Internal Rivalry in Sunni Islam
Sufism
Sunni fundamentalists are a minority within Sunni Islam. The great majority of Sunni Muslims in Pakistan belong to the Barelwi sub-sect which is especially strong in the countryside of where the bulk of the population resides. Inclined towards the mystical dimension in Islam or Sufism, Barelwis are or were usually more tolerant towards Shias as they relatively accommodating to others outside their fold. Hindus, Sikhs and Christians are sometimes welcomed at Sufi Shrines. The Islam of the Barelwis apart from the usual Islamic rituals such as praying and fasting is also based on pilgrimages to Sufi shrines, sometimes made in the hope of experiencing miracles. Some Barelwis become the disciples (murids) of holy men (murshids) and pay respect to saints both dead and living known locally as pir sahibs or Sufi sheikhs. Often Sufi pirs are candidates for the PPP or its rival the PML Peasants who are Sunnis sometimes will even take part in Shia festivals. Thus there is some convergence between Sunnis and Shias in rural areas. Sunni ulema fear that such a porous identity boundary will help to convert Sunnis to Shi’ism especially in areas where landlords are Shias. This fear of the Sunni ulema has helped sharpen sectarian identities.
The Deobandis
The Deobandis are the second largest Sunni sub-sect in Pakistan and the one from which most of Pakistan’s sectarian Sunnis and neighbouring Afghanistan’s anti-Shia Taliban militia are affiliated with many of its leaders were educated at numerous Pakistani Deobandi madrasas. This particular Sunni sub-sect holds an intermediate position between polar extremes of Sufism and Wahhabism in the Sunni spectrum. The Deobandis discourage many of the popular festivals and rituals that the Barelwis associate with Sufi shrines but unlike the more extreme Wahhabis, Deobandis do not actively promote the whole scale destruction of shrines. This is probably why the Taliban itself an extremist Deobandi organization, especially regarding matters relating to gender and entertainment, was more welcomed by Afghan people than some of the muhajdeen parties which demand a Wahhabi influenced society. In a rare instance, the Taliban is at the middle of a religious spectrum or is even considered as a compromise movement which is a very strange and rare occurrence. Deobandi Islam is centred on Mosques and especially religious schools called madrasas. Deobandi madrasas greatly outnumber Barelwi madrasas in Pakistan. It comes as no surprise that Deobandis are the majority of the Sunni ulema in Pakistan. The Deobandis with their foreign funded madrasas produce far more ulema than the Barelwis despite their smaller share of the population. Some Deobandis had lacked political legitimacy as initially they had opposed the creation of Pakistan in the 1940s but by targeting minorities like Shias and Ahmadis as the ``threatening `other these Deobandis have recently gained a degree of political legitimacy. Regarding the dominance of such Deobandi organisations in anti-Shia sectarianism, Miriam Zahab (2002:77) considers that the Shia-Sunni conflict should be referred more precisely as the Shia-Deobandi conflict.
The Dynamics of Sectarian Conflict The SSP (Army of the Companions of the Prophet-Pakistan) was formed during the Zia era in the district of Jhang in the Punjab, which is one of the regions of Pakistan, where Shia feudal landlords dominate a Sunni majority populace The SSP draws much of its strength from the urban areas of Jhang where migrant families from the violent 1947 partition of British India settled, most of these families were from East Punjab which was relatively free from the domination of high status landowning castes or tribes and while Jhang’s agrarian economy is still dominated by landlords. Despite the obvious vertical rivalry between the mostly lower middle class SSP and the Shia feudals, most of the SSP’s violence is directed against the Shia militant organization Siphe Muhammad Pakistan (SMP or Army of the Prophet Muhammad-Pakistan), which recruits from the same socio-economic strata. Many SMP activists like their SSP rivals have seen action in Afghanistan, initially fighting the Soviet-backed communists but in different militias and later on opposing sides: the SSP on the side of fellow sectarian Deobandis, the Taliban and the SMP on the side of the various Iranian backed Shia Hazara militias that later allied themselves to their former rivals the Russian backed Sunni dominated Northern Alliance, which finally drove out the Taliban from Kabul with American help. Even more strange are the circumstances in which the SSP has experienced some success in the political arena. The SSP supported the PPP minority administration in the Punjab during the second and rather chaotic reign of Benazir Bhutto in 1993-1996 despite the Shia affiliation and Shia vote-bank of the Bhutto clan. Two SSP Local Assembly members even became ministers in Pakistan’s most important province. In the adjoining NWFP (North West Frontier Province), the PPP political alliance with the Deobandis was used as a counterweight to Pathan nationalist parties. The PPP extended support to the Taliban movement with American approval to bring about much wanted stability in war torn Afghanistan which brought the SSP and other Deobandis organizations closer to the PPP. As a result, many in the Shia community shifted their political allegiance to the PML (Pakistan Muslim League) of Nawaz Sharif. This shift in voting on the part of the Shias, was one of the contributing factors that benefited the PML as Nawaz Sharif returned to office in 1997 ousting the PPP with a huge victory. Nawaz Sharif who was once the Deobandi General Zia ur Haques’s protégé. However, he soon passed the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 which was designed to curb sectarianism which had gained considerable ground during the Benazir Bhutto administration. Nawaz Sharif himself become a target of an unsuccessful assassination attempt by the Lasker Jhangvi (LeJ) a splinter group from the SSP which is even more violent and has alleged links with Al-Qaeda. This intra-Sunni violence represents a dilemma for the anti-Shia Deobandi extremists as they have to maintain their anti-Shia stance yet avoid alienating moderate Sunnis. Some Sunni Islamist organizations such as the Jammat Islami who view sectarianism as damaging the Islamist antisecular agenda have organized the Milli Yikjahati (National Unity) Council where sectarian differences can be discussed with the aim of reconciliation. The Jammat Islami has also opposed sectarianism as much of its Saudi funding has since been diverted to the SSP and the Taliban. The most extremist of the Sunni and Shia sectarian organizations such as the SSP, LeJ and SMP strongly oppose such meditating steps as threatening or compromising what they consider as the essentials of their faith.
The War on Terror in the aftermath of the events of 9/11 has, however, achieved some of the objectives of the Milli Yikjahati Council. The massive air bombing which helped to remove the Taliban in Afghanistan, created a powerful image of Islam being in danger from the West, which many Islamists of various sectarian affiliations used successfully to enhance their political standing. They joined in a political alliance the Muttahida Majlis Amal (MMA) based on antiAmericanism which included such diverse and opposing partners such as the Barelwi Jammat Ulema Pakistan (JUP), Jam mat Islami and the Taliban’s parent Deobandi organization the Jammat Ulema Islam (JUI). It even included Shias belonging to the TJP, which had its origins in the opposition to Zia’s Islamization of the late 1970s. (Pinault2003:83). However, the SSP did not join the MMA which since the October 2002 elections has controlled the NWFP adjoining the sensitive Afghanistan border. The SSP not only opposed the MMA for it included the TJP the forerunner of its bitter rival the SMP among it’s ranks, instead the SSP supported General Musharraf despite him officially banning sectarian organizations, curbing extremist madrasas and his U-turn regarding support for the SSP’s sectarian ally the Taliban, in the face of threats from the United States. Despite the MMA being a strong vocal critic of Musharaf’s pro-American anti-Taliban stance, it is a junior partner of the Musharraf backed Muslim League administration in Baluchistan. Summary The above account shows that sectarian organizations have alliances and counter alliances with more mainstream religious and supposedly secular oriented political parties in Pakistan. As such alliances are more inclined to be situational than being based on an ideology such as nationalism it is hard to say if there will be any real reconciliation between the various sectarian groups in the near future. As Pakistan is still evolving from feudalism to capitalism, it is experiencing problems of an identity crisis as its traditional power structures are coming under considerable strain. The landlords are losing some of their political clout but the industrialists and bureaucrats have not entirely replaced them and these categories are being increasing blurred. All these alliances and realignments leave the religious elites as brokers in a complicated patronclient set-up. Some of them have turned to and away from violent sectarianism in order to enhance their own power-bases depending on whether internal or external enemies can be portrayed as the greater threat to the national interest. (Haleem2003:474). Sectarianism violence threatens civil society yet it is only a symptom of the malfunctioning of the Pakistani nation-state which has used religion as a form of nationalism to counterweight other forms of identity but this approach has instead brought into existence a society now deeply fragmented on sectarian as well as regional, tribal and linguistic lines so undermining rather than enhancing Pakistani nationalism.