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India-Pakistan
Religious prejudice
2011-11-13
[Dawn] WHILE there can be little doubt that Pakistain`s religious minorities face discrimination, it is possible to read too much into the recent study Connecting the Dots: Education and Religious Discrimination in Pakistain. Sponsored by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, the study concludes that many textbooks foster intolerance against religious minorities, particularly against the Hindu community. As a result of this "teaching discrimination", the likelihood increases that violent religious extremism will continue to grow in the country, weakening religious freedom in the process. Yet given the relatively small scope of the study -- 107 textbooks reviewed, 277 students and teachers from 37 public schools and 226 students and teachers from 19 madressahs interviewed -- it appears too sweeping a definition of teaching practices in thousands of schools and madressahs across the country.

That said, however, the findings should serve as a wake-up call when we consider the many ways in which religious prejudice is implanted in the minds of youngsters. The emphatic conclusion of the study would suggest that fostering religious intolerance through textbooks is a systematic move, underpinned by malicious intent. No doubt, there was much mischief done during Gen Zia`s regime. But in recent years, guidelines have been provided for revising textbooks -- even though we are not sure how far these have been implemented to remove the biases that many books still contain. It is far more likely that the attitudes evident in the books, and testified to by the interviewees, are inadvertent betrayals of a parallel societal prejudice that has seeped into every aspect of public life. Over the years Pak discourse vis-Ã -vis minority communities has grown more discriminatory -- and increasingly violent. The prejudice is to some extent rooted in historical circumstance and its portrayal is stoked by a societal psyche where the perception of the `other` is suspect in the eyes of the majority and exploited by religious turbans. This being the case, Paks need to turn their gaze inwards. It was her compatriots` refusal to drink water offered by a Christian, after all, that led to Aasia Bibi being charged and sentenced for blasphemy.
Posted by:Fred

#3  They simply follow the Saudi education of intolerance.

How many madressahs/Taliban schools are funded by Saudi Arabia?
Posted by: Paul D   2011-11-13 17:59  

#2  Not all of the two million madari students in Pakistan are terrorist in training.

No. But all are clerics in training, and expect well-paying jobs in their field upon graduation. Most will not find employment, and they know nothing that will enable them to turn their hand to anything more complicated than grubbing out stones or digging ditches.
Posted by: trailing wife   2011-11-13 13:21  

#1  Madrassas in Pakistan

Not all of the two million madari students in Pakistan are terrorist in training. But I would ask some pointed questions about those jihadi factories religious seminaries that teach Salafist jihadism ....

Posted by: Mike Ramsey   2011-11-13 10:49  

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