Qazi sahib welcomed jihadists from Sudan, Chechnya and Bosnia, and he did fundraising tours for such transnational jihadist missions
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Somewhere in the early 1980s I walked into the Markazi Urdu Board
Library in Seokarno Square, Peshawar. I was there to see the librarian,
Maulana Fazle Ma’bood, a family friend, neighbour, and the local emir of
the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI). Between his usual white dastaar (headgear)
and his flowing white beard was the omnipresent smile. But the man he
was talking to had a stern look, which along with his dark Qaraqul
(Jinnah) cap and a grey beard, made him look almost angry. I barely
caught the name: Qazi sahib.
I was looking for a book by the JI
founder Syed Abul Ala Maududi, which the always kind Maulana Ma’bood
plucked from a shelf full of the prolific author’s works and handed over
to me. As I stepped down and out of the staircase, I saw Qazi sahib
walking towards a medical and radiology business concern, which they
owned, just steps away from the library. I did not know then that this
stern-looking but unassuming man would go on to become the third emir of
the JI and, more importantly, the patriarch of transnational jihadism.
He was Qazi Hussain Ahmad.
Qazi sahib was born in 1938 in the
Kaka sahib village, Nowshera, in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. He was named Husain
Ahmad after the then president of the Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind (JuH),
Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani, by his father Maulana Qazi Abdur Rabb
sahib, who was the JuH’s provincial president. It is not known if Qazi
Hussain Ahmad received any formal religious education other than the
initial instruction from his father. He did his masters in Geography
from the Peshawar University and around the same time enlisted in the
student wing of the JI, the Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba (IJT, or simply
Jamiat) and then jumped through the mandatory hoops to become a JI
member, eventually holding various leadership positions.
In late
1987, I joined the Khyber Medical College (KMC). One morning, we walked
into the college and saw banners going up and boys and girls protesting.
It turned out that the KMC Jamiat unit had fired upon a farewell party
for the outgoing final year class, beaten several students to pulp, and
ransacked the hall. The ‘decadent infidels’ had been vanquished. Jamiat
violence on campus was nothing new, but what was interesting was that
several IJT members would go missing from college for months on end. It
later emerged that the Jamiat boys from the university were being
dispatched to Afghanistan for jihad alongside the Mujahideen there.
Recruitment and indoctrination sessions were going on in the university
hostels. At least two of the Jamiat Nazims (presidents) from the KMC
fought in Khost in that period. The war against the Soviets was raging;
the Pashtuns were needed as cannon fodder and the JI decided to get a
Pashtun face at the top. Qazi Hussain Ahmad was ‘elected’ the
Jamaat-e-Islami’s emir that year.
One can disagree with Syed
Maududi on political and doctrinal issues, but many concede that his
intellect and scholarship remain beyond reproach. Even the late Mian
Tufail Muhammad had a fabulously nuanced Urdu translation of Data Ganj
Bakhsh’s Sufi masterpiece Kashf-ul-Mahjub under his belt. Qazi Hussain
Ahmad could hardly claim a booklet to his credit and unlike the seasoned
parliamentarian Professor Ghafoor Ahmed, whom he bypassed for the top slot,
Qazi sahib was just a junior senator, having been appointed to the
upper house under the military dictator Ziaul Haq in 1986. But he had
what others did not: deep ties with the Afghan Ikhwani jihadists. He
wrote: “From 1973 to 1977 I toured Afghanistan five times through
different channels and it was due to these contacts that Burhanuddin
Rabbani, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Maulvi Younas Khalis and their associates
moved to Pakistan (to wage jihad)...many Arab Mujahideen came to
Pakistan in the guise of clergy or businessmen of whom one was Osama bin
Laden...after the fall of the USSR the world became unipolar and Osama
bin Laden decided to shatter this myth.”
This newspaper was to
later record in its March 20, 2006 editorial that Qazi sahib had
admitted that bin Laden had met him several times, including at the JI
headquarters at Mansoora, and was a great supporter of the rightwing
alliance IJI. Most of us from Peshawar recall the JI and Hekmatyar’s
Hizb-e-Islami being joined at the hip and Qazi sahib and Hekmatyar
holding joint public meetings there. After the fall of Khost (though not
to Gulbuddin) Qazi sahib was the second Pakistani leader to drive
there, the other one being General Asad Durrani. When the Mujahideen
infighting started, the Pakistani security establishment tapped Qazi
sahib’s good offices to mediate between Ahmad Shah Massoud and
Hekmatyar. But what is less known is that Iran also asked Qazi sahib to
facilitate this truce. It is believed that after the US attack on
Afghanistan, Qazi sahib may have helped Hekmatyar get sanctuary in Iran.
Afghanistan was not the only front that the JI operated on under Qazi
sahib. Amir-ul-Azeem was given charge of coordinating jihad in Kashmir.
Similarly, Qazi sahib welcomed jihadists from Sudan, Chechnya and
Bosnia, and he did fundraising tours for such transnational jihadist
missions.
Qazi Hussain Ahmed remained a parliamentarian under two
military dictators but constitutional or theological pursuits were not
quite his forte. Having been expelled from the then State of Swat, where
he was a Geography lecturer at the Jehanzeb College, by the Wali
(ruler) for subversive activities, Qazi sahib remained wedded to a life
of protest, under state patronage that is. He quit the Senate in 1996
and published a 35-page roadmap called The Pakistan We Want. The
pamphlet — chockfull of generics — is not even a pale shadow of the
topnotch volumes Syed Maududi had produced. Qazi sahib was an abject
failure in his long marches and populist agitation as inside parliament.
I met him last during the botched APDM movement.
Jamaat-e-Islami
became intellectually poorer under his leadership and also ceded
domestic political turf to the Deobandi and Salafi upstarts. It is
unlikely that the JI will regain it position as the preeminent urban
religio-political force in Pakistan. Stoking the fire of civil wars in
Afghanistan and beyond, which eventually spilled over into Pakistan,
would perhaps remain his greatest legacy. But even on these grounds more
rigid and fierce jihadists are steadily outmanoeuvring the JI. Qazi
Hussain Ahmad the patriarch of the transnational jihadists died on
January 6, 2012: Surely to God we belong and to Him shall we return.
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By Dr Mohammad Taqi
Daily Times
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