Pakistan's Sufis Preach Faith and Ecstasy
The believers in Islamic mysticism embrace a personal approach to their faith and a different outlook on how to run their country’s government
- By Nicholas Schmidle
- Photographs by Aaron Huey
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Perhaps the biggest challenge for the new government is reining in the military's intelligence agencies, particularly the Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI. The Pakistan Peoples Party has long been considered an anti-establishment party, at odds with the agencies. In late July, the PPP-led government announced that it was placing the ISI under the command of the Interior Ministry, wresting it from the army—then days later, under pressure from the military, reversed itself. A uniformed president may symbolize a military dictatorship, but Pakistan's military intelligence agencies, ISI and Military Intelligence (MI), are the true arbiters of power.
In August, I got what I believe was a firsthand indication of the extent of their reach. Two days after Musharraf bid farewell, I began my trip to Sehwan for the urs for Qalandar, along with photographer Aaron Huey; his wife, Kristin; and a translator whom it is best not to name. We had barely left Karachi's city limits when my translator took a phone call from someone claiming to work at the Interior Ministry Secretariat in Karachi. The caller peppered him with questions about me. The translator, sensing something odd, hung up and called the office of a senior bureaucrat in the Interior Ministry. A secretary answered the phone and, when we shared the name and title our caller had given, confirmed what we already suspected: "Neither that person nor that office exists." The secretary added: "It's probably just the [intelligence] agencies."
We continued north on the highway into the heart of Sindh, past water buffaloes soaking in muddy canals and camels resting in the shade of mango trees. About an hour later, my phone rang. The caller ID displayed the same number as the call that had supposedly come from the Interior Ministry Secretariat.
"Hello?"
"Nicholas?"
"Yes."
"I am a reporter from the Daily Express newspaper. I want to meet you to talk about the current political situation. When can we meet? Where are you? I can come right now."
"Can I call you back?" I said, and hung up.
My heart raced. Images of Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter who was kidnapped and beheaded by Islamic militants in Karachi in 2002, flashed through my mind. Pearl's last meeting had been with a terrorist pretending to be a fixer and translator. Many people believe that the Pakistani intelligence agencies were involved in Pearl's killing, as he was researching a possible link between the ISI and a jihadi leader with ties to Richard Reid, the so-called shoe bomber.
My phone rang again. An Associated Press reporter I knew told me that her sources in Karachi said the intelligence agencies were searching for me. I had assumed as much. But what did they want? And why would they request a meeting by pretending to be people who didn't exist?
The car fell silent. My translator made a few calls to senior politicians, bureaucrats and police officers in Sindh. They said they were treating the two phone calls as a kidnapping threat and would provide us with an armed escort for the rest of our trip. Within an hour, two police trucks arrived. In the lead truck, a man armed with a machine gun stood in the bed.
Another phone call, this time from a friend in Islamabad.
"Man, it's good to hear your voice," he said.
"Why?"
"Local TV stations are reporting that you've been kidnapped in Karachi."
Who was planting these stories? And why? With no shortage of conspiracy theories about fatal "car accidents" involving people in the bad graces of the intelligence agencies, I took the planted stories as serious warnings. But the urs beckoned. The four of us collectively decided that since we had traveled halfway around the world to see the shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, we would do our damndest to get there, even if under police protection. After all, we could use Qalandar's blessings.
That evening, as the setting sun burned the color of a Creamsicle as it lit the sugar-cane fields on the horizon, I turned to the translator, hoping to lighten the mood.
"It's really beautiful here," I said.
He nodded, but his eyes stayed glued to the road. "Unfortunately, the fear factor spoils the whole fun of it," he said.
By then we could see buses clogging the highway, red flags flapping in the wind as the drivers raced for Qalandar's shrine. The railway ministry had announced that 13 trains would be diverted from their normal routes to transport worshipers. Some devotees even pedaled bicycles, red flags sticking up from the handlebars. We roared down the road in the company of Kalashnikov-toting police, a caravan of armed pilgrims.
The campsites began appearing about five miles from the shrine. Our car eventually mired in a human bog, so we parked and continued on foot. The alleys leading to the shrine reminded me of a carnival fun house—an overwhelming frenzy of lights, music and aromas. I walked beside a man blowing a snake charmer's flute. Stores lined the alley, with merchants squatting behind piles of pistachios, almonds and rosewater-doused candies. Fluorescent lights glowed like light sabers, directing lost souls to Allah.
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Comments (29)
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Like many other occupation, some people find it a really well earning business.
Be a Fake Sufi and no need to do any thing. But still there are real sufis in this world.
Posted by Abdullah on January 24,2012 | 11:27 PM
To Mr Braven John, Late Salmaan Taseer had nothing to do with sufism and he had never been a sufi.I you read definition of sufi you will know where he stood!
Posted by jogi on August 4,2011 | 11:47 AM
I know very well about Islam and Sufi foundation and its origin. can any body tell me why a Sufi follower killed a Sufi supporter Salmaan Taseer, Governor of Punjab province ?
Posted by Braven John on February 16,2011 | 11:21 AM
read N. Mahfouz's Tales From Our Quarter for anecdotes about sufis---
Posted by Jeff Carpenter on August 13,2010 | 01:29 PM
An interesting glimpse into the spiritual impulse that existed before there was organized religions. It is everywhere, still bubbling up!
Posted by Ted Trujillo on February 28,2009 | 09:33 AM
I find it interesting that 300,000 people showed up for a Sufi event vs. 2,000 for a Taliban event. It's nice to find a news source that exposes an accurate picture of the forces driving people in the world. This article reports that in the Muslim world, love is mobilizing exponentially larger numbers than fear. And I find it important that this article raises the question... in the field that Rumi asks to be meet in, should any path to Love be better than another?
Posted by Eric K on February 26,2009 | 03:12 PM
I just spotted the article today and found it interesting. There is a clunker which says that dancing is central to Sufism. Only some traditional Sufi orders use dance. I also don't think that one can juxtipose Shariat and Tariqat (Sufi path) as two opposing forces but I do think it's accurate to say that Sufis who are Muslim seek to be sensitive to additional messages encoded into the Quran.
Posted by Jerry on February 23,2009 | 01:01 AM
Very good and intereting article. Throughout the years and centuries sufism had been represnting the purity of Islam, the religion of love and peace.
Posted by Rahid Yateem on February 20,2009 | 08:34 AM
Pakistan's Sufis Preach Faith and Ecstasy
The article would have been more convincing if the dancers (except for 1 i could see)had been smiling! Oh, and getting rid of demons is better than drugging them as we do here.
Posted by John Stevens on February 2,2009 | 09:52 AM
Hi Prof. Burnett Carter. It's just that you said "Mahayana Zen Buddhism". But Zen is always a Mahayana vehicle. It's like saying "feline cat".
Posted by jules m. on January 26,2009 | 07:57 AM
I found that the article is quite educational because I learnt through same about "Qalandar" and the meaning hidden behind this name. Another thing I leart was that the song "Dhama Dham Mast Qalandar" is a sufi song and very famous which I used to sing while people of all religion danced happily not knowing the meaning behind this but only for the good tune and drumming that created hot atmosphere.
Posted by DEVDUTT DAVE on January 19,2009 | 09:03 PM
This is a great article. Meher Baba, who proclaimed himself to be the Avatar of the Age and God in human form, had a keen interest in Sufism. He founded a spiritual organization called Sufism Reoriented, which has flourishing branches in Washington, D.C. and Walnut Creek, California. Sufism is thus alive and well in both the East and the West.
Posted by Stephen Church on January 12,2009 | 09:16 AM
A very good article with sufi's and mystic touch.It is important to note here that the Province Sindh has always welcomed people from different communities, faiths, beleifs, convinctions, school of thought and religions. Sindh is truely a centre of all these activities that preach humanity. However I would suggest that the writer of this article should add a paragraph on Transcendentalism. There is a dire need to link Sufism, mysticism and transcendentalism. This unison will help people come closer. Regards Habibullah Pathan
Posted by Habibullah Pathan on January 6,2009 | 07:49 PM
The article on Pakistan's sufis did much justice to real islam which abhors killing and prescribes preaching with love and understanding unlike the angry hues we witness proliferating today. These would not only have been condemned by Muhammad peace be upon him, but its proponents would have had to face expulsion and even war at the hands of the Islamic community! Little does one read about Muhammad and his ways. As for the word LAL used to denote the Qalandar, the same is not the URDU or HINDI for the word/colour RED, but it is spelt with a guttural E after the letter A like LAEL as will be evident from comparing the two words--one in Arabic(LAEL) and the other in URDU/HINDI (LAL). The word means JEWEL and the Qalandar was called just that. If you remove the letter J from the word JEWEL as the same is the Anglicised version for the Hebrew or Arabic word Jewel--you get your answer. Thankyou for the article.
Posted by Walid Ansari on January 5,2009 | 09:28 AM
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