Do you accept this Pakistan?
knicq posted in Knicqisms on October 10th, 2004
Do you accept this Pakistan … this was the title of a report on the various “Cultural Activities” mushrooming in the land of the pure. It was posted on a certain forum for the expat Pakistanis, and a discussion had ensued. The response of most of our countrymen in Dubaidom was that of shock and utter disgust. Here we were thinking we were so much better than the faltering Arabs, and then we realised that we were no better than anyone. Worse, if at all. I am not sure if it is right or wrong, but many of us who were born here and weaned on the concept of “Islamic Republic of Pakistan”, who live our lives as Proud Pakistanis taking pride in our conservative values, are jolted when brought face to face with what is rather than what should have been. I got my jolts back in 1994 when I had landed in Islamabad. I have since developed an immunity to the attempts at “Liberalization”, and was therefore not really shocked at the report. Merely saddened.
I am sitting here in my office, trying to locate a boring official document, and I chanced upon this below peice that I had posted in response. It got me thinking, a year down the road, I feel just the same….
“A few years ago, I had a friend visit me from Lahore. We were room mates in our college days. It was good having him here, and reminiscing the fun days – the late nights at our room, the jesting, the animated arguments, the movies, and then the very early breakfast at some Doodh-Dahi ki dookan. The most adventurous moral transgression was limited to an odd rated movie, or a pack of cigarettes. (I will not have you believe we were all saints)
Then, he proceeded to tell me how he had had a chance to witness another way of life in Lahore. A private party at a bungalow, drinking and dancing, 30-something sari clad ladies making rather indiscreet passes at this 21 year old, and the party culminating in the wee hours of the morning after much hoopla. I brushed most of it aside thinking the story was heavily exaggerated – and I made room for the possibility that this was perhaps a norm in a secluded segment of the society. This couldn’t be happening in the mainstream Pakistani society. No Sirreee – Our people would have no part of it.
Little had I realized then that the truth would be driven home so forcefully, so soon.
No, of course not! I do not accept this Pakistan.
This is not the Pakistan our forefathers had envisioned. If this were the society we intended to become, we had no reason to go through the bloodshed of 1947, and the subsequent wars. Before long, the protagonists of this wave of debauchery will begin to ask this very fundamental question. And it will pass down the strata of the society. We are a confused nation as it is. This main stream departure from what is left of our identity will bankrupt us.
I am all for peace and tolerance. I endorse any measures taken to curb Terrorism, sectarianism, sectarian violence and extremism. (I am a proud fundamentalist). I am the most vocal proponent, you will find, of an enduring peace in South East Asia, and specifically between Pakistan and India. That is a lot really, when you factor in the fact that I am from Azad Kashmir. It works more in our favor than it does in India’s. India is well on it’s way to becoming an economic giant, if you don’t consider it one already. It can afford to set aside petty cash to encourage or counter misadventures on the LOC. We cannot.
But, let us just be sure that peace with India does not become a merger with India. Cultural or Geographical. Let us remember what our identity is. Liberal/Moderate thought is not and should not be deemed to be limited to heads on naked shoulders. It’s only pre-requisite is responsible shoulders. Let those shoulders be ours.”
April 26th, 2006 at 9:29 am
I had meant South Asia when I wrote South East Asia. You would think a shipping salesperson would know better!
April 26th, 2006 at 1:44 pm
Can’t disagree with a word you say up there bro.
Reading this, I am reminded of something I read 20 odd years ago (does that make me sound ancient?). As I was 8 or so at that point, it is not something poignant or profound or even particularly wise… but here it is anyway, after this promising introduction (now I know what I am not in marketing!).
Ibn-e-Insha, in his “Urdu ki aakhri kitab”, talks about Pakistan, and more fundamentally, what it constitutes of. So he starts of by saying that Inglistan main angraiz qaum rahti hay, germany main german qaum, japan main japanee qaum.
Acha bhai, yeh kia hay?
Pakistan hay
Yahan Pakistani qaum rahti ho gi?
Nahi, yahan Sindhi qaum rahti hay.
yahan Punjabi qaum rahti hay.
yahan Pathan qaum rahti hay.
yahan Bengali qaum rahti hay.
yahan Mirza aur Khan aur Syed aur falanay rahtay hain.
yahan yeh qaum rahti hay aur woh qaum rahti hay.
Magar…
Punjabi toh hindustan main bhi rahtay hain…
Sindhi toh hindustan main bhi rahtay hain…
Pathan toh hindustan main bhi rahtay hain…
Bengali toh hindustan main bhi rahtay hain…
Toh phir yeh alag mulk kion banaya?
Acha ghalti ho gai bhai, aainda nahin banain gay….
Makes you think, doesn’t it?
Our identity is as Muslims, first and foremost, and then as Pakistanis. If we are not the former, we cannot be the latter, in all due honesty. And if we are not the latter…we are, let’s face it, nothing….
PS: apologies if the above is not an exact quote… it almost certainly is not, since I am going from memory of something read two decades ago.. zaib-e-dastaan ke liye
April 26th, 2006 at 4:12 pm
[...] I also realize that I might have given the impression that I am one of those India-bashing fanatics, whose Pakistanism is a function of Anti-Indianism. I despise those people just as much as I do those Indians whose Indianism is not complete without Anti-Pakistanism. I am a strong believer in the Two-Nation Thory, however, and do believe that the cultures of Pakistan and India are vastly (and fundamentally) different despite the apparent similarities. I think I had made that point somewhere else also, let me see if I can find where. Here it is. 2 Responses to ‘The luxury of hindsight… CGL IX’ [...]