A mob reacts in Joseph Colony | Arif Ali, White Star
One reason why the attack on Joseph Colony caught its residents and Christians living in other neighbourhoods in Lahore by surprise was the fact that the city had never before experienced such an attack. Non-Muslims living in Lahore may have always felt left out socially, economically and politically but their residential areas have never been targeted in the past, says Michael.
The other reason for their surprise was that the whole incident started as a personal squabble, and had nothing to do with religion, between Saawan and Shahid Imran, his Muslim friend who lives in Sheikhabad and works as a barber. The two had been friends for almost a decade. Many residents of both Joseph Colony and Sheikhabad remember how close Saawan and Imran once were. Saawan was often a guest at Imran’s house, says Humeira Iqtidar, a teacher at the Kings College London who spent many weeks many weeks in the two neighbourhoods to understand the local dynamics. Shaheen Tariq (also known as Aunty in Joseph Colony) confirms Iqtidar’s statement: “Saawan and Imran were not just ordinary friends. They shared a deep relationship,” she says. “You don’t drink together every night if you don’t enjoy each other’s company,” she adds.
Tariq has lived in Joseph Colony all her life and has been running the Tariq Karyana Store, a grocery shop there for more than a decade. She recounts how Imran and Saawan would often crack crude jokes while purchasing snacks from her. “All friendships have room for jokes and Imran and Saawan’s friendship was no different,” she says but adds that she always warned them to be careful because jokes could easily be misconstrued. The two young men always told her not to worry.
Tariq’s shop is just two shops away from Saawan’s house. From that vantage, she has seen the initial stages of the attack unfold in front of her eyes. First there were only three boys, all from Sheikhabad, who came there and began challenging Saawan to come out of his house and “face the consequences of his actions”, is how she describes the start of the events of that day back in March. Soon the crowd outside the house started growing bigger by the minute, and scores of people started cursing Saawan and his family, she adds.
Tariq’s shop had never been busier and, at least initially, she was delighted to see her sales grow even though she was feeling a little uneasy about the commotion. Out of curiosity, she started asking her customers as to why there was so much screaming, shouting and name calling. They told her that Saawan had made fun of Islam. Among the mob outside in front of her shop she could spot Ghazali Butt, a PMLN leader, and Asad Ashraf, a former member of the Punjab Assembly, along with many men in green turbans. Their presence was reassuring for her. “These are influential people; they will control the crowd and everything will fizzle out,” she recalls telling herself. But the crowd pulled out Saawan’s billiard table to set it alight. She saw two young men purchasing petrol from a nearby shop for the purpose.
By that time, people inside her own house had started panicking. When she tried to dismiss her daughter’s pleas to close down the shop and run away, the girl yelled: “They are not thinking straight. They will break your head if you don’t shut down the shop.” It was at this moment that Tariq’s eye caught a glimpse of the fire being lit just a stone’s throw away from her shop. She pulled down the shutters, grabbed as much money as she could from the cash counter and ran inside her house. Little did she know that those 8,000 rupees would be the only thing she could save from her shop. Though the police managed to disperse the crowd that day, most residents of Joseph Colony knew the worst was yet to come.
The number of targeted killings of non-Muslims rose from 26 in 2011 to36 in 2012. In the last year, 23 victims were Christians and 13 wereHindus. Source: NCJP
According to the Human Rights Watch, an international organisation that conducts research and advocacy on human rights, living condition for Pakistan’s non-Muslims have drastically deteriorated. Moreover, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom stated in its 2012 report that Pakistan has been a “country of particular concern” since 2002 as far as the state of its non-Muslim citizens is concerned. Many in Pakistan, including some members of the non-Muslim communities, still want to believe that the situation is not as bad as it is made out to be.
A large part of this denial stems from the efforts of the state and the elected politicians to hide, rather than improve, the situation. This is exactly what is happening as far as the abduction and conversion of Hindu girls in different parts of Sindh is concerned. In the last half a decade, the incidents of abduction and conversion have risen alarmingly. Official data shows that the number of these incidents has decreased recently though Ravi Davani, the secretary general of All Pakistan Hindu Panchayat, claims that the lower incidence is because there is pressure to stop their reporting.
“Firstly, families of the girls now hardly approach the police. Even if they do, the policemen promise help only if the family remains silent,” he says. “The policemen in turn are pressurised by the locally influential landlords to keep the incident under wraps; the landlords are told to do the same by the elected representative of the area,” he adds.
“No one wants these incidents to get out anymore. They are too embarrassing for the country.”
The government’s eagerness to keep the incidents of violence and discrimination against non-Muslim Pakistanis a secret is resulting in what Davani sees as religious blackmailing. He recounts how seven Hindu families are residing inside the Shri Laxmi Narain temple – located inside Karachi’ Native Jetty right next to the newly built Port Grande shopping, eating out and recreational area -- in sheer violation of religious edicts but refuse to leave, claiming discrimination and persecution. “How can anyone produce and raise children in a sacred place?” Davani angrily asks. They eat meat in there; they have built toilets in a 200-year-old place of worship,” he complains.
Davani says that the families shifted inside the temple soon after the destruction of Babri Masjid in India. Bhagwandas Chawla, the then secretary general of the All Pakistan Hindu Panchayat decided that the temple needed a caretaker to avoid its demolition in the aftermath of the mosque’s razing in India which prompted tit for tat attacks on Hindu places of worship across Pakistan. He appointed Dassa Ram to take care of the temple but soon Dassa Ram’s entire family moved into the temple, followed by some other poor Hindu families who did not have a place to live. Whenever the officials of All Pakistan Hindu Panchayat try to shift them out of the temple, they rush to the media, complaining that their place of worship and their homes are being taken over.
“These land grabbers use the fact that they belong to the Hindu community to their advantage,” says Davani. “If you tell all the media houses that you are being discriminated against because of your religion, people will, of course have sympathy for you.”
Dassa Ram’s descendents, in fact, have filed a court case against Davani and Bhagwandas Chawla’s son Mukesh Chawla who is a minister in Sindh cabinet. “They just want the land for the construction of hotels,” says Bhaani, Dassa Ram’s wife. The stalemate will continue until the court decides the case.