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08-07-2007, 04:50 AM
Harry Potter and the New World Order
by M. Faraz Anwar
Last weekend, I had the pleasure of watching the newly
released "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix'. The film is
excellently filmed and the plot is interesting. Nevertheless, what
was more interesting was the political twist in the film. Call it an
urban legend or simply paranoia, Hollywood and politics seem to go
hand-in-hand. The new Harry Potter film reminded me of the education
policy for Muslim countries that is being 'suggested' by Western
governments.
In the film, the Ministry of Magic has become a vehicle of
Valdermort, an antichrist-like character, who is determined to assert
his new-world-order on the good-world. Valdermort has with him all of
the dark forces and creatures, while the good is with schools,
especially Hogwarts', where Harry Potter and his friends study. The
Ministry now feels threatened by any retaliation from the school
students once the 'one-who-must-not-be-named' comes back from the
underworld. They send a bureaucrat from the Ministry to teach an
important subject of defensive spells (or something to that effect).
Her job as a teacher of defensive spells is to teach only the theory
and not to let the students learn how to actually defend themselves.
She starts forcing 'reformations' in the schools and finally
overthrows the headmaster Dumbledore.
Now let us take a look at the educational reformations in Muslim
countries. The Western governments seem to be a vehicle of 'you-know-
who'. Their main threat, as they openly say, is 'militant Islam'. The
main breeders of these militants are schools, which, according to
them, are mostly in Pakistan. The current government of Pakistan has
been pressured to 'reform' the education system, and it has
succumbed.
There were scattered bits of news of some chapters being eliminated
from primary school books of Urdu and Islamiat (Islamic Studies),
like the one about warrior Mahmood Ghaznavi and others. Mind you, I
am not talking about madrassas (religious seminaries), rather
about 'normal' schools, government-owned or private, that actually
follow the same curriculum set by "book boards". The military-like
training that spanned two weeks and was being given to Intermediate-
level students has been abolished (it was not serving a purpose
anyway, but that is a different story). The case of madrassas is
different. They are under direct threat of not just curriculum change
but outright extermination.
The changes are subtle, but the impact of altering or removing those
chapters could affect generations to come. Our people are already
under an inferiority complex, bedazzled by glamour of anything
Western in TV and cinema. If the glorious legends of history vanish
from their memories, their self-respect will also diminish. Such
people are then ready to be enslaved. The works of the great poet
Allama Iqbal warn of exactly this condition, rather pathology, and
suggest ways to counter it. One can only hope his poems are not
removed in the name of reformation and modernism.
Perhaps the solution to such politics is also from the new Harry
Potter film. When their school starts teaching only "nice things"
(much like Ghalib's and Meer's poetry), the students take their
learning into their own hands and want to fix things themselves. And
this, in turn, reminds me of the Red Mosque crisis!
by M. Faraz Anwar
Last weekend, I had the pleasure of watching the newly
released "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix'. The film is
excellently filmed and the plot is interesting. Nevertheless, what
was more interesting was the political twist in the film. Call it an
urban legend or simply paranoia, Hollywood and politics seem to go
hand-in-hand. The new Harry Potter film reminded me of the education
policy for Muslim countries that is being 'suggested' by Western
governments.
In the film, the Ministry of Magic has become a vehicle of
Valdermort, an antichrist-like character, who is determined to assert
his new-world-order on the good-world. Valdermort has with him all of
the dark forces and creatures, while the good is with schools,
especially Hogwarts', where Harry Potter and his friends study. The
Ministry now feels threatened by any retaliation from the school
students once the 'one-who-must-not-be-named' comes back from the
underworld. They send a bureaucrat from the Ministry to teach an
important subject of defensive spells (or something to that effect).
Her job as a teacher of defensive spells is to teach only the theory
and not to let the students learn how to actually defend themselves.
She starts forcing 'reformations' in the schools and finally
overthrows the headmaster Dumbledore.
Now let us take a look at the educational reformations in Muslim
countries. The Western governments seem to be a vehicle of 'you-know-
who'. Their main threat, as they openly say, is 'militant Islam'. The
main breeders of these militants are schools, which, according to
them, are mostly in Pakistan. The current government of Pakistan has
been pressured to 'reform' the education system, and it has
succumbed.
There were scattered bits of news of some chapters being eliminated
from primary school books of Urdu and Islamiat (Islamic Studies),
like the one about warrior Mahmood Ghaznavi and others. Mind you, I
am not talking about madrassas (religious seminaries), rather
about 'normal' schools, government-owned or private, that actually
follow the same curriculum set by "book boards". The military-like
training that spanned two weeks and was being given to Intermediate-
level students has been abolished (it was not serving a purpose
anyway, but that is a different story). The case of madrassas is
different. They are under direct threat of not just curriculum change
but outright extermination.
The changes are subtle, but the impact of altering or removing those
chapters could affect generations to come. Our people are already
under an inferiority complex, bedazzled by glamour of anything
Western in TV and cinema. If the glorious legends of history vanish
from their memories, their self-respect will also diminish. Such
people are then ready to be enslaved. The works of the great poet
Allama Iqbal warn of exactly this condition, rather pathology, and
suggest ways to counter it. One can only hope his poems are not
removed in the name of reformation and modernism.
Perhaps the solution to such politics is also from the new Harry
Potter film. When their school starts teaching only "nice things"
(much like Ghalib's and Meer's poetry), the students take their
learning into their own hands and want to fix things themselves. And
this, in turn, reminds me of the Red Mosque crisis!