The useful conversations at a conference are never in the room. They happen in the corridor, over bad coffee, among the people who did not get a panel.
What we heard there over the weekend was a single proposition, stated with varying degrees of anger. The subcontinent is held down by two post-imperial states, each of which inherited the Raj’s administrative logic and neither of which has any intention of loosening it. The languages, the peoples, the small nations inside the big ones are being quietly extinguished. The activists who said this were Baloch, Sindhi, Kashmiri and Punjabi.
We should also say at the outset that this essay is about Pakistan. The two-hegemon frame is the activists’ frame, and we have not adopted it.
I. Ethnicity versus the Pakistani state.
It is acute in Pakistan, and the reason is not that Pakistan is crueller. It is that Pakistan is more religiously homogeneous, and homogeneity does something specific to identity.
Consider what a Baloch nationalist can now say that he could not have said in 1947. He can say that Balochistan is Muslim. Overwhelmingly, unarguably, to a degree the Pakistani state itself cannot dispute. Religion has been settled. It has been taken off the table. And once religion is off the table it can no longer do any distinguishing work, which means it can no longer do any binding work either.
Ethnicity is not resurgent in Pakistan despite Islam. It is resurgent because Islam has become the floor rather than the ceiling. When everyone is Muslim, being Muslim explains nothing about who governs whom, or who takes the gas revenues out of Sui.
II. The racial contention.
The activists say that ethnicity is a foreign import into Islam, a colonial residue, a European infection. Pakistani officialdom says the same thing from the opposite direction. Ethnic feeling is fitna, divisive, un-Islamic.
The argument is thirteen centuries old and has already been had.
Islam never abolished ethnicity. It repeatedly subordinated it without ever eliminating it, which is a different achievement and a more fragile one. The Umayyad state ran an explicit ethnic hierarchy in which non-Arab converts, the mawali, paid taxes their Arab co-religionists did not. The revolution that destroyed the Umayyads was raised in Khurasan and carried by Persians who had had enough of Arab precedence. The shu’ubiyya of the following century was a literary and political movement of Persians asserting cultural parity, conducted entirely inside Islam, in Arabic, by devout men. The Delhi Sultanate reserved its high offices for a Turkish and Persian slave elite and kept Indian Muslim converts out of them.
The Ottomans came closest to a genuinely supra-ethnic Muslim political identity, and they sustained it for centuries. But their subjects were sorted into millets by confession rather than by blood, which is to say that even the great supra-ethnic empire needed a religious cleavage to organise around, and when that cleavage stopped distinguishing anyone; the Arabs went their own way.
Ethnicity survived contact with the profession of faith every time it was tested. Transcending ethnicity was an aspiration about Muslim politics.
III. What India conceded and Pakistan refused. Continue reading Pakistan & India as Imperial Nation States
