سڀني وزٽرس کي ڀليڪار چئون ٿا مهرباني ڪري پنهنجا مشوره ۽ شڪايتون اسان جي فيس بڪ پيج تي موڪليندا. FaceBooK

Jiye sindh

      
      

      


      Jiye
      Sindh


      THE FATE OF SINDH was sealed in 1947. But it has
      been unsealing from the very first day. Sindhi Muslims were asking for
      partition because other Muslims were also doing so --- and because the
      Hindus were saying no. It seemed to be such great fun. But they had never
      thought of the consequences of this funny business.


      It is true, the Sindhi Muslims were way behind the
      Hindus in education, employment, and trade. But they were coming up all
      the time. Moreover, they were 70 per cent of the population and a big
      majority in the Assembly --- and what cuts deep in politics was bound,
      eventually, to cut deep all-round The future of the Sindhi Muslims,
      therefore, was assured.


      Meanwhile, in 1945 the two most respected leaders
      of Sindh had already resigned from the Muslim League in disgust over
      Jinnah's preference for the pro-British reactionaries in Muslim society.
      One was Sheikh Abdul Majid, who had joined the League in 1915, and edited
      the chief organ of Muslim opinion in Sindh, the daily Al-Wahid, and
      inducted stalwarts such as Khaliquzzaman of UP and Abdur Rab Nishtar of
      NWFP into the League. The other was G M. Syed who, as president of the
      provincial League, had transformed it from a sleepy little feudal outfit
      into a mass organization


      When, therefore, Partition came, the Sindhi
      Muslims were not sure it was the right thing. Mohammed Ibrahim Joyo was
      sure it was the wrong thing. He wrote the book Save Sind --- from
      Pakistan. But it was too late. And when refugees from Bihar poured in, and
      the Sindhi Hindus began to leave, they were sure it was the wrong thing-
      The atmosphere in Sindh turned funereal. It was as though the rakshasa
      (demon) was on the prowl and he might devour anybody and anything any
      time. People spoke very little and in hushed tones. The Muslims were heard
      saying that Qiamat (end of the world) seemed to be fast approaching.
      


      Within days Jinnah's portrait was off the Sindhi
      walls. When refugee Muslims wanted to kill Hindus, Sindhi Muslims refused
      to cooperate. Premier Khuhro himself went out, revolver in hand, to quell
      the riots. Indeed, the first dispute between the Sindh Government and the
      Pakistan Government arose when, after the sack of Karachi on 6 January,
      1948, the former arrested refugee rioters and recovered looted property
      from them, and the Centre sided with the rioters. The refugees were heard
      saying: ``The Sindhi Muslims seem to be born from the urine of the
      Hindus.''


      In January, 1948, Government of India appointed
      Malkani as Additional Deputy High Commissioner in Pakistan to organise the
      migration of Hindus from Sindh. But Khuhro, the Premier of Sindh, refused
      to let him tour the province; for, he said, he did not want the Hindus to
      leave. And he meant it. He was so keen an the Hindus staying on that he
      saw to it that even the ``normal'' run of dacoities did not take place.
      This was more than the refugee Prime Minister of Pakistan, Nawabzada
      Liaquat Ali Khan, could stand. Soon after, Khuhro was dismissed.

      


      Such is the genesis of the ``Jiye Sindh'' (``Long
      Live Sindh'') movement, which caused the MRD (Movement for Restoration of
      Democracy) to assume the form of a mass struggle in August-September 1983,
      when five hundred persons were killed and railway property alone worth
      about 150 crores of rupees destroyed. A complete rationale of this
      movement is to be found in G .M. Syed's books The Past, Present and Future
      of Sindh, Sindhu Desh --- What and Why, and Consciousness of Sindh, all in
      Sindhi. These books make revealing reading. Syed, born in 1904 and still
      happily with us, says that Pakistan is a folly and a crime, that refugees
      have ruined the country, that West Punjab has reduced Sindh to a colony
      and that Pakistan must die so that Sindh can live and breathe freely
      again. He elaborates as follows:


      First the so-called Islamic State of Pakistan''.
      It is altogether un-Islamic. There has never been an Islamic State --- and
      there never can be one. It is ridiculous to say that the Koran is the last
      word in wisdom or knowledge. And in any case there is nothing in the Koran
      on which you can base a modern polity --- or build a modern economy.
      


      Muslims have been divided into various schools
      from the first day. There are 350 different sects of Islam. There is no
      provision for a Khalifa in the Koran; but a Khalifa was fabricated
      nevertheless --- on the model of the Pope. Religion and politics were also
      mixed up in Islam --- again on the model of the mediaeval Church.
      Christians, however, had the good sense to separate the Church from the
      State centuries ago. Muslims continue to mix up the two --- and muddy
      both.


      Islamic principles are fine; but ``Arab Chhaap
      Islam'' (``Made in Arabia Islam'') has always been intolerant, aggressive
      and imperialist. The Arabs invaded Sindh in the name of Islam, sacked it
      in the name of Islam, sold 20,000 Sindhi men, women and children in
      slavery, again in the name of Islam. We have no use for that kind of
      Islam. Even tyrannical rulers such as Timur and Aurangzeb had been hailed
      as ``great Islamic leaders''.


      Also much of what passes for Islam is
      pre-Mohammedan Arab tribal customs. Qaaba, says Syed, is believed to be an
      old Shiva linga. Hajis still throw stones to kill old Arab goddesses
      Manaat and Laat. They run between two hills, Marru and Safaa, because that
      is what Ibrahim's slave-girl Hajran did in search of water when she was
      about to deliver a baby. These are primitive Arab customs which have
      nothing to do with Islam. The water of the Indus is not less holy than
      that of the Arab well of Zam Zam.


      The people here want to be buried in Arabia for a
      favourable position before Allah on the Day of judgement. They do not know
      that some time after burial, the Arabs take out their bodies and throw
      them into a cave. What kind of schools and colleges can be established by
      people who have been burning libraries? Can the people, who have been
      warring on music and dancing, ever do justice to radio and television?
      


      Pakistan is a denial of Indian geography and
      history. It goes against the grain of Ashoka and Akbar. In any case, if
      the Arabs who speak the same language and swear by the same Allah can have
      separate states, why cannot the Sindhis, the Punjabis, the Baluchis and
      the Pakhtoons have separate, sovereign states of their own? To keep them
      together against their wishes is to give them a common funeral.

      


      Pakistan is a sinful state, founded on the ashes
      of all sound principles. It is a thieves' kitchen. It is led by
      kafan-chors (people who would steal even coffins). Even as a ``bhangi''
      (scavenger) does not become ``great'' by being called mahtar, this
      randi-khana [house of (political) prostitution] does not become ``holy''
      by just being named ``Pakistan''. The Sindhis do not want to have anything
      to do with such a state.


      Next the ``refugees''. They have come to Pakistan
      not because they could not live in India. Crores of Muslims are living in
      India in peace and with honour. In UP, the Muslims were 13 per cent of the
      population but they had 45 per cent of the jobs. And yet they have come
      away in large numbers. They are adventurers, who want even more here than
      they had in lndia. The Hindus left vast properties in Sindh; all these
      have gone to the refugees. Even the Hindu properties sold to Sindhi
      Muslims were declared ``evacuee property'' and handed over to refugees.
      Many of these refugees had filed false claims; but all these were
      certified by their fellow-refugees manning the evacuee property and
      rehabilitation departments.


      It was these refugees who had murdered and looted
      the Hyderabad Hindus on 26 December, 1947 and the Karachi Hindus on 6
      January, 1948. When Premier Khuhro proceeded against the rioters, the
      refugee supremo, Liaqat Ali Khan, turned against him.


      The Sindhi leaders in their goodness had invited
      Jinnah to set up the capital of Pakistan in Karachi. But Liaqat Ali
      detached Karachi from Sindh and asked the Government of Sindh itself to
      shift to Hyderabad. When the Sindhis asked for at least compensation for
      the loss of Karachi, they were told that it was a ``conquered territory'',
      for which there could be no compensation. When Khuhro protested, they just
      dismissed him. In his place they brought in a spineless man, Pir Illahi
      Bux. This puppet promptly made Urdu compulsory in Sindh.

     

      When Syed Ali Akbar Shah, Sindh Muslim League
      President, led a Sindhi deputation to Liaqat Ali to urge protection for
      Sindhi culture, the latter remarked: ``What is Sindhi culture, except
      driving donkeys and camels?'' This same Liaqat Ali invited all the Indian
      Muslims to Pakistan when he said it was good enough for all the ten crore
      Muslims.


      India drafted its constitution in three years;
      Pakistan under Liaqat did not do so even in six years. In view of his pro-
      refugee and anti-local policies, some Punjabi politicians and officials
      united to bump him off. Soon after partition, the Punjab, NWFP, and
      Baluchistan banned further entry of refugees. But refugees have been
      allowed to flood into Sindh all through. This is an intolerable situation.
      


      Even in the British days an officer posted in
      Sindh had to learn Sindhi within six months. But now this rule has been
      waived. The Governor, the Chief Secretary, the lnspector-General of Police
      and most other senior officers in Sindh are non-Sindhis, who refuse to
      learn Sindhi. If the refugees settled in Sindh persist in refusing to
      learn Sindhi, they will deserve to be disfranchised.


      In pre-partition Sindh, Hindus had come to acquire
      30 lakh acres of land over a period of 100 years, and the Muslims resented
      that; but the refugees have grabbed 60 lakh acres in a fraction of that
      time.


      Hundreds of crores of rupees have been gifted away
      or loaned to the refugees to set up industry, carry on trade, build
      houses. None of this is available to the Sindhis. The Sindhis have less
      than 3 per cent jobs in the government of Pakistan. (The joke in Pakistan
      is that it was established by the Sunnis, so that the Shias --- of UP etc.
      may rule it, for the benefit of the Ahmediyas of Qadian, who have since
      been proclaimed as non- Muslims.)


      The refugee leaders have been obliterating old
      Sindhi names and substituting new ones for them. (In Karachi, the ancient
      Ram Bagh has been renamed Aram Bagh --- and Achal Singh Park, as Iqbal
      Park.) On the other hand, foreign names have not been replaced in Sindh.
      For example, we still have Jacobabad, named after Gen. Jacob who had
      conquered Sindh with Napier. However, in the Punjab, Montgomery has been
      named Sahiwal, and Lyallpur, Faisalabad to restore the Punjabis'
      self-respect.


      This is an impossible state of affairs. The
      refugees must rediscover their roots in Krishna and Kabir, and behave
      themselves --- if they want to live in Sindh.


      As for the Punjabis in Pakistan, the less said the
      better. A popular saying in Sindh is that one Punjabi is equal to two men
      and two Punjabis are much too many. They treat all Pakistan as their
      colony. Pakistan has become Punjabistan. They control the politics and the
      civil and military services. They are taking over more and more land,
      industry and trade in Pakistan. The British seem to have partitioned India
      to give the Punjabi Muslims all this territory for their exploitation, in
      appreciation of their services in the two World Wars. To make this
      exploitation easier, in 1954 they forced the merger of all the four
      provinces into ``One Unit''. Since the premiers of these provinces would
      not agree, they were all dismissed.


      As the hapless Sindhi officers were being
      transported en masse to Lahore, the scene reminded everybody of the Jews
      being taken in captivity to Babylon after the fall of Jerusalem.

      


      At the time of the formation of One Unit, Sindh
      had a credit of 33 crore rupees --- and Punjab a debit of 100 crore
      rupees. All these finances were merged --- and Sindh was thus robbed of
      its surpluses.


      More than ten years after Partition, the
      constitution of Pakistan was at last ready. All that remained was the
      Governor General's signature. But at this stage, this Punjabi gentleman,
      Ghulam Mohammed, dissolved the Constituent Assembly and installed a
      Bengali puppet, Mohammed Ali Bogra --- then doing duty as ambassador in
      Washington --- as Prime Minister of Pakistan.


      The dissolution of the Consembly was challenged in
      the Sindh High Court, which pronounced it unconstitutional. But the
      Federal Court, controlled by the Punjabis, upheld the dissolution.

      


      Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was a Sindhi, but he was also
      a puppet of Punjab. He came up by flattering Iskander Mirza and Ayub Khan.
      He organized lavish shikar parties for them on his vast estate. He
      compared Ayub to Lincoln and Lenin and said that if Shah Abdul Latif, the
      great Sindhi poet, were alive, he would have surely garlanded him. When
      Bhutto came to power, he became a terror. He branded some of his critics
      with red-hot irons. He took out others in procession, with their faces
      painted black. He got a district and sessions judge arrested without
      warrant. When the Sindh Assembly declared Sindhi as the sole official
      language of Sindh, Bhutto had the province declared bi-lingual, giving
      Urdu official status in Sindh. He played into the hands of the Punjabi
      civil and military officers. He did nothing to right the many wrongs
      perpetrated on Sindh by the Punjabis and the refugees.


      Although Bhutto posed as a democrat, fighting
      military dictatorship after 1977, he had all along been hand in glove with
      the top brass. As Secretary-General of Convention League. Bhutto proposed
      that the Deputy Commissioner and the Superintendent of Police should be
      district party president and secretary, respectively. He was the
      right-hand man of Ayub until the Tashkent declaration between India and
      Pakistan, when Bhutto had decided to desert him, to escape the
      unpopularity that attended that declaration in Pakistan. Bhutto proposed
      to Air Marshal Asghar Khan that the two should rule together: ``The
      programme is to rule. The people are stupid and I know how to make a fool
      of them. I will have the danda (lathi) in my hand and no one will be able
      to remove me for twenty years.'' He made the same proposal to Gen. Yahya
      Khan: ``East Pakistan is no problem. We will have to kill some 20,000
      people there and all will be well.''


      In 1977, Bhutto actually made himself Chief
      Martial Law Administrator. Later he appointed himself Colonel-in-Chief of
      the Pakistan Armoured Corps. Not even his judicial murder had erased these
      memories from the public mind. One reason why Zia-ul-Haq was able to get
      away with the postponement of elections was the feeling, shared by other
      parties, that the unscrupulous Bhutto must not be allowed to return to
      power.


      The principles of distribution of Indus basin
      river waters between Sindh and Punjab were laid down in the various
      statutes and agreements since 1901. It was laid down that Sindh shall have
      25 per cent of the waters of the Ravi, the Sutlej, and the Beas, and 75
      per cent of the waters of the Sindhu. These formulae were based on the
      fact that Sindh has less than 10 inches annual rainfall as against
      Punjab's more than 20 inches and it has less forest cover --- 2 per cent
      --- than even Arabia. When, however, One Unit was forged, this agreement
      was violated. The waters of the Ravi, the Sutlej, and the Beas were sold
      for 1,000 crore rupees from India and some other countries. And this mon-
      ey was not used to implement the dozen irrigation schemes earlier prepared
      by the Government of Sindh; it was used, instead, to dam the waters at
      Tarbela, Mangla, Chashma and Rawal in the Punjab, for the benefit of
      Punjabis.


      Sui gas of Baluchistan is sold cheaper to the
      Punjab than to Sindh.


      Punjab has an area of 55,000 square miles --- and
      Sindhi 54,000 square miles. In 1947, Punjab had a population density of
      300 as against 80 in Sindh, 150 in NWFP, and 18 in Baluchistan. But in
      1979, while the Punjab density had increased by only 33 per cent to 400,
      in Sindh it had more than trebled to 260 per square miles. This
      extraordinary increase represented the influx of the Punjabis and the
      refugees in Sindh.


      The Sindh lands irrigated by the two
      post-Partition barrages at Guddu in the north and Kotri in the south ---
      have been allotted mostly to refugees and retired military men, most of
      them again Punjabis. The whole thing amounts to an internal invasion of
      Sindh. And when Sindh resents it all, Punjab only threatens it the more.
      


      General Tikka Khan, as governor of East Pakistan,
      had said: ``Pakistan is interested only in Bangla land; as for the
      population, it could bring people to settle there.'' Later he told the
      armymen in Malir near Karachi: ``We failed in East Bengal because it was
      too far away; there were too many people there, and it was helped by
      India. If `Sindhu Desh' raises its head, we can easily crush it because it
      is near at hand, not very populous, and not likely to be helped by any
      foreign power. We will then offer the Sindhi Pirs and Zamindars, who are
      fattening now, as a sacrifice (qurbani) in celebration of our victory,
      Jashne-e-fateh.''


      The Punjabis have become very aggressive. Their
      Iqbal only further pumped their ego when he wrote:


     

      Khudi ko kar buland itna

      ki har taqdir se pahle

      Khuda banday se poochhe,

      Batn teri raza kya hai

 


     

      (Let your personality be so strong that before God
      apportions fortune, He asks you, what you would like to have.)

      


      The Sindhi psychology is very very different. Shah
      Abdul Latif says:


     

      Wag Dhani je vas,

      Aun ka paana vahini?


     

      (My string is in the hands of my Lord, I am not
      here on my own steam.)


      Punjabi and Sindhi Khudas are as different as
      Punjabis and Sindhis themselves. ``If the Punjabis end up in Heaven, we
      Sindhis would like to stay in Hell.''


      It was not always like this. Punjab and Sindh
      never invaded each other in history. This was because the mind of the
      Punjab was then moulded by saint-poets such as Guru Nanak, Warris Shah,
      Bullay Shah. It has now forgotten its real culture and destiny. In the
      process it has suffered badly. Because of Partition, two Indo-Pak wars had
      been fought on the soil of Punjab, hurting the Punjabis badly. The
      Punjabis also feel amputated by separation from other Punjabis, now in
      India; hence their keen desire to woo back the Sikhs. The Punjabi Muslims
      will have to recover their heritage of Nanak-Warris- Bulay Shah, to be at
      peace with themselves and with others.


      As for the state of Pakistan, Sindh rejects it
      wholly. Sindh has always been there, Pakistan is a passing show. Sindh is
      a fact, Pakistan is a fiction. Sindhis are a nation, but Muslims are not a
      nation. Sindhi language is 2,000 years old, Urdu is only 250 years old.
      Sindhi has 52 letters, Urdu has only 26. The enslavement of Sindh by the
      Punjab in the name of ``Pakistan'' and ``Islam'' is a fraud. It is the
      most serious crisis in the history of Sindh in the past 2,000 years.
      


      The Sindhis have long been fooled in the name of
      Islam. Many of them tried to trace their ancestry to Persian, Turkish and
      Arab families. Some of them could be heard singing their desire to sweep
      the streets of Mecca and to die in Medina. ``Under the impact of foreign
      Muslim rule, even a foreign sparrow came to be regarded a nightingale in
      Sindh.'' N ow they realize that all this is folly. ``Only a fool dances to
      other people's tunes.''


      They had thought that the ``Islamic state of
      Pakistan'' would .be good for them. But it had been a disaster. ``We are
      reminded of the animal which went to get some horns, and returned with its
      ears chopped off.''


      ``Sindh rejects the Arabian edition of Islam, it
      rejects the Punjabi version of Pakistan, and it rejects made-in-India
      Urdu. Iqbal and Jinnah have been worse disasters for Indian Muslims than
      Chenghiz and Halaku. Sindh rejects them both.'' When Pakistan celebrated
      Jinnah centenary, lakhs of posters appeared in Sindh denouncing the
      Quaid-e-Azam as Qadu Hajam (Silly Barber), Qatil-e-Azam (Great Murderer),
      Kafir-e-Azam (the Great Heathen), and Ghadar-i-Sindh (Traitor to Sindh).
      


      Many Muslims look upon Iqbal as the prophet and
      poet of Pakistan, who enunciated the theory of partition in his presiden-
      tial address at the Allahabad session of the Muslim League in 1930. But
      Sindhi nationalists look upon him as a Punjabi chauvinist and British
      stooge. They point out that when the Muslims were agitated over the
      British attack on Turkey during World War I, Iqbal had sung: ``I offer my
      head in the war, please accept this humble gift from a loyal subject.'' In
      1923, when others were returning their titles over the British excesses,
      Iqbal agreed to be knighted. The Muslim League split into two in 1928 over
      its attitude to the Simon Commission. The nationalist section led by
      Jinnah and Saifuddin Kitchlew met in Calcutta and denounced the
      commission; the pro-British section, led by Mohammed Shafi and Iqbal, met
      in Lahore and welcomed the all-white Simon Commission.


      Iqbal was a great admirer of Amanullah, the
      progressive king of Afghanistan. But when the British dethroned Amanullah
      and enthroned puppet Nadir Khan, Iqbal was all praise for Nadir too!
      


      The Sheriff of Mecca was a nationalist. The
      British replaced him by a pliable Saud as the keeper of Islam's holies.
      This gentleman in his Wahabi fundamentalism, demolished many ancient
      tombs, including those of Mohammed's family members. Muslims all over the
      world were shocked. But Iqbal hailed Saud as ``the best ruler in Asia''.
      


      When Bhopal sanctioned Iqbal a monthly allowance
      of 500 rupees, the Nawab became ``the star of Islam''. Nehru had refused
      to meet Mussolini; Iqbal not only met him but announced that Islam tallied
      with fascism. Iqbal himself admitted that he had come out in support of
      Pakistan because ``Lord Lothian, Under Secretary of State for India,
      assured me that India would be partitioned.'' For all these reasons, the
      Sindhis reject Iqbal. When, therefore, Pakistan observed Iqbal Centenary,
      Sindh countered it by celebrating the anniversary of its poet-saint Latif
      in every nook and corner of the province.


      The Sindhis point out that Sindh is bigger than
      Belgium Denmark and Switzerland, all put together.


      Sindh takes pride in its heritage from
      mooanjo-daro to Dahir to Dodo Soomro to Allah Bux --- something tabooed by
      the establishment in Pakistan. Sindh wonders why it cannot glorify its
      pre-Islamic heritage, when Firdausi, the national poet of Iran, had
      glorified ancient Iranian heroes and ridiculed the Arabs as barbarians.
      


      Pakistan celebrated the 2,500th anniversary of the
      pre-Islamic Cyrus of Iran for a whole week; why does it not celebrate
      Maharaja Dahir Sen, the pre-Islamic hero of Sindh?


      Dance and music are natural to a normal man. The
      one and only statuette unearthed at Mooanjo-daro is that of a dancing
      girl. Syed thinks that even Kathakali and Manipuri dances originated in
      Sindh. It is stupid, he says, to reject dancing as In-Islamic.

      


      For centuries, Muslim spiritual seekers in Sindh
      went with Yogis and Avadhoots on pilgrimage to Porbandar and Hinglaj. They
      were interested in truth and self-realization, and not in hatred and
      violence. It is stupid to cancel Diwali, Dussehra, Janmashtami, Nanak
      Jayanti and Christmas as holidays in Pakistan.


      Since Pakistan will never allow Sindh --- and NWFP
      and Baluchistan --- to live its own life and come into its own, Pakistan
      has got to go. ``A Sufi Sindh and an Islamic Pakistan cannot coexist, even
      as you can't put two swords in one scabbard. If Pakistan continues, Sindh
      will die. If, therefore, Sindh is to live, Pakistan must die.''

      


      This is not an easy task. There are many cowards
      and collaborators in Sindh. Some of them have married Urdu- wallas --- and
      they even speak Urdu at home. But all is not lost; the unconquerable will
      never to submit or yield, remains. The Sindhi youth are awake. They know
      that if they do not act now, Sindhis will be liquidated like the Red
      Indians in America --- or reduced to the position of Harijans in Hindu
      society. As the Persian adage goes, ``Tang ayad ba jang ayad'' (driven
      into a corner, anybody will fight back). And so will Sindh. A volcano is
      raging underneath the apparent quiet of Sindh.


      The odds are heavy. But Sindh has survived
      invasions of Iranians and Greeks, Arabs and Pathans, Mughals and British.
      It shall overcome. It says to Pakistan:


     

      Aado takar tar,

      matan rooh ratyoon thien.


     

      (Oh you obstructing rock, get lost, or you will be
      smashed to smithereens.)


      It hopes to God for the fall of the establishment:
      


     

      Munhiji, aasa eeha,

      Kadhain keraienday Kot khay.


     

      (I am looking forward to the collapse of that
      fortress.) It is sure that help will come to Sindh if it helps itself:
      


     

      Panehi eendo Hote,

      Aun pin agabhari thiyan.


     

      (My Lord will come; but let me, too, go forward
      --- to meet Him half-way.)


      And so Sindh is looking to Porbandar, the ancient
      spiritual beacon for Sindh --- for ``Ghaibi maddad'' (divine or mysterious
      help).


      The appeal of love, peace, and Vedanta from the
      East is irresistible. Did not Shah Latif himself say:


     

      Purab mariyas,

      Kanh dar diyan danhiri.


     

      (I have been captivated by the East. To whom shall
      I confide this?)


      The Sindhi rejection of Pakistan, as enunciated
      above by G.M. Syed, is total.