Haq Nawaz Jhangvi wasn’t on a mission to convert non-Muslims—he was on a mission to cleanse Islam from within, in the most violent way imaginable.
Unlike most Islamists whose rage is aimed at the “standard” kafirs—Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Jews—Jhangvi’s primary hatred was reserved for other Muslims, specifically Shias, whom he declared kafirs and wajib-ul-qatl (worthy of death). To him, they were worse than infidels—they were traitors inside the house of Islam.
As the founder of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), he turned mosques into war zones and madarsas into indoctrination camps. He didn't call for reform—he called for extermination. His sermons were fuel for mass murder. Entire communities of Shias, especially in Pakistan’s Punjab and Karachi, were hunted down based on his ideology.
To a non-Muslim, his existence proves an uncomfortable truth: Islamic extremism doesn't just threaten “outsiders”—it devours its own. And while he posed as a man of God, his god demanded blood—not of Hindus or Christians first, but of fellow Muslims who didn't agree with his version of faith.
Today, his ideological offspring—Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and similar Sunni terror outfits—continue the legacy of intra-Islamic cleansing, bombing Shia processions, schools, and mosques with the same justification Jhangvi spewed decades ago.
No notable events have been recorded for this Mullah.