Controversial upcoming film is likely to fan radicalism in Pakistan
Pakistani Christians have expressed their reservations about the upcoming Pakistani movie entitled “Aik Aur Ghazi” -- in English it’s ("One More Holy Warrior") – saying that it could stir up the fanaticism among Muslim youth and many have vehemently condemned it, report Dan Wooding and Jawad Mazhar, special to ASSIST News Service.
The Urdu movie, being made by a leading Pakistani producer and director Syed Noor, carries a clear slogan on the advertising hoardings that “Punishment for Blasphemers is decapitation”. The campaign is going on and many Christians say that it is spreading fanaticism in streets and roads.
Some local Pakistani daily newspapers are publicizing the upcoming movie in an extraordinary manner on daily basis.
I (Jawad) have seen a ANS a huge banner hanging across the road near my home and it has also appeared acorss the country and in Gujranwala, where on Tuesday, April 30, 2011, a mob more than 350 Muslim extremists violently attacked two Christian areas on Tuesday, following the filing of what many believe was a fake blasphemy case against a Christian father and son.
More than advertising the movie, the banner, put there by a Muslim religious organization, seemed to be a bid to instigate radicalism there.
One Christian leader, who asked not to be named, said, “We appeal to the Pakistani moviemaker and the government to stop shooting and advertising this movie, as we believe it could open corridors for the common Pakistani citizens to be involved extra judicial killing in the name of Islam.”
“A man, a gun, and vengeance for "blasphemy"
Issam Ahmed, Correspondent for The Christian Science Monitor, recently wrote a story about the movie. It began: “A man, a gun, and vengeance for 'blasphemy.’
“For Pakistanis, the scene may evoke memories of the moment liberal governor Salman Taseer was killed by his own security guard last month for speaking out against the country’s blasphemy laws, which have long been used to carry out personal vendettas and persecute religious minorities.
“Instead, it’s a poster for upcoming film 'Aik Aur Ghazi ('One More Holy Warrior') by eminent Pakistani screenwriter and director Syed Noor, which he says he plans to release within two months. And where Taseer’s killer Mumtaz Qadri was fêted mainly by lawyers and religious parties, the killer in Mr. Noor’s film, a convicted criminal, achieves redemption and hero status through murder.
“Though director Noor denies any similarity between his film and the killing of Taseer, the film's expected commercial appeal is indicative of growing acceptability of extrajudicial killing in the name of Islam, argue experts.”
The writer went on to say, “Both Qadri and Tariq, the fictitious hero of Noor’s film, are thick-set men with bushy beards and dark, round faces. Both men hail from the province of Punjab, the conservative hinterland. And the film tagline carries the same chilling message backed by Qadri and his supporters: “‘Punishment for Blasphemers: Decapitation.’”
According to columnist and cultural critic Nadeem Farooq Paracha, Noor’s reputation as a “moderate Muslim” gives his work more credibility. He argues that the Pakistani media are full of personalities who, while proclaiming to represent progressive values, often espouse extreme views.
“Such people are far more dangerous than those extroverted about their fundamentalism,” he says. “These are people whose numbers have grown and who call themselves moderate Muslims: They are anything but,” he adds. In fact, he says, that's how fundamentalism is popularized.
The writer added that director Noor, a 40-year veteran of Pakistan’s film industry (known here as “Lollywood”) is famous for a string of romantic hits with racy song-and-dance numbers featuring scantily clad actresses. Like all good Lollywood films, “One More Holy Warrior” includes a romantic love interest for the hero, Tariq “before he went to jail,” says Noor, who recently attracted attention for publicly criticizing a Muslim Pakistani actress for appearing in an Indian reality TV show and developing a love interest with an Indian actor.
“My film has nothing to do with Salman Taseer,” he says in an interview at his studio, adding: “The villain in my film claimed he was the prophet of Islam. Salman Taseer was just trying to help a woman,” referring to Taseer’s efforts to free a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, from jail where she awaits a death sentence for blasphemy.
Critics, the story concluded, however, aren’t convinced. “He is making a fictional character who did the same thing as Mumtaz Qadri – how is it different? Where is the logic in that one?” says Paracha.