Thousands leave Pakistan bound for holy war

In buses and trucks, pickups and vans, more than 5,000 people rolled out of a northeastern Pakistan village this morning, bound for the Afghan frontier and vowing to fight a holy war against the United States.

In buses and trucks, pickups and vans, more than 5,000 people rolled out of a northeastern Pakistan village this morning, bound for the Afghan frontier and vowing to fight a holy war against the United States.

Thousands of Pakistani men, young and old, had massed in Temergarah on Friday night with assault rifles, machine guns, even rocket launchers. A few even carried axes and swords.

Their mission, they said: to enter Afghanistan’s Kunar province and help the country’s ruling Taliban defend any ground incursions by American troops.

‘‘I am an old man. I consider myself lucky to go and to face the death of a martyr,’’ said Shah Wazir, 70, a retired Pakistani army officer. In his hands this morning he carried a French rifle from about 1920.

Organisers said similar-sized groups were massing in other towns across North West Frontier province, an enclave of ethnic Pashtuns with ties to and deep feelings for neighbouring Afghanistan.

Volunteers gathered in scores of groups of 20, sitting on the ground to be briefed by military commanders wearing black turbans and full beards similar to the Taliban militia on the ways of jihad, or Islamic holy war. One key rule: obedience to leaders.

‘‘It is a difficult time for Islam and Muslims. We are in a test. Everybody should be ready to pass the test and to sacrifice our lives,’’ said Mohammad Khaled, one brigade leader.

Hussain Khan, 19, a carpenter from the area, carried a Kalashnikov and stood with his friend. He said he was leaving behind a fiancee and joining a just cause.

‘‘Whether I come back alive or I am dead, I’ll be fortunate because I am fighting in the service of Islam,’’ Khan said.

As the would-be warriors embraced and chanted anti-American slogans, 17-year-old Abdul Rasheed asked one commander to allow him to join.

‘‘Please come with me and meet my father and convince him to let me go,’’ Rasheed said. He said his father was reluctant.

The call for holy war came this week from Sufi Mohammad, an outspoken Muslim cleric who runs a madrassa, or religious school, in nearby Madyan. He exhorted ‘‘true Muslims’’ to mass and prepare to go to Afghanistan to repel any US ground incursions.

How they will get there, and what they will do upon arrival, is uncertain. Their way station before entering Afghanistan is Bajur, a borderland village where volunteers from different area will come together this weekend.

In this region of Pakistan, Mohammad’s organisation Tehrik Nifaz Shariat Mohammadi Malakand, or Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Laws has been embraced.

And the cleric’s message - that, despite its insistence to the contrary, the United States is waging war on Islam hits home.

‘‘This is a strange occasion of world history,’’ Mohammad said Friday. ‘‘For the first time, all the anti-Islamic forces are united against Islam.’’

It was impossible to verify how many were actually en route to join him. In recent weeks, many militants have claimed far more supporters than their rallies eventually produce.

However, the numbers in Temergarah and the people jammed into trucks and on bus rooftops suggested support was heavy. Mohammad’s backers say the number to enter Afghanistan will reach 100,000.

‘‘We are not worried about death,’’ said Khaled, the brigade leader. ‘‘If we die in jihad, it is something much more greater than to be alive. And we will be taken into paradise.’’

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