Pakistan TV broadcasts conversions to Islam, minorities protest
(August 06, 2012) Pakistan's religious minorities - including its Christian leaders
- have strongly condemned the decision to broadcast the conversion of a young man
from Hinduism to Islam. The ceremony was broadcast for Ramadan, the holy month of
fasting and prayer for Muslims, on the private ARY Digital channel on 25 July. Although
the national media - not just television, but also weekly and daily newspapers - are
not new to the publication of material that is "offensive" to other faiths, this is
the first time in history that a live conversion of a non- Muslim has been broadcast,
and that too during a popular television show, thus rendering public one of the most
intimate and sacred aspects of the human person. Younas Alam, director of the Commission
for the rights of minorities in Pakistan, said that after the recent cases of forced
conversions of non-Muslim women, this is "a more direct attack on minorities." Sunil,
20-year old Hindu embraced Islam during a prime time show broadcast during Ramadan
(pictured). Originally from Karachi, the most populous city in the country, the young
man took "only five minutes" to change his religion, under the expert hand of a "Maulvi",
a Muslim religious leader. Although he claims to have converted to the faith of Muhammad
of his "own volition", many remain skeptical and do not believe his claims. Ansar
Burney, Head of the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust at which Sunil worked for six years,
defines the conversion as "staged". And many others speak of a fiction artfully assembled
by the presenter and the authors, only to gain a greater audience share.