Mowahid Shah

Mowahid Shah

Mowahid Hussain Shah is an attorney-at-law, writer, and policy analyst. His articles are published regularly in English in both Nation (an English daily) and Nawa-i-Waqt (an Urdu daily). For over a decade, he has been the lead columnist for Pakistan Link, the most subscribed weekly throughout North America for the US Pakistani community.

Mowahid Hussain Shah

For over 30 years, Mowahid Shah has studied the interplay between religion and politics.[1] In 1979, he was one of few authors at the time who examined the repercussions of the trial and execution of Pakistan Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, and predicted its ensuing implications, including increasing politicization of Islam in Pakistan; that “using Islamization of law to legitimize their continued power, the army may in the long term govern with a civilian façade”, and that persecution of the Bhutto family would continue with consequent enlargement of the Bhutto myth.[2] His prescient article in the Christian Science Monitor[3] correctly predicted the onset of Western-Muslim world tensions[4] well before Harvard professor Samuel Huntington popularized the theory of a "clash of civilizations". A few months later, he predicted that “Operation Desert Storm may become a desert trap” that “would radicalize the region for generations.”[5]

Career

Mowahid Shah is a former law partner of U.S. Senator James Abourezk. In 1980, Senator Abourezk envisioned and founded the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC). ADC’s founding director was Dr. James Zogby. Mowahid Shah played a small role in facilitating the launch of the civil rights organization.[6] He and Dr. Zogby wrote ADC's first publication, "The Other Anti-Semitism"[7] and worked together in researching and analyzing similarities between 19th century anti-Jewish cartoons and modern cartoons offensive to Arabs and Muslims.[8]

From 2003-2007, Mowahid Shah served as Minister and Special Assistant to the Punjab Chief Minister, Pakistan. He played a major role in the creation of Punjab’s first comprehensive consumer protection law.[9] He proposed a 5-point initiative aimed at ensuring that the disabled be treated with dignity,[10] In 2004, he organized the first ever conference at the Chief Minister’s Office focused on respecting and enhancing teachers’ dignity and status.[11]

Early years

Born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Mowahid Shah spent part of his boyhood schooling in Jakarta, Indonesia, during the Sukarno era. A student from Forman Christian College, he went on to earn his LL.B. from Punjab University Law College. He is the son of Colonel Amjad Hussain Sayed, who is the last surviving delegate, sent by poet-philosopher Allama Iqbal, to the Muslim League session in 1937 in Lucknow, which laid the foundations of the Pakistan Movement.

As a student leader at George Washington University in the 1970s, Mowahid Shah was Editor of the “Harbinger”, a student publication. He successfully defended in student court a resolution issued by the university's International Student Society in support of international human rights. In his LL.M. thesis, he posited the right under international law of the Palestinian people to resist forcible military occupation.

Mowahid Shah was one of the first Pakistani lawyers admitted to the District of Columbia and U.S. Supreme Court Bars.

References

  1. ^ See e.g., Shah, Mowahid H. "Pakistan, Islam, and the Politics of Muslim Unrest", in Change and the Muslim World, Philip H. Stoddard, David C. Cuthell, and Margaret W. Sullivan, eds. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, N.Y., 1981. ASIN B002J4B1JC. This early article captured "the unhealthy interplay between politics and religion." See [1]. Retrieved on 2010-12-20.
  2. ^ Shah, Mowahid H. "The Death of Bhutto and the Future of Pakistan", Worldview, New York, Vol. 22, No. 6, June 1979. Retrieved on 2010-12-20.
  3. ^ Shah, Mowahid. "New Cold War with Islam", The Christian Science Monitor, Boston, 30 July 1990.
  4. ^ Zeromus, Liquidus. [2] "It was written two decades ago; and that is what makes it so interesting, it predicted what is going on now." Retrieved on 2010-12-20.
  5. ^ Shah, Mowahid H. "Perils of War: A Muslim View", The Christian Science Monitor, Boston, 5 November 1990. See also Zalatimo, Dima. "American Muslims Divided Over Crisis in the Gulf", The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, Washington, D.C., October 1990, Vol. IX, No. 5, pp.68-69.
  6. ^ "Arab Voices: Listening and Moving Beyond Myths"
  7. ^ Zogby, Jim. "Arab Voices Launched", 15 October 2010. Retrieved on 2010-12-20.
  8. ^ Zogby, James J. "T. Boone Pickens: Spoiling a Big Idea", 2 December 2010. Retrieved on 2010-12-20.
  9. ^ "Laws a must to protect consumer rights: Mowahid" The Nation, Pakistan, 27 October 2003. "The Punjab Consumer Protection Act 2005". Retrieved on 2010-12-20.
  10. ^ "5-point initiative proposed to help disabled: Mowahid", The Daily Times, Pakistan, 31 July 2003.
  11. ^ "Govt fully committed to restore teachers' status in society: Pervaiz Elahi", Pakistan Press International, 8 September 2004.

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