Danish Dari German Spanish French Turkish Arabic
Click here to go to start page Click here to go to start page
Search Sort content by country/region Sort content by artist Sort content by subject
News stories world-wide
About music censorship
About Freemuse
Publications
Study room
Articles
Speeches
Radio programmes
Music albums
Books
Films
Freemusepedia - History of music censorship before 2001
Activities
Links
Press room

ARTICLE
13 March 2009

Pakistan / USA:
Salman Ahmad: 'Obama should
listen to Pakistani artists'


As the Taliban silence music in the Swat Valley in northern Pakistan, Freemuse ambassador and singer Salman Ahmad denounces the Pakistani peace accord with the Taliban.
Click to read more about Salman Ahmad on freemuse.org

American president Barack Obama has promised to listen to the Muslim world. He can start by listening to Pakistani artists who embody peace, modernity and pluralism, suggests Freemuse Ambassador Salman Ahmad in an article in the US newspaper Washinton Post.

Salman Ahmad, the founder of Pakistani rock group Junoon, says that artists in Pakistan take their inspiration from Sufism, the tolerant and inclusive strain of Islam that is the antithesis of the beliefs of the Taliban.

Commenting on the Pakistani government ´‘peace agreement’ with Taliban troops and acceptance of Sharia law in the Swat Valley of Pakistan, Ahmad says:

“The killing off of arts and culture in Swat is an ominous sign. It is the first step in the potential Talibanization of more of the country. If you give the Taliban an inch – as Zardari has done – they will take a mile.”

Alien form of Islam
In the article Salman Ahmad writes that in its 60-plus turbulent years as an independent country, Pakistan has been held together by its music, poetry, films, literature and sports. Pakistan is an overwhelmingly Muslim nation, but culture – not religion – is the glue that binds people in this critical US-allied country.

Ahmad adds: “But now the Taliban are grafting an alien form of Islam onto Pakistan, with dire consequences for Pakistanis, the region and possibly the world. Earlier this month the Pakistani government and army made a deal with the Taliban and gave them control of the Swat valley. The government ceded this region near the Afghan border after countless pitched battles with the militants. Many military and civilian lives have been lost to an enemy that loves death more than life."

Ahmad and his band Junoon suffered political censorship in Pakistan during the rule of Benazir Bhutto, partly due to a song denouncing political corruption. Bhutto’s husband is now president of Pakistan and Salman Ahmad suggests that:

“President Asif Ali Zardari’s ill-conceived appeasement will only embolden the Taliban and may squelch more of Pakistan’s voices of peace just when Pakistanis and the world need to hear them most.”

Eerie silence in Swat
In Swat and elsewhere in the North-West Frontier Province, Pakistan’s cultural soul is under attack. Swat – 100 miles from Peshawar, Rawalpindi and Islamabad – used to be a haven for arts, music and tourism. There is now eerie silence.

“The Taliban have shut down girls’ schools, imposed an extreme interpretation of sharia law and destroyed music shops. Cinemas are being locked down. The fanatics’ idea is simple: to asphyxiate Pakistan’s rich and vibrant culture and replace it with their own ‘distorted interpretation’ of Islam,” says Salman Ahmad.

In 2004 in the BBC4 programme ‘The Rock Star and the Mullah’, Salman Ahmad confronted mullahs in the North-West Frontier Province on their ban on music.


Read more


Pakistan: Harmonium player murdered
Freemuse articles about Salman Ahmad


Salman Ahmad







Click to read more about Pakistan on freemuse.org
Pakistan























































Swat valley








Source

The Washington Post – 24 February 2009: 

'Rescuing Pakistan from the Taliban'


Go to top
Related reading on freemuse.org

Pakistan: Punjab Assembly bans concerts in educational institutions
On 24 January 2012 Punjab Assembly passed a resolution that bans holding of 'objectionable' musical concerts in educational institutions
25 January 2012
Pakistan: Music returns to some of Pakistan's tribal areas
In parts of Pakistan’s tribal areas, music is starting to return, reported Free Speech Radio News in a well-produced radio report on 16 January 2012.
18 January 2012
Pakistan: Taliban campaign against music still in full swing
Militants bombed or torched more than a dozen music shops in the second week of November 2011 in Khyber Pukhtunkhwa province and North Waziristan
16 November 2011
Pakistan: Freemuse network will document attacks on musicians
At a two day workshop held in Islamabad 12-13 November 2011 a Pakistani network was set up in support of musicians and composers at risk
15 November 2011
Pakistan: Under the censorship radar, anti-establishment songs flourish
Using humour and satire, song writers increasingly enjoy a new sense of openness and freedom of speech in Pakistan nowadays, reported Times of India
02 November 2011
Pakistan: Bomb blast destroys music and video market in Peshawar
Six people were killed and over 37 injured in a bomb explosion on 19 September 2011 that targeted a music and video CD market in Peshawar
21 September 2011
Pakistan: Broad instability spelled an end to art in Swat Valley
World Policy Institute has published an in-depth article about the development for artists in Swat Valley since 2007, written by Shaheen Buneri
14 September 2011
Pakistan: Threats from the Taliban sends sarod player into exile
Asad Qazalbash, Pakistan’s only accomplished sarod player, has left the country due to a declaration by the Pakistani Taliban that music is un-Islamic
22 August 2011
Pakistan: The Taliban’s war on music has done lasting damage
It will take a long time for Swat’s musical culture to recover from the Taliban’s crackdown on music, reported Shaheen Buneri from Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
08 August 2011
Pakistan: Terror campaign by religious militants against Sufi worshippers
In the sixteenth attack on Sufi shrines in two years, Taliban suicide bombers killed 49 and injured 93 Sufi devotees while they were doing music and meditation
08 April 2011
Pakistan: Anti-music militancy increases in the north-western mountain region
The militants are targeting films and music and everything they see as obscene, and the situation in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is deteriorating
21 March 2011
Pakistan: CD markets bombed - once again
The bombings of CD markets in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province in beginning of February 2011 suggests that militants are again threatening the entertainment industry
24 February 2011
Pakistan: Singer kidnapped by religious militants
On 26 November 2010, unidentified militants kidnapped Musharraf Bengash, a Pashtun singer from the Mir Ali area in North Waziristan. Later, a jirga negotiated his release
08 December 2010
Pakistan: Musicians and artists are returning to Swat Valley
After a military operation against the religious extremists, artists are now returning back to Swat Valley in northern Pakistan, reported The Express Tribune.
26 November 2010
Pakistan: Music school closed after threats from extremists
A group of religious extremists threatened Asad Qazilbash, a renowned sarood player in Islamabad, to stop giving lessons and remove the signboard for his music school
25 October 2010
Pakistan: Fundamentalists attacked a music gathering
In the evening on 5 September 2010 a group of religious fundamentalists attacked a music gathering in Nowshera District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
06 September 2010
Book by Salman Ahmad: 'Rock & Roll Jihad'
Rock star Salman Ahmad desribes his encounters with angry mullahs and oppressive dictators who wanted all music to be banned from the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
10 February 2010
Pakistan: Five injured and 10 music shops damaged by bomb blast
Five people were injured and 10 shops damaged in a bomb blast on 28 January 2010 in a music and video market in the small town of Jand in Pakistan's Punjab province
10 February 2010
USA: Banned music showcased in concert series in New York
A concert with the exiled Pakistani singer Haroon Bacha on 9 December 2009 marks the start of 'Impossible Music Sessions' in New York showcasing banned music
09 December 2009
Pakistan: Music stores are rebuilt in Swat valley
In the north-western Pakistani valley of Swat, the Taliban's ban on all forms of artistic expression has been lifted, and culture now makes a comeback
04 November 2009