Almost all the people of Pakistan are …
Years: 1953 - 1953
Almost all the people of Pakistan are Muslims.
Most of them belong to the Sunnite sect, the major branch of Islam, with a significant representation among the Shi'ite branch.
There is also a very small, though influential, sect called Ahmadiyah, or Qadianis, which does not regard the prophet Muhammad as the final prophet, a basic tenet of most Muslim sects.
The majority of Pakistani Sunnites belong to the orthodox Hanafi school, one of the four schools or subsects of Sunnism.
Shi'ites are also divided into numerous subsects; among them are Isma'ilis (the followers of the Aga Khan), as well as the Twelvers (Ithna 'Asharis) and Bohras, which are prominent communities in commerce and industry.
The principal business communities among Sunnites are Gujarati Memons and Chiniotis from Punjab.
On occasion, definitions of Islamic identity result in violent controversy, as in Punjab during the early 1950s when agitation is directed against the Ahmadiyyas.
With Nazimuddin in office, militant Muslims, led by the Ahrars, a puritanical political group, call for the purification of national life.
In 1953, they demand that the Ahmadiyah sect be outlawed from the Islamic community.
After Nazimuddin temporizes, rioting and arson envelop Lahore and other Punjabi towns.
The Secretary of Defense, Colonel Iskander Mirza, presses the Cabinet into sanctioning martial law in Lahore, and order is restored.
