Mixing relief with religion, JuD way in Pak

Islamabad: Hundreds of people, including Hindus, staying in flood relief camps run by a front organisation of the Jamaat-ud-Dawah in Pakistan`s southern Sindh province are being "peppered liberally" with Islamic teachings, according to a media report today. About 2,000 living in tents in camps set up by the Falah-e-Insaniyat Foundation, the relief arm of the […]

Islamabad: Hundreds of people, including Hindus, staying in flood relief camps run by a front organisation of the Jamaat-ud-Dawah in Pakistan`s southern Sindh province are being "peppered liberally" with Islamic teachings, according to a media report today. About 2,000 living in tents in camps set up by the Falah-e-Insaniyat Foundation, the relief arm of the JuD, were rescued by the group`s volunteers. They are provided meals twice a day, "a daily dose of food peppered liberally with religious teachings", The Express Tribune reported.

"They come and remind us again and again to offer namaz," said a man who fled floods in Malkani and is living at a relief camp in Badin. He said the people in the camps are not forced to pray though there is plenty of encouragement as families have been given prayer mats and copies of the Quran. "Namaz parho, Quran parho, safai karo! (Say your prayers, read the Quran and clean up)" said a woman, mimicking a female instructor at the camp.