Hindu hostility." This is in con- trast to his attempt to discover differences between the two communities in the psy- chology of space: whereas "the houses of the Muslims were more spacious, airy and open to light" those of the Hindus had "small rooms, verandahs and less space open to sky [sic]" which "shows the secret and exclusive attitude of Hindu mind [sic]."'5 For students who have had no contact with Hindus, both statements, differences in style notwithstanding, can easily fuel a form of inverted bigotry. The more so since they are given abundant "evidence" to underline the invidiousness of Hindu majoritarianism. A Hindu Congress wedded to a policy of cultural genocide is a potent-perhaps the most potent-symbol justifying the Islamic foundations of Pakistan. The Muslim League's Lahore resolution of 23 March 1940 was orches- trated so that Muslims could lead their "lives in accordance with the dictates of the Holy Quran and Sunnah." So Pakistan can only be an Islamic state because it was the protection of their religious and cultural practices that propelled India's Mus- lims to demand a separate homeland in the first place.16 With the specter of Hindu genocide powering their narrative reconstructions of the past, there is nothing to prevent writers like Ali from declaring reactive bigotry as the main pillar of Paki- stani nationalism. Discrepancies in narrative styles are tolerated only so long as they do not overrun the two-nation idea, which is "foundational" to the politics of Muslim, and by ex- tension, Pakistani identity. This is made quite explicit by one of the more zealous members of the Pakistani-studies literati. So "colossal a development and so great a miracle of the present century" as the creation of Pakistan could have "never taken place" if there had been "no definite ideology working behind it." Renegades such as Justice Mohammad Munir who argue that the "term ideology was never used in the Pakistan movement days are absolutely worng [sic]." The two-nation theory was "the other name of Pakistan ideology." There is simply no room for the opinion held by "defeated, dejected and disgruntled people" that the term "Pakistan ideology" was invented by a particular "religio-political organization"-namely the Jamat-i-Islami. What Pakistan, the writer believes, needs is a thought police to protect the ideo- logical frontiers against wayward others within. He proposes constitutional provi- sions against "anti-Pakistan ideology tendencies and activities." Such individuals should be prevented from "taking part in [the] country's politics, government and higher public services." Describing Pakistani studies as the capstone of "our edu- cational pyramid," the writer regrets that neither students nor the teachers are taking it seriously. To him, it is appalling that "a considerable number of Pakistani intel- lectuals do not believe in our ideology." Even the committed refused to "wield This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 81 powerful pens," especially in English. And this despite the fact that the "whole case of Pakistan was won mostly through English." Yet unfortunately, "English in Pa- kistan is being treated like a discarded theory of chemistry." With his own mutated English supporting this telling observation, the writer lambasts scholars and histo- rians, including "some Pakistani writers," who are "living in foreign countries such as England and America" and "indulg[ing] in bitterly criticising Pakistan's ideo- logical bases."'7 SACRIFICIAL CONTESTS Targeting internal others is a favorite hobbyhorse of the ideology. Dipped in vitriol of a noxious kind, the narrative and discredit opponents within are potent examples of big theme of sacrifice, the other side of the imploding narrat brings this out in no uncertain fashion. According to the gust 1947 Muslims made majestic sacrifices in the name of under British colonialism than any other religious commu Muslim nationalism in the singular is rarely disputed. But into the postindependence period completed that the offic lithic Muslim nationalism explodes in moral outrage of claims of sacrifice in the cause of Pakistan by anyone subs viewpoint or to the counternarratives of regional heroics. Bundling Muslims, Islam, the two-nation theory, and Pak ary narrative of "us" is relatively easier to do in the histo But a negatively fashioned identity is a far cry from posit ology grounded on the denial of difference due to the Every Pakistani's "first and foremost duty [was] to work f of the Muslim countries" and help in "regaining 'Khilaf whole world"-"O Allah! help the Muslim world to that Pakistan's "struggle" to become a fully Islamic state is st plete. The fault lies with the misguided who talk of secula Evidence of Jinnah's secular credentials is dismissed and the Quaid-i-Azam is hi- jacked into a world where, denuded of his Saville Row wardrobe, he appears suitably, if not comfortably, attired in an achkan and shalwar. But Jinnah even in death is a hard taskmaster for simpleminded soldiers of Islam. Muhammad Dogar is delighted to cite a speech in which the Quaid-i-Azam, that most "blessed" of mortals, declared Islam to be the basis of Pakistani nationalism. Not a man to understand the power of irony, Dogar faithfully reproduces the rest of the speech in which Jinnah warned: Make no mistake. Pakistan is not a theocracy or anything like it. Islam demands from us the tolerance of other creeds and we welcome in closest association with us all those who of whatever creed, are themselves willing and ready to play their part as true and loyal cit of Pakistan. The importance of extending the truths of Pakistan's official history into the postindependence period has required a concerted and sustained onslaught against "un-Islamic" secularists within as well as outside the state apparatus. In this chamber This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 82 Ayesha Jalal of horrors, refurbished during General Zia-ul-Haq's regime, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto ap- pears as Dogar's villain-in-chief. A chapter in Dogar's book entitled "Cruel Regime of Bhutto" declares in its first paragraph that "a worst dictatorship" of "a staunch Communist" had "married all values of Islam and Islamic traditions [sic]." Bhutto, "a drunkard, characterless and an un-Islamic-minded man," was "totally inclined to- wards the unnatural and anti-Islamic principles of Communism and Socialism." The next chapter, appropriately dignified as "Islamic Regime of Zia," proclaims with re- lief "the blessed advent of the Martial Law regime of Pakistan under the blessed leadership of... General Muhammad Zia-ul-Huq, an Islamic-minded man, came on the blessed day of July 6, 1977."19 Just how critical it is for the Islam pasands to win the battle against secularism needs emphasis. Without the power to declare an ideological and spiritual hege- mony-albeit one enforced by the coercive and crumbling pillars of the state ed- ifice-it is impossible to win the war against those contesting the officially conjured national idioms. An exploration of the theme of sacrifice provides the key link be- tween the wars on secularism and regionalism unleashed by the state's ideologues. The diversities of Pakistan's constitutive regional mosaics allow for a dazzling number of possibilities for astute political operators. Together with their own lin- guistic and religious minorities, these regionalisms, with their multifaceted and rich cultural contours, are a potent source of inspiration for those at the margins of power. In the hands of parties and politicians these are the time bombs that can blast the remnants of that emotion that fired the demand for a Muslim homeland. Interestingly enough, the streaky and shrieky rusted metaphors of Pakistani officialdom met the first jolt from within the state structure when a commission headed by Justice Mohammad Munir reported its findings on the Punjab distur- bances of 1953. In a campaign that laid the basis for the most galling religious in- tolerance in the mid-1970s and 1980s, the heterodox Ahmediya community was targeted by a band of men who had opposed Jinnah and the league's movement for Pakistan in no uncertain terms. Their main demand was that the Ahmediyas should be declared non-Muslims because they violated a fundamental tenet of Islam by conferring the status of prophethood on their spiritual leader Mirza Ghulam Ahmed. After exhaustive interviews, the commission discovered that no two reli- gious divines could agree on the definition of a Muslim. Agreement on the rights of non-Muslims, variously referred to as kuffar, zimmis, or mu'ahids, was even more difficult. According to a representative of the Jamat-i-Islami, non-Muslims could not have equal rights of citizenship in an Islamic state.20 By the same token, no true Muslim could be a loyal citizen of a non-Muslim state. In the opinion of that most learned of Islamic scholars, Maulana Abul Ala Maudoodi, there could be "no objection even if the Muslims of India... [are] treated in that form of Gov- ernment as shudras or malishes and Manu's laws... applied to them, depriving them of all share in the Government and the rights of a citizen." After all, "such a state of affairs already exists in India."21 If Hindu India is the enemy without, the proponents of regional autonomy along- side the ungodly secularists are the enemies within. The religious divines who had so strenuously opposed the creation of Pakistan were reincarnated in the official dis- course of the 1980s as the true heroes in the Muslim saga of suffering and sacrifice. This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 83 It was the ulema who from the 19th century until the establishment of Pakistan sac- rificed the most "in the front of the battle for the creation of homeland for the Muslims of the subcontinent [sic]." They "supported the cause of Pakistan whole heartedly" and "underwent many a hardship even while advocating the case of the Muslim League and the division of the Sub-continent."22 Opposition to the idea of a Muslim homeland by many ulema, including Maulana Maudoodi, has been con- veniently glossed over and the sacrifice of others discarded and devalued. It was not just ideological purity but the emotive fact of geographical displace- ment for a life of dignity in a Muslim homeland that has fanned the hotly contested rival claims surrounding the theme of sacrifice in the cause of Pakistan. One of the earliest and still unresolved debates has evolved around the issue of Punjabi and mu- hajir sacrifice for Pakistan. The muhajirs (lit. refugees) is a term that invokes some of the Pan-Islamic claims of origins. But this group has also lived a tale of profound grief and loss that resulted from being completely uprooted from their natural physi cal and cultural habitats. The pervasiveness of this emotion has suffused the claims of the Urdu speakers who can point to a much longer history of sacrifice to preserve the cultural and religious identity of India's Muslims. Among those notable in a wide spectrum of articulators of muhajir sacrifices, is the entrancing political orator Altaf Hussain, the leader of the Muhajir Qaumi Mahaz (MQM) whose word has to be reckoned with if only for its forceful impact on the imaginations of one dis affected segment in the ocean of discontent and disillusionment that is Pakistan. Altaf Hussain's rise as the leader of the muhajirs of Karachi and Hyderabad is a poignant example of how the official discourse has filtered into the urban politics of Pakistan. Asked for his self-definition and purpose and from where it had all come he summed it up in perfect Urdu: "we are the same as you, we are Pakistani, we live in Pakistan, Pakistan is our watan [homeland], the gift of the sacrifices of our el- ders." "Don't you know," he declaims, "that Hindustan's minority province Muslims sacrificed two million lives. We are the heirs of those two million Muslims." With this dramatic overture, the rest makes for gripping reading: The story of their looted homes and valuables, is our story. We have a right to Pakistan, and it is a right of blood, we gave blood for it. It is amazing that here we are being asked "who are you." If you need an introduction to us, sir, then we are the muhajirs. We are the founders of Pakistan, we have and will continue to sacrifice for it.23 The claim of sacrifice as the basis of rights has been a powerful source of inspi- ration for the muhajirs, the most recently proclaimed "nationality" in Pakistan. Ac- cording to Altaf Hussain, the muhajirs were the only "group without a province and whose only association is with Pakistan." The MQM is a reaction to the sub- nationalisms that have besieged the political arenas of Pakistan. If regionalism was the primary basis of identity, then "for those who are neither Punjabi, nor Pathan, nor the old inhabitants of Sind, nor of Baluchistan, but gave up all for Pakistan to come here, who are they? Where is their space? Where is their muqam [station]?"24 These assertions by the spokesman of a nonregionally based linguistic commu- nity are only one example of the way in which the theme of sacrifice assists internal counternarratives of "us" and "them" in negotiating the fault lines of a geograph- ically bound but ideologically limitless official conception of Pakistan. One of th This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 84 Ayesha Jalal most emotionally charged statements of Punjabi regional sacrifices for Pakistan is contained in a book by Mohammad Hanif Ramay, who was governor of the prov- ince during the Bhutto era. Written in Urdu to its author's regret, Punjab Ka Muq- adama (The Case of the Punjab) blends nostalgia, imagination, and history to produce a classic statement of sacrifice. A regional populist, Ramay's narrative abounds with love for the land of the five rivers, an aspect of identity singularly ab- sent in the purely ideological reconstructions of the official discourse on Pakistani nationalism. Turning the attack on regionalism into a virtue, Ramay gives full play to territorial nationalism. If the Urdu-speaking muhajirs lost their homes, so too did the Punjabis living in the eastern districts of the undivided province: "traveling miles on foot drenched in the shadows of death and deprivation when they reached the frontiers of Pak Punjab they kissed its soil and touched it with their eyes, think- ing of it as Pakistani and not Punjabi soil." Rent in twain and devastated by their loss of a provincial identity, Punjabis developed a stronger and deeper affinity to Pakistan. Just as Heer's yearnings for Ranjha imperceptibly merged her identity into that of her beloved, so by crying "Pakistan, Pakistan, the Punjab itself became Pakistan." So enthusiastic were the Punjabis at the prospect of recovering their lost identity through Pakistan, they adopted the slogan "speak Urdu, read Urdu, write Urdu." How could Pakistan be a euphemism for Greater Punjab when Punjabis had given up their identity for Pa- kistan? What, after all, was hegemony without a culture and language; political and economic dominance without fundamental rights? How could "a person who does not speak, read or write Punjabi be called 'Punjabi' ?"25 Altaf Hussain and, somewhat more guardedly, Ramay play to the official gal- leries who dub "anti-state" anyone contesting the neat equation of Muslims, Islam, and Pakistan. But the counternarratives of identity construction in the political are- nas have resisted more than they have adopted the official dictums of Pakistani his- tory, nationalism, and ideology. These in part explain the banal, brazen, and brutish bigotry of officially controlled textbooks on Pakistani history. As one illustrious member of the enterprise puts it, the very purpose of "Pakistan Studies [is to] un- veil... the sacrifices which the millions of Muslims of the subcontinent, gave for the accomplishment of Pakistan."26 It is the enemies within, the spokesmen of con- testatory regional identities, who, though given no voice in the texts, provide the ammunition for the carpet bombing of young minds in Pakistani schools, colleges, and universities. The theme of sacrifice retains its relevance in regional counter- narratives of "us" and "them," but takes on different nuances than the ones infusing Altaf Hussain and Ramay's creative imaginings. Sacrifice for a Pakistani state dominated by the Punjabis-transfigured in this genre into "them"-is not nearly as important as sacrifices in the anticolonial struggle or the rights of "us," the sub- merged regional linguistic minorities. The Pathan leader, Abdul Wali Khan-whose father Abdul Ghaffar Khan, also known as the Frontier Gandhi and Bacha Khan, was a close ally of the congress- openly contests the Muslim League's claim of sacrifice in the cause of freedom. "Did the Muslim League launch any movement, wage any struggle, render any sac- rifice to qualify for that right?" Wali Khan asks rhetorically. Far from committing "sacrifices in the cause of independence" the Muslim League played "no role in lib- erating this land from British slavery." The "untold sacrifices" of the Khudai Khid- This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 85 matgars [those in the service of God] were rejected simply because they had closed ranks with the congress to oust the British colonialists. They were "blamed for be- ing the progeny of Hindus," but no sooner was independence won than Muslim Leaguers rushed hither and yon to appropriate the property of the Hindus as if it were their birthright. Wali Khan deems it unpardonable that minority-province Muslim League leaders escaped to the "safety, prosperity and comfort of Pakistan," abandoning crores of poor Muslims who had "made all the sacrifices" at their be- hest. And yet these selfish, irresponsible, and acquisitive rulers of Pakistan claimed higher moral ground by exploiting Islam-"they do not report history, they man- ufacture it."27 Apart from Wali Khan, the most indefatigable proponent of a submerged region- alism in postindependence Pakistan has been the octogenarian Sindhi politician G. M. Syed. In Heenyar Pakistan khey tuttan khappey (Now Pakistan Should Disintegrate), Syed openly advocates the breakup of the country and the creation of an independent Sindhu Desh. Another book, Sindhu Desh-A Nation in Chains, sets about proving the viability of the Sindhi state of Syed's dreams. Taking his imagination to new heights, this votary of regional identities has taken to calling for independent states of Baluchistan, Pakhtunistan, and even a tiny Seriaki Desh. Pakistan's geographical frontiers are whittled down to half the size of the present province of the Punjab, a just reward for non-Punjabi regional and subregional sacrifices. There are many variations of the theme of suffering and sacrifice within the geo- graphical frontiers of Pakistan in regional counternarratives of identity. Most of these implicitly or explicitly contest the ideological definitions of the state in assert- ing their regional interests. The buttressing of regionalism by secularism is anath- ema to the guardians of Pakistan's ideological and geographical frontiers. This convergence of internal enemies was particularly troublesome for a military ruler desperately seeking legitimacy by rallying the Islam pasands to defeat ungodly sec- ularists and regionalists in the battle for control in Pakistan. At a time when the cards were stacked against regionalists, secularists, and dem- ocrats alike, one bold journalist gave voice to the view that the phrase "ideology of Pakistan" was never used by Jinnah and had been "coined by his ideological ad- versary, Maulana Maudoodi." He was commenting on a statement by a former gov- ernor of Baluchistan, Mir Ghous Bakhsh Bizenjo, who took the opportunity of his presence in the Punjab to carry the attack of regionalism to the very heart of the official conception of national identity. According to Bizenjo, not the most rebar- bative of regionalists, "you can't appropriate patriotism for yourself... if you con- sider Baluchis to be as much Pakistanis as you yourselves are." Recalling Jinnah's notion of a Pakistani state with equal citizenship rights, irrespective of religion or any other distinction, he contested the official equation of a Muslim nation with a Pakistani nation. In Bizenjo's opinion, the construct of a Muslim nation was "a non-issue... hysterics, without arguments" in the service of those wielding power at the apex of the central state. Jinnah's use of the two-nation theory was far re- moved from the notion of an official ideology that, according to Bizenjo, was the principal hurdle in forging a truly collective ethos in a federated union of Pakistani provinces.28 There is clearly a vast distance between the advocates of a Pakistani national ideology and those whose frame of reference is either secular or bounded by the This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 86 Ayesha Jalal territoriality of the region. So if the contradiction between the Pakistani state's ideological protestations and geographical limitations forms the basis of the im- ploding narrative of national origins, it provides the locus for the exploding counternarratives of regional sufferings and sacrifices. Just how little these contes- tations have been allowed to filter into the official history textbooks can be seen by the summary manner in which regional distinctiveness is treated by writers pro- claiming a collective Pakistani ethos. Consistent with the state's homogenizing agendas of proclaiming a national culture by fiat, the bigoted narrative styles of these textbooks reveal why the integrating idioms of an official Pakistani national- ism have fostered such a disintegrating social ethos. One textbook minces no words when identifying the real enemies within. Re- gionalism is a "very dangerous episode." Such tendencies and "isms of any shape or kind are diametrically opposed to our ideology." Sind is the gateway of Islam and "we must vehemently discard all alien tendencies creeping into that sacred land of Islam." Efforts to advance regional dialects and lores was an attack on the very foundations of Pakistan. The Urdu language was the cause of Pakistan ideol- ogy. This was why neo-Punjabism had to be discarded. The writer attributes the Punjabi language, and by implication, the notion of a distinctive Punjabi identity, to Ranjit Singh who was "the greatest enemy of the Muslims and their culture." "How can we consider him our hero?" he asks his uninformed student audience. And Dullah Bhatti, the great hero of Punjabis who fought the armies of Akbar, is dismissed as the "hero of his tribe... not the hero of Islam." Despite Akbar's "re ligious vagaries," he still "enjoyed a great status." With status as the main qualifi- cation for Islamic credentials, it is no wonder that the vast majority of Punjabi speakers, who like so many of their compatriots in other provinces are consigned to the margins of political and economic power, find the official discourse more alienating than exhilarating.29 It is not simply a matter of disagreement on the heroes of Pakistani history. The purpose is to educate the future generations to reject anything in their regional cul- tures that fails to qualify as Islamic. There was a time when the mela chiraghan, the annual festival of lights in honor of the great Punjabi Sufi poet Madho Lal Hussain, saw the people of Lahore rubbing shoulders regardless of class or communal back- grounds. Still held on popular demand, it is now merely an occasion for the lower strata of the city's teeming millions to congregate and partake of the celebrations. The reason for the distancing of the middle and upper classes is not difficult to dis- cern. Madho Lal might have been "a good Punjabi poet" but he "left the path of sharia" and "no true Muslim can take pride in him." This textbook proves Ramay's case in the very process of rejecting it. Launching a frontal attack on Punjabi, the writer asserts that although the poetry "might be rich in wisdom... [the] Punjabi language is by no means a refined language.... It has no rules and regulations... no grammar.... It is rather a crude and rustic language." So "from every point of view" the "whole 'Punjabi case"' is "fundamentally a bad and totally a false case" with "no solid foundations at all," a mere concoction of "defeated, dejected and mischief-monger peoples [sic]." Something "positive" had to be done in "snubbing such anti-Pakistan ideology elements."30 And indeed the customary celebrations of Urdu in all the Pakistani-studies text- books are often declarations on the relative inferiority of regional languages and cul- This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 87 tures. This is not altogether surprising as Urdu is an inevitable extension of that already loaded and untenable equation of Muslim, Islam, and Pakistan ideology. Yet like the other idioms in the officially conjured grammar of nationalism, Urdu appears to have provided greater impetus to the counternarratives of regional iden- tity than to the construction of a Pakistani collective ethos. As a proponent of Urdu confessed some years ago, the problem lay not with the language so much as with its "overzealous protagonists" who short-sightedly tried to "force it as a symbol of Islamic solidarity and Pakistani patriotism." Urdu was "pitted against the regional languages, which were treated with a measure of contempt, if not openly dubbed as instruments of national disruption." Not surprisingly, Urdu came to be regarded as a "symbol of cultural snobbery and an instrument of domination in the hands of a minority."31 Jamil Jalibi is another seasoned campaigner for Urdu as the only me- dium through which Pakistanis can direct their energies toward building a truly collective ethos. He likens the task of merging the counternarratives of identity construction into "a single personality" to the one facing Sisyphus who seemed "doomed forever to roll uphill a heavy stone which rolled down repeatedly." But when with "weary feet" Sisyphus came down from the hilltop he began to think and the "thinking engender[ed]... a new consciousness" that made him "stronger than the stone" and broke the monotony of fate. Pakistan needs freedom of expres- sion and an intelligentsia willing to take up the challenge of critically rethinking how to go about constituting a collective ethos. The "result of the test will be the beginning of either a new renaissance or never-ending slumber."32 CONCLUSION Renaissance or continued slumber? The choice is easier made than executed. All de- pends on just how willing and able Pakistanis in their serried ranks are to confront the conceptual conundrums emerging from a historical past that, whether creatively imagined or bitterly contested, cannot reconcile the claim of nationhood with the winning of statehood. They at least have the state if not the nation of their imag- inings, and there are ways of overcoming contradictions that cannot be resolved. A result of the ideological posturing and geographical limitations of the Pakistani state, these contradictions are constructs of the rusted minds and rusted metaphors of officialdom. Without sustained debate on citizenship rights, accompanied by a re- apportioning of responsibility for the construction and dissemination of ideas and knowledge between state and civil society, Pakistan cannot take the elementary steps toward forging a collective ethos as a nation-state. The challenge is a daunting one in a country where critical thinking has been banished for extended periods of time under military bureaucratic rule. Sisyphus's successful reckoning with fate is an enlivening myth; critically and creatively broaching issues closely monitored by the swords writing victory is an enervating truth. At a time when the umpires have abandoned the field to partisans, some cri- teria of critical evaluation will have to fly out of the trap doors of knowledge if there is to be any ethical justification for persisting with an unevenly poised battle between the creative power of imaginings and the creative imaginations of power. The embattled terrain of Pakistani historiography and its tortured reflections on the contending narratives of identity construction points to the dangers of viewing This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 88 Ayesha Jalal all knowledge of the past as mere interpretation, one no more valid than the other. Evidence culled from the official textbooks on Pakistani history is a testimony to the imperative of differentiating between the creative bigotry of power and the critical power that vests in creative imaginings. If all forms of creative imaginings are to enjoy the same stature, then there is nothing to prevent the politics of identity from engendering hatreds toward internal and external others. A hierarchy of situated knowledge grounded in a philosophy of ethics may be the only option left for schol- ars doomed to contextual irrelevance by the conceptual relativities, subjectivities, and insecurities of a postmodern world. Until then the brave voices of dissent will have only the self-confident security that comes of the creative in pure inspiration: Punish me for I have written the significance of the dream in my own blood written a book ridden with an obsession Punish me for I have spent my life sanctifying the dream of the future spent it enduring the tribulations of the night Punish me for I have imparted knowledge and skills of the sword to the murderer and demonstrated the power of the pen to the mind Punish me for I have been the challenger of the crucifix of hatred I'm the glow of torches which burn against the wind Punish me for I have freed womanhood from the insanity of the deluded night Punish me for if I live you might lose face Punish me for if my sons raise their hands you may end your being Punish me for I love the new life with every breath I shall live my life and shall doubly live beyond my life Punish me for then, the sentence of your punishment will end.33 NOTES Author's note: This article was written for a conference sponsored by the Americ search Council on Nationalizing the Past at Goa, India, May 1993. I also presented York University and King's College, Cambridge. I am grateful to participants at the helpful comments. 1Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spre (London, 1983). 2Ayesha Jalal, The Sole Spokesman: Jinnah, the Muslim League and the Demand bridge, 1985). 3Choudhary Rahmat Ali, Pakistan: The Fatherland of the Pak Nation, 3rd ed. (Cambridge, 1947), 344. 4Choudhary Rahmat Ali, India: The Continent of Dinia or the Country of Doom? 3rd ed. (Dinia Continental Movement, 1946). Also reprinted in his Pakistan, 312-30. 5Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Speeches as Governor General of Pakistan 1947-1948 (Karachi, n.d.), 8. This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Conjuring Pakistan: History as Official Imagining 89 6Kishwar Naheed, "Nightmare" in Beyond Belief: Contemporary Feminist Urdu Poetry, trans. Rukhsana Ahmad (Lahore, 1990), 30-31. I have made certain amendments to the Ahmad translation, which seem closer to the original Urdu. 7In this paper I examine a number of required readings for this curriculum during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Among some of the used textbooks I collected, there was one in which an independent- minded student had scribbled "Hell Studies"-an indication of the ongoing resistance to the tyranny of official history. This sentiment has been echoed recently by at least two Pakistani historians, K. K. Aziz, The Murder of History in Pakistan (Lahore, 1993) and Mubarik Ali, In the Shadow of History (Lahore, 1993). Unfortunately, both writers spend more time quibbling about "facts" than calling into question the ideologically motivated distortions in official interpretations of history. 8Haji Wali Muhammad Dogar, Pakistan Studies and Affairs (Lahore, 1983), 4. 9Ibid., 18-19. 'OM. D. Zafar, A Text Book of Pakistan Studies (Lahore, 1988), 4-8, 21. 1Jameel Jalibi, Pakistan: The Identity of Culture (Karachi, 1984), 53-56. 12Sher Muhammad Garewal, Pakistan Way of Life and Culture (Lahore, 1988), 117. 13K. Ali, A New History of Indo-Pakistan up to 1526, 4th ed. (Lahore, n.d.); idem, A New History of Indo-Pakistan since 1526, rev. ed. (Lahore, n.d.). 14Ali, A New History of Indo-Pakistan since 1526, 256. 15Star Pakistan Studies with Questions and Answers for Degree Classes (Lahore, n.d.), 11. 16Ali, A New History of Indo-Pakistan since 1526, 270. 17Garewal, Pakistan Way of Life and Culture, 184-91. 18Dogar, Pakistan Studies and Affairs, 68-69. 19Ibid., 124-29. 20Report of the Court of Inquiry Constituted under Punjab Act II of 1954 to Enquire into the Punjab Disturbances of 1953, known as The Munir Report (Lahore, 1954), 213-14. 21Ibid., 228. 22Zafar, A Text Book of Pakistan Studies, 51-52. 23"We have raised the heads of the poor." Two extended interviews with Altaf Hussain. (Muhajir Academy, Karachi, 1988) (my translation from the Urdu). 24Ibid., 10. 25Mohammad Hanif Ramay, Punjab ka Muqadama, 4th ed. (Lahore, 1988) (my translations from the Urdu). 26Rabbani, A Comprehensive Book of Pakistan Studies, 252. 27Abdul Wali Khan, Facts Are Sacred (Peshawar, n.d.), passim. 28Viewpoint, 27 August 1978, 7-8, 22; ibid., 3 September 1978, 7, 26. 29Garewal, Pakistan Way of Life and Culture, 192 (my emphasis). 30Ibid. 31Zuhair Siddiqui, "A Nation in Search of its Culture," Viewpoint, 13 August 1976, 11. 32Jalibi, Pakistan: The Identity of Culture, 196-97. 33Kishwar Naheed, "Talking to Myself" in Beyond Belief, 34-35. This content downloaded from 110.93.234.10 on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:18:30 +00:00 All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms