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Discouraging our Good Samaritans
By Li Xing

China Central Television (CCTV) is currently running a series of short profiles of heroes and heroines on its nightly newscast.
Aired during CCTV's peak viewership period, the profiles portray men and women who gave their lives to help found the People's Republic or who made extraordinary sacrifices to improve Chinese society. Many of them are classic Good Samaritans.
Some, like Lei Feng, the 22-year-old soldier known for being always ready to help others in need, are household names.
He led his squad to assist passengers with heavy luggage and clean waiting halls at a local train station during Spring Festival holidays, the peak travel season.
Lei's work was recognized by Chairman Mao Zedong, who called for all Chinese to "learn from Lei Feng."
Others, like Liu Yulian, whose story was broadcast on Monday, are less well-known. For 41 years Liu, a 58-year-old doctor, has cared for more than 1,000 residents of Hami, a remote village in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, most of them Uygurs.
Three college freshmen from Changjiang University have also won national acclaim for giving their lives while rescuing two younger boys from drowning in the Yangtze River in Jingzhou, Hubei province.
All this is obviously intended to encourage Good Samaritans and promote a harmonious society. Sadly, the message is blunted by the news of several cases of entrapment by law enforcement officials in Shanghai and elsewhere.
The case of van driver Sun Zhongjie, 19 and from Henan province, drew national attention earlier this month. Around 7:30 pm on Oct 14, Sun was hailed by a man pleading for a ride. Seeing that the man was lightly dressed and was shivering in the cold, Sun allowed him to get in.
But after driving for a few minutes, Sun was forced to stop by two cars from the local transport authority. He was charged with operating an illegal cab service and his van was confiscated. He appealed, but the authorities denied that he had been entrapped and maintained the charges against him.
Desperate to prove his innocence, Sun cut off his little finger to draw attention to his case, setting off a series of official investigations.
The resulting revelation that the traffic police used "improper means" to collect evidence comes as no surprise because quite a few victims have come forward with stories similar to Sun's.
In one case, a driver surnamed Zhang was stopped by a pedestrian who claimed to be suffering from a severe stomach ache. Zhang turned the man away at first, but eventually gave in because the man appeared to be seriously ill.
During the short drive, Zhang twice declined the man's offer to pay. When Zhang stopped at a turn, the passenger snatched his car key.
The police swooped in, dragged Zhang out of his car, and charged him with operating an illegal taxi service. Zhang had to pay 30,000 yuan to get his car back.
An investigation revealed that police had paid people to act as bait and entrap drivers like Sun and Zhang.
On Monday, the local government cleared Zhang's name and apologized to Sun.
The damage had already been done, however. Incidents like these discourage Good Samaritans and severely undermine public trust in law enforcement.
Worse, they erode the moral and ethical codes on which our society has relied for millennia and which form the basis for a harmonious society.
Far from encouraging Good Samaritans, such incidents cause people to look away when they are asked for assistance. Who will emulate heroes like Lei Feng when they fear that their kind-heartedness will be cause for prosecution?


 
A voice from the roots
I went to Mecca but I did not find the truth, Even though I prostrated myself a hundred thousand times over, I went to the Ganges but I did not find the truth, Even though I bathed myself a hundred thousand times, I held the rosary; I turned the beads in my hand, But I did not turn the heart in my breast.I went inside the mosques and the temples But I did not go inside myself.
These heart throbbing lines by Bullah Shah were sung by Arieb Azhar in the most inspiring voice in his concert 'A Melodic Expression of Spirituality' last Thursday. His songs sat the audience on the edge of their seats, wrapped in mysticism. This concert was organised by Asian Study Group (ASG) in collaboration with Pakistan National Council of the Arts (PNCA) as a seasonal event with the theme 'Peace and Tolerance'. Besides concert, the event also featured a painting exhibition of 10 oil paintings by Shafique Faruqi titled "Mysticism through Colours.
First impression can be deceiving as apparently Arieb Azhar is one cool dude, wearing jeans and a t-shirt, and shaved head covered in a bandana. But when he played the first single from his album Wajj, 'Husn-e-haqiqi' he captured the hearts of audience through his magical voice. The single is set to the Sufi poem written about a hundred years ago. It ponders the beauty of truth and the nature of god. It's not unheard of for these poems to be sung, but never in quite this way.
With scintillating voice, he then sang "Allah Hoo- Alif Allah Noor Paay" and continued with mystic poetry of Bullah Shah, Sultan Bahu, Sarmad Sehbai, Khawaja Ghulam Farid and Guru Nanak. By the time, he sang the Rajhistani folk song 'Kesarani Balam (Long haired beloved), the audience was completely overwhelmed. At the concert, Arieb Azhar was accompanied by Zeeshan Mansur on guitars, Akmal Qadri on flute, Amir Azhar Rubab on Bass and Ajmal Khan on 'tabla', all of them truly did justice to their instrument playing.
Arieb said 'True music is the union between the individual and the universe - a release, rapture, celebration, quest, and lament of the human spirit. If I am able to touch that in the moments of my life, I will consider myself fortunate'. He continued, 'Some of my earliest memories are of Shaukat Ali singing Saif-ul-Muluk, and later of Abida Parveen'. He added that he found the 'feel' he was looking for but the task of interpreting it in songs was far from over!
Fascinated with music for as long as he can remember, Arieb Azhar grew up listening to Eastern and Western classical and folk music that influenced his love for 'roots' music, and has always used the guitar as an accompanying instrument. The artist went to Croatia and Yugoslavia at the age of 19 for his studies and spent the subsequent 13 years there. In 2003, he moved back to Pakistan with the aim of immersing himself in the music of the Subcontinent. According to him, "I felt I needed to return to my roots in order to rediscover the genuineness of my music." He has performed and been involved in leading music festivals of the country, such as the Rafi Peer World Performing Arts Festival and Sufi Festival, and more recently, the Coke Studio Projects.
Hats off to Asian Study Group and Pakistan National Council of Arts for organising a truly scintillating event - that was a relief for people watching violence on their TV screens. Events like this demonstrate the world that we are a land with our roots in the powerful ideology and life long struggle of great people rather than a country of terrorists. Love, peace and divine knowledge through direct experience of God are some of these powerful messages.

—Bushra Naz bushranaz@dailymailnews.com
 
 
 
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