PAKISTANI
MADRASAS: QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
by
B.Raman
What are madrasas?
Madrasas are Islamic religious seminaries, which were
originally meant to train young persons, who wanted to take
to religion as a profession. They wanted to work as clerics
in mosques and as members of the staff in Islamic
charitable institutions. In view of the limited career
opportunities open to the students of the madrasas, only
those who were keen to become religious clerics joined them.
Till 1977, the number of madrasas in Pakistan was therefore,
very small. There were only 244 madrasas in Pakistan in the
1950s. This number went up to about 500 in the 1960s and
about 700 in the early 1970s. The military regime of the
late Gen. Zia-ul-Haq (1977-1988) saw a mushrooming growth of
the madrasas.
What were the reasons for this mushrooming growth?
Firstly, Zia allowed the Government Departments and the
Armed Forces to recruit madrasa graduates to lower posts.
This tremendously expanded the career opportunities
available to the products of the madrasas. Secondly, Zia, a
devout Deobandi, was attracted by Wahabism. He
permitted a large flow of money from Saudi Arabia for
starting madrasas to spread the Deoband-Wahabi ideology.
Thirdly, Zia's military regime saw a decline in public
investments in the social sector, particularly in education.
As a result, in many rural areas, the only affordable
schools available to the poor people were the madrasas.
Fourthly, helped by the Saudi money, the madrasas started
providing free boarding and lodging to their students. Many
poor parents chose to send their children to the madrasas.
This spared them the responsibility of finding money
for their upbringing. The radicalisation of the madrasas was
a post-1980 phenomenon.
What were the reasons for the post-1980 radicalisation of
the madrasas?
Firstly, the Afghan jihad against the Soviet troops. The
intelligence agencies of the US, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan
used the madrasas for radicalising the Muslim youth and
motivating them to join the Afghan Mujahideen in their jihad
against the Soviet troops. The Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) got a number of text books prepared with
the help of Wahabi clerics of Saudi Arabia projecting
Communism as anti-Islam and calling for jihad against the
Communist evil in Afghanistan, had them printed in printing
presses in the US and distributed to the madrasas.
According to Mr.Ishtiaq Ahmed, Associate Professor of
political science at the Stockholm University: "The
joint CIA-Saudi initiative resulted in a proliferation of
madrasas, regardless of the genuine need for maulvis. Thanks
to the CIA’s 51 million US dollar grant to the University
of Nebraska to produce pictorial textbooks glorifying jihad,
killing, maiming and bombing other human beings was made
sufficiently entertaining. Sadism could now be cultivated as
a virtue. That was when madrasa doors were opened to the
mass of the poor. The new “education” they received was
to hate the Russians, later generalised to include any
non-Muslim. Jews, Hindus and Christians figured prominently
and out of it came the expression of a Yahud-Hunud-Nasara
conspiracy against Islam. The phrase had never existed
previously, but because of its Arabic sounds, it went
readily to the hearts and minds of the Islamists. The
Buddhists did not fit into the Yahud-Hunud-Nasara formula.
But the Taliban by destroying the Buddha statues at Bamiyan
indicated that even Buddhists were against Islam and
therefore their symbolic presence in Islamic Afghanistan had
to be annihilated." The text-books prepared at the
instance of the CIA taught the students that it was their
religious obligation to wage a jihad against the Soviets and
their stooges. The same text-books are now being used after
appropriate revisions to tell the students of their
religious obligation to kill the Americans and their
stooges. Secondly, Zia's concerns over the impact of the
Iranian Islamic Revolution of 1979 on the loyalty of the
Shias of Pakistan. He encouraged the madrasas controlled by
the Sunnis to include in their teachings the need to counter
the Shia assertiveness.
What was the role of the madrasas in Afghanistan?
Nearly 3,000 students of the madrasas joined Gulbuddin
Heckmatyar's Hizbe Islami and fought against the Soviet
troops. In April,1992, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
asked the madrasas controlled by the religious
fundamentalist organisations to declare a vacation to enable
the students to join the Afghan Mujahideen in their final
assault on Kabul, which led to the collapse of the
Najibullah Government. The ISI issued them arms and
ammunition at the border before they crossed over into
Afghanistan. Similarly, in September ,1996. the ISI asked
these madrasas to declare a vacation to enable their
students to assist the Taliban in its final assault on
Kabul. They came back to the madrasas and resumed their
studies after the Taliban had captured Kabul. The Taliban
was and continues to be made up of the products of the
madrasas, Afghans as well as Pakistanis.
What has been the role of the madrasas in the spread of
jihadi terrorism in and from Pakistan?
All the leaders and cadres of the Sunni extremist
Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) and the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ)
and the Shia extremist Siph Mohammad, almost all the leaders
of the Taliban and over 90 per cent of its cadres and over
70 per cent of the leaders and cadres of the
Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM), the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI),
the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM), and the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET)
are products of the madrasas. However, less than 15
per cent of the members of the Al Qaeda are madrasa
products. No leader of the Al Qaeda is known to have
been a madrasa product.
What has been the role of the madrasas in the spread of
jihadi terrorism to other countries?
The madrasa products of the HUM, the HUJI, the JEM and the
LET play an active role in jihadi terrorism directed against
India. All of them are Pakistani and not Indian nationals. A
large number of foreign Muslims come to the madrasas to be
qualified as religious clerics. The largest number of
foreign students in the Pakistani madrasas are
Afghans---from inside Afghanistan as well as from the Afghan
refugee camps in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and
Balochistan. The second largest number are from South-East
Asia, mainly from Malaysia, Thailand, Myanmar and Indonesia.
The third largest number are from the Central Asian
Republics (CARs), mainly from Uzbekistan, and the Chechen
province of Russia and the Xinjiang region of China..The
fourth largest number are from the Muslim communities
in West Europe and North America. Of these, Pakistanis and
persons of Pakistani origin constitute the maximum. The
fifth largest group is from countries such as
Yemen, Somalia, Bangladesh, Tanzania, and Australia.
Presently, next to the Afghans, the Thais constitute the
second largest number of persons enrolled in the madrasas,
mainly of Karachi. Uzbeks constitute the third largest
number, in terms of individual nationalities. Not all
madrasa students go back to their respective countries as
motivated jihadi terrorists. But all go back as
Western-haters. Many of these Western-haters ultimately
function as clerics in the mosques of their countries and
use their position to preach hatred against the West,
against the US in particular. Often, jihadi terrorists are
made not in the madrasas, but in the mosques headed by
clerics who had studied in the madrasas of Pakistan. Saudi
religious organisations use the madrasas of Pakistan for
spreading Wahabism to the Muslims of other countries and for
the Arabisation of the Muslims of South-East Asia, who are
viewed as soft because of the influence of the Indian
culture and the Hindu religion on them. In its election
manifesto for the October,2002, elections to the Pakistan
National Assembly, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), the
six-party fundamentalist coalition, had stated that if it
came to power it would assist the jihad being waged by the
people of the Southern Philippines, the Arakan area of
Myanmar, the Jammu & Kashmir area of India, Palestine
and the Chechen area of Russia. They have since included
Southern Thailand also in the list of countries where
Muslims are waging a jihad and whom they would assist. It is
believed that the command and control of the jihad in
Southern Thailand is now located in Karachi. In an editorial
published on August 4,2005, the "Daily Times", the
prestigious newspaper of Lahore, wrote: "To our shame,
nearly 1,200 religious schools under one organisation in
Karachi alone are “teaching” all sorts of refugees from
Southeast Asia, including those from Thailand, many of whom
have been returning home to raise the flag of a futile
Islamic revolt."
What has been the role of the Pakistani madrasas in the
radicalisation of the Muslim youth of Pakistani origin in
West Europe and North America?
The Muslim youth of Pakistani origin studying in the
madrasas of Pakistan fall into two categories---those who
are sent by their parents in order to dilute the Western
cultural influence on them and those, who come on their own
in order to contribute to the cause of their religion. Some
of them are already strongly anti-West before joining the
madrasas and some become anti-West during their stay
in the madrasas. In the last 20 years, there has been a
steady increase in the number of Pakistanis, who have
migrated to the West and in the number of mosques, which
have come up in the West to cater to their religious needs.
Since there are not many madrasas in the Western countries
to produce qualified clerics to man these mosques, the
Western Governments liberally issue medium and long-term
visas to qualified clerics from Pakistan to come to the West
and work in these mosques. Almost all of them are
hate-mongers and use their position to spread hatred against
the West to the religious congregation.
How are foreigners admitted or recruited to these
madrasas?
Sometimes, foreign students directly apply. Sometimes, they
are recruited by the preaching missions of the Tablighi
Jamaat (TJ), which visit these countries and then they are
helped to join the madrasas, with offers of scholarships.
When foreign students apply for a visa to come to Pakistan,
they are expected to produce a no objection certificate from
their Governments. Many circumvent this requirement by
coming to Pakistan on tourist visas, joining the madrasas
and then getting their visas extended with the help of the
madrasa authorities. Those, who came on a tourist visa and
manage to stay on, constitute the largest group. Their
Governments are often not aware of their enrolling
themselves in the madrasas. After the arrest of the brother
of Hambali, the operational chief of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI),
and some other Indonesians and Malaysians from madrasas of
Karachi controlled by the LET and their deportation in 2003,
the Pakistani authorities had issued instructions to tighten
up admissions to the madrasas and to prevent persons
with tourist visas from joining the madrasas. These
instructions have been observed more in their breach.
What kind of courses are run in the madrasas?
There are two kinds of courses.The certificate issued at the
end of the first course is treated as the equivalent
of the School-Leaving Certificate and the certificate issued
at the end of the second course is treated as
the equivalent of a university degree. Before
Gen.Pervez Musharraf came to power, this equivalence was
valid only for recruitment to Government jobs. In 2002, he
modified the electoral laws of the country and laid down
that only persons holding at least a School-Leaving
Certificate can contest elections to the local bodies and
that only persons holding at least a university degree can
contest elections to the provincial and National Assemblies.
He made this equivalence valid even for election
purposes in order to favour the candidates of the religious
parties over those of the Pakistan People's Party
Parliamentarians of Mrs.Benazir Bhutto and the Pakistan
Muslim League of Mr.Nawaz Sharif. As a result, a large
number of products of the madrasas, who had never had any
general education, managed to get into the local bodies
councils and into the provincial and National Assemblies.
Many non-religious political leaders were weeded out of the
political process on the ground that they were not
graduates. Recently, he has abolished this equivalence in
respect of the elections to the local bodies by laying down
that a product of a madrasa cannot contest the elections
unless he or she has also done, in addition to the madrasa
course, a general education course in English, Urdu
and Pakistan studies. The madrasas mostly teach Arabic and
not Urdu. Nine students of madrasas challenged this order
in the court of Chief Justice Iftikhar Husain Chaudhry of
the Lahore High Court. On August 3,2005, the court upheld
the order and dismissed the petitions. Does this mean that
the equivalence would no longer apply even to the elections
to the provincial and National Assemblies and for
recruitment to Government jobs? Possibly so, but the
position is not yet clear.
What kind of training is given in the madrasas?
Eighty-per cent of the madrasas, which are not controlled by
the fundamentalist organisations, mostly give religious
education and no military training. Some of them even teach
general subjects such as English, Urdu, Pakistani history,
general science and even computer science. Those controlled
by fundamentalist and jihadi terrorist organisations, which
constitute about 20 per cent of the total, impart
religious education plus basic military training with the
help of ex-servicemen. Even they do not impart any terrorist
training in subjects such as fabrication of explosives,
assembling an improvised explosive device (IEDs), hijacking
an aircraft etc. Such jihadi terrorist training are given in
separate training centres, which are more often than not
located away from the madrasas, though instances of the
madrasas and the jihadi terrorist training centres
being located within the same premises are not unknown as in
the case of the LET.Only those students of the madrasas, who
volunteer for jihadi terrorist training, are sent to these
training centres. Hence, not every madrasa product is a
potential jihadi terrorist, but every product of these
training centres is a potential terrorist.
It has been reported that two of the perpetrators of the
London explosions of July 7,2005, had visited the madrasas
of the LET and the JEM? Could they have undergone any
training course there?
Not necessarily. Many foreign Muslims with extremist views
visiting Pakistan prefer to stay in the hostels and the
guest houses of the madrasas because boarding and lodging
are free and they are not subject to police surveillance
during their stay there. Thousands of foreign Muslims
attending the annual congregation of the Tablighi Jamaat
stay in the hostels and guest houses of the madrasas. Before
1996, during his visits to Pakistan, Osama bin Laden used to
stay in the guest house of the LET at Muridke, near Lahore.
Just because a foreign Muslim visited a madrasa or stayed in
its hostel does not necessarily mean that he underwent a
training course there.
How many madrasas are there in Pakistan presently?
According to official figures of the Government of Pakistan,
there are presently 11,221 madrasas in the country.Of
these, 6,148 have been registered with the provincial
governments under the Society Act 1860. The remaining
5,073 have refused to register themselves. According to
unofficial figures, there are nearly over 20,000 madrasas.
According to Mr.Ijazul Haq, Minister for Religious Affairs,
who is the son of the late Zia, 8,000 madrasas were being
run by Deobandi organisations, 1800 by Barelvi organisations,
400 by Alh-i-Hadees organisations, 382 by Shia organisations
and 1,200 by the Jamaat-e-Islami (JEI), the leading party of
the MMA coalition. The total of the approximate figures
(11,782) given by him slightly exceeds the total number of
11,221 given above. Eighty per cent of the total madrasas
are run by different religious organisations with funds
received from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait . The remaining are
run by different fundamentalist and jihadi terrorist
organisations, with funds from Saudi Arabia. Some of them
such as those controlled by the HUM, the HUJI, the JEM and
the LET also receive funds from the ISI.
What action has the Pakistan Government taken against the
madrasas?
Successive Pakistan Governments since the days of
Mrs.Benazir Bhutto have been concerned over the uncontrolled
and uncontrollable activities of the madrasas. These
madrasas, particularly those controlled by Deobandi
organisations, not only spread anti-Western hatred,
but also anti-Shia hatred. Madrasa products have been
involved in almost all sectarian terrorist incidents in
Pakistan. After 9/11, under American pressure, Musharraf
announced a number of measures against the jihadi terrorist
organisations and the madrasas. He banned many of these
organisations, arrested their leaders and cadres, ostensibly
froze their bank accounts, stopped their fund collection
drive and issued an ordnance for the compulsory registration
of the madrasas, which might have given the Government some
control over their curriculum. Subsequently, under pressure
from the MMA, which opposed the legitimisation of his
election as the President in a referendum and of the
various powers assumed by him through ordinances, he held in
abeyance the implementation of these measures. The jihadi
terrorist organisations banned by him started operating
under new names with new bank accounts and no action was
taken against them. Their arrested leaders and cadres were
released on the ground that there was no evidence of
involvement in terrorism against them. No action was taken
against the madrasas, which refused to register
themselves. After the London explosions, he has again
recycled the unimplemented orders of 2002 and
re-enacted---for the third time since 9/11--- the charade of
strong action against terrorist organisations and their
infrastructure in Pakistani territory. He has ordered the
police to act against the terrorist organisations, under
whatever name they may be operating, arrest their leaders
and cadres and stop their fund collection. He has also
ordered all the unregistered madrasas to register themselves
by December 31,2005, and asked the Government to expel all
foreign students in madrasas. The madrasas have already
announced that they would defy his orders. He has told
foreign correspondents that he could not implement his
previous two crack-downs strictly due to fears of a backlash
and has promised that this time he meant business and would
act firmly to put down terrorism from the Pakistani
territory. The proof of the pudding will be in the eating.
What are the options before the international community
and the Western governments?
To make it clear to Musharraf that continued economic
and other assistance to Pakistan would depend on his
implementing his promises this time and to free the mosques
in the West frequented by residents of Pakistani origin of
their present dependence on imported clerics from
Pakistan for running them.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai,
and Distinguished Fellow and Convenor, Observer Research
Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter. Email: itschen36@gmail.com
)