By  Mowahid Hussain Shah

December 07, 2018

Miseducation

Education is not necessarily the be-all remedy for everything. It depends on what kind of education is imparted. Miseducation is education which is improper and harmful. Half-baked knowledge can sometimes induce the delusion of what Somerset Maugham described in his short story, “Mr Know-All”: “The possibility that he could be mistaken never occurred to him.”
Subcontinental society has shown what rote learning, memorization, and displays of showy piety can inflict. Issues are seen in black and white, while the in-between gray is overlooked.
Decline of attention, reading, and reasoning has left a desolate trail. In its place has been proliferation of warped thinking, with reliance on hearsay, rumors, and unverified facts. Speaking without data or evidence and indulging in generalities becomes the norm. One sees lots of conclusions but very little reasoning to support them.
Miseducation is a problem that cuts across geographical boundaries. The reading public in much of the Western world exposed to mainstream media and academia has been indoctrinated into thinking that in the Middle East, for example, Palestinians are in the wrong and not the wronged party; that nuclear proliferation is an Iranian problem, not Israel’s; that terrorism is individual or group, but not state-sponsored. It is a matter of who controls the context.
Miseducation bolsters blind spots and close-mindedness. All the amount of technical progress in India and success of its educated class in the West has not been able to surmount deeply embedded caste prejudices.
The arrogance of knowing better and being better runs parallel with deeply entrenched ignorance. Maulana Rumi had warned that “ignorance is God’s prison; knowing is God’s Palace.”
What was done to the African continent under the rubric of Christianity, commerce, and civilization remains to be adequately looked into. A case in point is Belgian Congo. Adam Hochschild’s 1998 book, “King Leopold’s Ghost” details the forced labor, starvation, torture, and mass killing of its people in the ravaging of its land for rubber.
Buddhism is generally depicted as a benign faith of peace. But juxtapose those optics with 21st century Burma where its treatment of the Rohingya Muslims, according to the UN, warrants prosecution for genocide.
After he spearheaded his New Zealand cricket team to a remarkable win over Pakistan at Abu Dhabi, it was educative to witness Ajaz Younis Patel do a thanksgiving sajdah, sending a message that the appeal of Islam is transcendental and not confined or monopolized by ethno-national parameters.
Miseducation can occur anywhere. It can be at a madrassa in Multan or a think-tank in Washington.
Miseducation fosters myth-making in America in that theirs is “the greatest country” with the “best” system in the history of mankind, contributing to self-satisfying complacency and bypassing the necessity of self-examination.
On the Vietnam debacle, David Halberstam wrote a book in 1972 on the harm done by the educated elite, “The Best and the Brightest,” lambasting the “brilliant policies that defied common sense” in Vietnam and which underlined the difference between intelligence and “true wisdom, which is the product of hard-won, often bitter experience.”
In 1709, Alexander Pope had warned that “a little learning is a dangerous thing.”

 



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PREVIOUSLY


Election 2004: Decisive but Divisive

Muslim Youth & Kashmir in America

The Big Picture: Wealth without Vision

Oxygen to Global Unrest

Punishing the Punctual

Change without Change

Don’t Be Weak

Passionate Attachment

The Confidence of Youth

The Other Side of Democracy

Campaign of Defamation

Pakistani Women & the Legal Profession

A Pakistani Journey

Farewell to Fazal

Mukhtaran and Beyond

Revamping the OIC

7/7 & After

Nuclear Double-Standard

Return to Racism

Hollywood – The Unofficial Media

The Sole Superpower

The UN at 60

A Slow Motion World War?

Elite vs. Street

Iqbal Today

Macedonia to Multan

Defending our Own

2006 & Maulana Zafar Ali Khan

Error against Terror

The Limits of Power

Cultural Weaknesses

Aggressive at Home, Submissive Abroad

Global Storm

The Farce of Free Expression

The Changing Mood

Condi & India

Xenophobia

Looking inward

Re-Thinking

A Tale of Two Presidents

Close to Home

Flashpoint Kashmir

The Spreading Rage

Confronting Adversity

The Illusion of International Law

Other Side of Extremism

Five Years after 9/11

The Educated Ignorant

The Decline of Humor

Icons

Six Years of Insanity

The War Not Being Fought

Munir Niazi

Compliance & Defiance

Counter-Message

Miscast

The Goddess of Wealth

The Meaning of Moderation

The Tora Bora of Fear

Clash of Civility

The Early Race

Challenge & Response

Will & Skill

Zealotry

Movie-Media and Pakistan

Hug with a Thug

Quest for Integrity

Unconquered

Vanity

Bringing Back the Past

Stuck in Iraq

Islam, Science and the West

Turmoil over Turkey

Leaders versus Leadership

Might Does Not Make Right

Kursi First

Vision & Will

Battle of the Billionaires

Assassination Alley

Extremism and Change

Rosy Expectations

Short-Term Gain, Long-Term Pain

Not Winning

Beyond Baghdad: Five Years after

The Hijab of Democracy

Hate, Fear & Hope

Weapon of Words

Hide N’ Seek

Yanking in the UN

Obama’s Breakthrough

Let Lahore Be Lahore

National Mood & Sports

Flirting with Fire

Trips Abroad

Georgia on the Mind

Duel for the White House

Zia to Zardari

Palestine: Avoiding the Unavoidable 

Not Working 

In the Ring 

Obama’s America

Smiles & Dreams

Quiet Deeds of Good

Crime and Indifference

Journey of Understanding

VIP-hunting

Terror via Counter-Terrorism

Umpires or Vampires?

The Long Road

Yesterday’s Reminder

Appeasement and the Real Threat

Israel’s Washington Agenda

New Challenges

Cairo and Beyond

Re-fighting Old Battles

America ’s Super Villains

Activism in America

Style without Substance

Overcoming Barriers

Ashes to Afghanistan

The Looming Change

Fear and Possibilities

What Is Not Debated 

Hired Guns

Rampage at Fort Hood

Manmohan in Washington

The Long Duel

Green Nukes

Vision and Division

Avoiding Why

Striving to Matter

Shame-proof

Anxiety and Opportunity

Putting Iraq in America

The Right Strategy

Looking Beyond

Rot at the Top

Strategic Folly

Daring & Caring

Over-Stepping on Turkey

Sudan : Perils of Provincialism

Old Fears, New Target

Europe ’s Stain

The US-Pakistan Enigma

The Status Quo Is Unacceptable

9 Years after 9/11

License to Steal

US Muslims at the Crossroads

Tumor of Terror

An Arab Voice

Disastrous Decisions

Double Game

Sticky Wiki

What Quaid Was Not

Money Conspiracy

Pharaohs & Pirates

Greed and Cricket

Change & Challenge  

Forty Years after 1971

Abandoning Our Own

Rewarding Failure

Osama and Obama

Tsunami of Tolerance

Representation and Presentation

Meek and Weak

Change or the Same?

No Easy Exit

Nation to Non-Nation

10 Years after 9/11

Shining India?

Big Power, Small Politics

Rule of the Gun

Proxy of the Powerful

Fight for Fairness

Republican Race

Actors or Directors

Speaking out

Professional Sycophants

More Provinces?

Too Much Information

Soft Separation

Soft Poison

Unemployment & Over-Population

Seize the Day

The Arab Awakening

Ben Bella

At University of Gujrat

Good People Behaving Badly

Playing Over-Smart

Do Less

Resisting the Resistible

Performance, Not PR

Home-grown Havoc

Salutation to the 65 th Year

Plague of Provincialism

USA Elections 2012

Rage

Fight or Flight

Rift and Drift

Obama II

Me and We

Small Role or Small Actors?

On Losing

Who Will Guard the Guards?

Loyal to Their Loot

Prevail or Fail

Perceptions and Reality

Toll of Occupation

Re-think, Re-examine, and Self-correct 

The Washington Tribe

Voice and Vision

Moral Slump

Wall of Illusion

Under One Banner

Bitter Harvest

Gallows and the Throne

Scent of Power

At a Standstill

Leaders and Leadership

The Deadline

Fighting Darkness

Distant Connections

Governance: The Long View

Discussion in DC

Darkness in the Mind

Killing Kennedy and Liaquat Ali

Yahya Khan Speaks on 1971

Quaid & Xmas in Washington

150 Years of FC College

Tyranny of Money

50 Years of Ali

A Dose of Truth

Little Guy, Big Impact

A Reassessment in Washington

Crimea & Kashmir

Democracy or Oligarchy?

Afghan Elites: Blaming Pakistan

Pitfalls of Intervention

Arabs in America

Never Give up

German Journey

Tyranny of Today

Manipulating Language

March & Match

Destroyers

Out of Darkness

Modi in America

Awareness or Fairness?

Mideast Maze

Easy Scapegoats

Freedom to Insult

Journey of Recovery

Mental Colonialism

Letters from a Grandfather

Power Imbalance

Discord and Division

Colloquium at Capitol Hill

Washington Lauds Gharib Nawaz

Balkan Lessons

Pivot from the Mideast

American Campus & Mideast Turmoil

Muslim Father; Two Americans

Challenging Fear

Victim Mentality

X & Ali

Fake Democracy?

Irresponsible Passivity

Erosion of Ethics

Dragon of Hate

Extreme in the Mainstream

Ugly Times

Pakistani Summer in England

Speaking Haq

At the Oval

Britain Beware

East in West

Trump Turmoil

Tiny Nation, Towering Figure

Realities: 2016

End of an Innings

Trumped

Embarrassment to America

Dishonest Media

Purana Pakistan

Media Unleashed

Mental Walls

Quarantining Qatar

Vizier or Fakir

70 Not Out

70th in Washington

England in September

White Rage

Daughter of the Quaid

Overstay

Fighting for Pakistan

Confronting the Barriers

Battleground Africa

Low Goals

Mental Pollution

Inside Europe

Washington in Disarray

Departures

Freedom’s Burden

Japan Journey

Possessed by Possessions

Fairness, Not Favors

Post-Election Vibes

Once Hate Is Unleashed

Paisa & Politics

South Sudan/South Punjab

Pakistani Progress

At American University

England in October

Out of the Shadows


2001

 

Editor: Akhtar M. Faruqui
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