In the Christian Science Monitor, Mark LeVine considers the significance of the recent Taliban bombing at the International Islamic University in Islamabad, and what it means for Islam:

Building such an active Pakistani citizenry [equipped with the social knowledge and skills to challenge the dominant political and social-religious discourses] was and—I imagine despite the bombing—remains a major goal of the IIU.

Sadly, it’s just such a goal that probably made it a “legitimate” target for the Taliban, for whom a healthy public sphere populated by educated citizens willing and able to challenge, potentially democratize, and clean up their government would pose at least as big threat to its position in the country as the army they are now fighting in the country’s northwest.

Not surprisingly, the core mission of the IIU would also not win it many friends among the country’s corrupt economic and political elite, who, as many of the senior education and religious officials I met confided to me, share the Taliban’s desire to silence any kind of critical scholarship or societal debate.

With this attack, the Taliban has struck what until now was a sanctuary, however fragile and inchoate, where the emerging generation of Pakistanis and Muslims could determine on their own terms how best to bring together their cultures and traditions to grapple with the profound challenges faced by their societies.

I hope it doesn’t weaken the spirit and resolve of the thousands of students who’ve come to the IIU from across the Muslim world to help build a better future. They are not just the future of Pakistan, or of Islam; they are the future as well.

Read the full article here.