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Showing posts with label Ejaz Haider. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ejaz Haider. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

That Girl In Swat: Ideological Struggle is the Key, Radical Islamism and Jihad, NewAgeIslam.com

Radical Islamism and Jihad
That Girl In Swat: Ideological Struggle is the Key
By Ejaz Haider
Dec 26, 2009

Faiza Khan is my metaphor for Swat’s future. And if I am right, turning Swat around post-military operation should not be difficult.

I was standing in the open quad of the Government High School for Girls in Mingora, my crew setting up cameras for the shoot there, and I could see girls peering through the windows of the classrooms all around. Getting there was not easy. I had to earlier meet with the district’s education officer to get his permission. There were two problems: schools have armed police guards throughout the area and, in this particular case, cultural sensitivities were involved.

“You cannot move freely,” the principal told my producer, a young woman who was my only hope to get through the cultural shackles. With the weight of the education officer’s permission behind me and a lot of persuasion, I was told I would get limited access to a group but only after the girls had themselves covered properly. They were told to stay inside the classrooms while we set up the cameras, and yes, to keep their heads down.

Curiosity and their vigour to challenge the principal’s order came to my rescue. I could see them looking out, faces uncovered and exhibiting the artless freedom that comes natural to young women. And then one of the doors opened; I heard giggles; some girls were trying to push another out of the classroom.

http://newageislam.com/that-girl-in-swat--ideological-struggle-is-the-key/radical-islamism-and-jihad/d/2281


Sunday, June 3, 2012

Advice to Al-Qaeda: Keep it real, Radical Islamism and Jihad, NewAgeIslam.com

Radical Islamism and Jihad
Advice to Al-Qaeda: Keep it real
Ejaz Haider
August 17, 2008

Mark Twain it was who said “Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn’t”. Bacon quoted a jesting Pontius Pilate as asking “What is truth?” and without staying for an answer ordered Christ to be put on the cross. Even truth, it seems, is nothing absolute, though Bacon must have made up the story like the lazy reporter who doesn’t venture out and writes desk stories that cannot be verified.

Leaving that aside, however, how about substituting truth with life in Twain’s statement? Life too, without fiction’s controlled, select treatment and the writer’s deft handling of the plot, is not obliged to stick to possibilities. But perhaps I am wrong. When infused with the literalism of faith, life can begin to lose its myriad possibilities, even its colour, slithering instead through select grooves.

One report tells me that Al Qaeda in Iraq’s Sunni belt may be losing popularity because of “imposing their way of thought on the most mundane aspects of everyday life”.

http://newageislam.com/advice-to-al-qaeda--keep-it-real-/radical-islamism-and-jihad/d/576