Social hypocrisy

September 17, 2009 § 6 Comments

Realization is a painful bearing – however, it’s also the one which delivers reality from myth and reason from mere speculation. Not only that, it’s the precedent of change – an essential ingredient to convert status quo. Unless the conceived perceptions of a status quo are falsified through the recognition of their futility and the fake facets upon which the entire structure of such deluded notions rests, it can’t be posed a serious threat to. And that’s how realization, albeit a painful bearing and at times striking as a staggering reality and fringing upon disbelief and obscenity in the light of current system, becomes essential to identify the root causes of a problem and chief factor in resolving it.
However, that’s no mean job. To challenge an established truth is to deny the authenticity of the entire system that contains it and profits through it. It becomes all the more difficult for an individual especially when the individual is brought up in the very system, with the fabricated truths vested within the streaks of his conscience right from the start. Yet, reason and rationality are the key elements to stand reality from falsity – and it’s through this that one can, at any point of the journey, pause for a moment and sift through his ideas and look verity from fiction.
Our society is no exception to the above-mentioned rule. Many versions of truths have been released, over time, by the state machinery of our nation and they keep evolving, changing and sometimes moving in a diametrically opposite direction than their former self. To a common individual who’s a part of the society, the first version comes off the textbooks – the state’s chief tool of modeling minds. To take a bird’s eye view, the chief notions a student’s mind collects from such books are fairly clear and general: that India is our greatest enemy, that Pakistan is the most exalted nation, that our neighbor has been hell bent upon destroying us since ever, that Indian army always sneaks up at Pakistan at night and Pakistan is able to defeat them in broad daylight with a mere fraction of equipment as compared to them and finally, that being Muslim makes us the most pious of all beings.
And it’s in connotation to such academic basis that we are able to shape such ‘intellectuals’ and ‘scholars’ who have an expertise in identifying the ‘conspiracies’ of nearly all non-Muslim nations around the globe – all bent upon harming Muslims in general and Pakistan in particular. And that, as a result, brings frequent releases of uncovered ‘secret’ Jewish/Hindu/Freemasons meetings, societies, plans and conspiracies aimed at destroying us. While that gives one good food for a non-fiction joke and musings in idle time, that’s very contrary to the productive mode of thought for dwelling in the Orwellian delusions, those myths of insecurity, resistance, conspiracy etc. leaving no space for a rational understanding of the things.
To cite an example, the common practice around our nation is to denounce Amreeka most enthusiastically. While that barely does anything to Amreeka itself, that does however, stop us from viewing out wrongs. We are so invested in identifying other’s mistakes and wrongs and so content with self-contained exaltations of piety that we fail to look at the dishonesty, corruption, falsity and other traits that have become a permanent part of this pious, Muslim nation. We miserably fail to see that while the bloody kafirs stick to all good traits that a being may posses, those of truthfulness, honesty etc, we are terribly bad at work ethics, absolutely undeserving to do business with, in light of our repute as cheaters, and have the general temper of losers. We are no success at science and technology and a shame to the religion we love to associate ourselves with.
Coming to India, while a smooth democratic system continues and prospers there and it becomes one of the fastest growing economies, we earn the position of a failed state in the eyes of the world – not because of the so-called conspiracies set up against us, not at all, but entirely because of our refusal to see how wrong we are in thinking us right and how wrong, indeed, in failing to identify the drawbacks we contain and failing to remove them. As a nation, it’s our favorite hobby to deny anything that concerns us and to keep our cannons too busy firing at others to realize the black that’s seeping through our hearts.
One may pause for an instant and think: how good it would have been had Pakistan and India been enjoying great relations, having economic ties and strategic partnership – that necessarily would have profited both and would’ve made the region a prosperous one, possibly a developed region in near-future. But the state of denial on our part never let the opportunity be. I’m not disputing India’s lack of readiness for such measures but that certainly does not exempt us of an equally radical take on the issue for decades.
Coming to the facet of piety, a general outlook of our society reveals it to be a very religious one – with mosques springing up in every other street and madressahs set everywhere, an apparent view makes one believe that ours is a society which is a strict adherent of a religion and a follower of it – the practical demonstration, however, reveals the quite contrary. While the religiosity is an ever-increasing part of our society, it comes in inverse proportion to the traits of honesty and morality. The basic traits of goodness only decline in face of this religiosity.
It’s an acute state of denial mixed with arrogant ignorance and hypocrisy that wouldn’t let time deliver us to rational grounds. Unless we finally except that as a nation, we have receded along moral decadence down to the lowest level and as adherent of a religion, we are a shame to that religion itself, we can’t evolve into a better nation. Unless we realize the hypocrisy that has been deployed on our part to all the issues we’ve faced, we can’t shun it and face the bitter truth. And without that, we can’t progress for change only succeeds realization.
Realization is a painful bearing – however, it’s also the one which delivers reality from myth and reason from mere speculation. Not only that, it’s the precedent of change – an essential ingredient to convert status quo. Unless the conceived perceptions of a status quo are falsified through the recognition of their futility and the fake facets upon which the entire structure of such deluded notions rests, it can’t be posed a serious threat to.
And that’s how realization, albeit a painful bearing and at times striking as a staggering reality and fringing upon disbelief and obscenity in the light of current system, becomes essential to identify the root causes of a problem and chief factor in resolving it.
However, that’s no mean job. To challenge an established truth is to deny the authenticity of the entire system that contains it and profits through it. It becomes all the more difficult for an individual especially when the individual is brought up in the very system, with the fabricated truths vested within the streaks of his conscience right from the start. Yet, reason and rationality are the key elements to stand reality from falsity – and it’s through this that one can, at any point of the journey, pause for a moment and sift through his ideas and look verity from fiction.
Our society is no exception to the above-mentioned rule. Many versions of truths have been released, over time, by the state machinery of our nation and they keep evolving, changing and sometimes moving in a diametrically opposite direction than their former self. To a common individual who’s a part of the society, the first version comes off the textbooks – the state’s chief tool of modeling minds. To take a bird’s eye view, the chief notions a student’s mind collects from such books are fairly clear and general: that India is our greatest enemy, that Pakistan is the most exalted nation, that our neighbor has been hell bent upon destroying us since ever, that Indian army always sneaks up at Pakistan at night and Pakistan is able to defeat them in broad daylight with a mere fraction of equipment as compared to them and finally, that being Muslim makes us the most pious of all beings.
And it’s in connotation to such academic basis that we are able to shape such ‘intellectuals’ and ‘scholars’ who have an expertise in identifying the ‘conspiracies’ of nearly all non-Muslim nations around the globe – all bent upon harming Muslims in general and Pakistan in particular. And that, as a result, brings frequent releases of uncovered ‘secret’  Jewish/Hindu/Freemasons meetings, societies, plans and conspiracies aimed at destroying us. While that gives one good food for a non-fiction joke and musings in idle time, that’s very opposed to the productive mode of thought for dwelling in the Orwellian delusions, those myths of insecurity, resistance, conspiracy etc. leaves no space for a rational understanding of the things.
To cite an example, the common practice around our nation is to denounce
Amreeka most enthusiastically. While that barely does anything to Amreeka itself, that does however, stop us from viewing out wrongs. We are so invested in identifying other’s mistakes and wrongs and so content with self-contained exaltations of piety that we fail to look at the dishonesty, corruption, falsity and other traits that have become a permanent part of this pious, Muslim nation. We miserably fail to see that while the bloody kafirs stick to all good traits that a being may posses, those of truthfulness, honesty etc, we are terribly bad at work ethics, absolutely undeserving to do business with, in light of our repute as cheaters, and have the general temper of losers. We are no success at science and technology and a shame to the religion we love to associate ourselves with.
Coming to India, while a smooth democratic system continues and prospers there and it becomes one of the fastest growing economies, we earn the position of a failed state in the eyes of the world – not because of the so-called conspiracies set up against us, not at all, but entirely because of our refusal to see how wrong we are in thinking us right and how wrong, indeed, in failing to identify the drawbacks we contain and failing to remove them. As a nation, it’s our favorite hobby to deny anything that concerns us and to keep our cannons too busy firing at others to realize the black that’s seeping through our hearts.
One may pause for an instant and think: how good it would have been had Pakistan and India been enjoying great relations, having economic ties and strategic partnership – that necessarily would have profited both and would’ve made the region a prosperous one, possibly a developed region in near-future. But the state of denial on our part never let the opportunity be. I’m not disputing India’s lack of readiness for such measures but that certainly does not exempt us of an equally radical take on the issue for decades.
Coming to the facet of piety, a general outlook of our society reveals it to be a very religious one – with mosques springing up in every other street and madressahs set everywhere, an apparent view makes one believe that ours is a society which is a strict adherent of a religion and a follower of it – the practical demonstration, however, reveals the quite contrary. While the religiosity is an ever-increasing part of our society, it comes in inverse proportion to the traits of honesty and morality. The basic traits of goodness only decline in face of this religiosity.
It’s an acute state of denial mixed with arrogant ignorance and hypocrisy that wouldn’t let time deliver us to rational grounds. Unless we finally except that as a nation, we have receded along moral decadence down to the lowest level and as adherent of a religion, we are a shame to that religion itself, we can’t evolve into a better nation. Unless we realize the hypocrisy that has been deployed on our part to all the issues we’ve faced, we can’t shun it and face the bitter truth. And without that, we can’t progress for change only succeeds realization.
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§ 6 Responses to Social hypocrisy

  • Anas Shafqat says:

    Very thought-provoking. Great work, Salman!

  • Haroon says:

    ___

    First two paragraphs are good begining.

    It would be accurate if a precise dissect analysis of society individual is done before discussion on crowd psychology of whole nation. :)

    A suggesstion !

    ____

  • |While the religiosity is an ever-increasing part of our society, it comes in inverse proportion to the traits of honesty and morality. The basic traits of goodness only decline in face of this religiosity.|

    Iqbal said k Haram ko ihl-e-haram say gila hai, agar wo ye baat batoon ko batata tu bot bhi rotay k kalma-go nay ye kaam kiay? Dhokay baaz hum, geebat-go hum…. Undoubtedly there is a duality in our acts of worship and our morals. It doesn’t fail to honour us. Yet I have to maintain that religiosity in Islam is not confined to just ibdah or to morals (ikhlaq) – both are equally important as well as other components of deen. After all, when we ‘recognize that we are submitting to a truth outside our experience’, we submit to it wholeheartedly and completely. Allah iss ki toufeeq day. Ameen.

  • Salman Latif says:

    Ameen.
    I believe that in today’s world, Muslims have particularly lost the pursuit of intellectual knowledge, something Islam itself urges them to go for. Undoubtedly, there are individuals few and far between in the Islamic world who attend to this most important thing, the majority simply plays ignore to it or when someone takes a non-traditional approach, poses a vicious, rather violent, resistance to thwart this attempt.

  • Salman Latif says:

    @Haroon
    That’s a good suggestion, thanks :)
    This article was actually meant at an overview of the societal trends and I necessarily had to transcend beyond the individual to the society. It sometimes get rather judgmental when talking of individuals or so I feel about it.
    Still, thanks :)

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