Jinnah made a mistake and
I am ashamed of being Pakistani, Mahwash Badar in The Express Tribune, Karachi
"...to every single person who defends
their patriotism blindly
and their religion with a bullet, I hope you know exactly whose side you are on. I hope you sleep well at
night knowing that you are on the side of the
murderers." May 12, 2014
Jinnah made a mistake and I am
ashamed of being Pakistani, Mahwash Badar
The Express Tribune, Karachi, Pakistan
The Express Tribune, Karachi, Pakistan
Anyone who has ever travelled abroad will tell you that no matter
where you go, no matter how developed the country it is that you're
travelling to, if you are a British national or a Caucasian American,
the doors become friendlier. The security becomes less pressurising.
Visa queues are shorter. Procedures are simpler.
If you're a brown Pakistani man (or even woman) who is travelling
to another country, that's a whole other story. You're working in the
Middle East, chances are your salary is just a little bit above the
basic working wage or anything that will get you a bed-space with seven
other human beings. Respect is minimal.
You're not supposed to ruffle any feathers. Or demand for rights.
Your children are thousands of miles away studying (because you can?t
afford education for them here), your wife probably has another job to
help make ends meet and
Pretty much the equivalent of, well, I don't know. What is that
the equivalent of? What analogy do I draw to represent the utter misery
that is being a Pakistani in this
super-power dominated world?
super-power dominated world?
As if the current state of the country, what with its years of
dictatorship and lack of infrastructure, hasn't driven us insane enough,
there is the added bonus of inviting religious
extremists and letting them destroy everything we hold near and dear.
Sure, apologists will reason it saying "this is not true
Islam" and what not. But my question is when, seriously, when do we set aside the debate of
what is true Islam and what isn't?
Let the clerics and the religious scholars sit in their mosques and minibars, oh I meant minbars. But once and for all, eliminate and annihilate the savage, beastly, cowardly, immoral men who buy the bodies of fragile, poverty-stricken, desperate men, strap them with explosives and send them into markets with innocent women and children. Finish these abhorrent elements in the society that attempt to throw us back to the Stone Age.
Let the clerics and the religious scholars sit in their mosques and minibars, oh I meant minbars. But once and for all, eliminate and annihilate the savage, beastly, cowardly, immoral men who buy the bodies of fragile, poverty-stricken, desperate men, strap them with explosives and send them into markets with innocent women and children. Finish these abhorrent elements in the society that attempt to throw us back to the Stone Age.
A recent article in the New York Times reported on the World Health
Organisation (WHO) declaration of the polio emergency in Pakistan.
Last year, a polio worker was killed in Peshawar, as well as another
who was shot dead in Khyber Agency. Several were kidnapped in Bara. In
January this year, gunmen killed three health workers taking part in a
polio vaccination drive in Karachi. Not Kabul. Not Sierra Leone. Not
Riyadh. Karachi.
My heart boils and burns as more devastating news and reports
flood the channels. The New York Times article further stated that
according to a report, the highest refusal rates for polio vaccination
were recorded in wealthy neighbourhoods of Karachi because they had
little faith in public health care. In North Waziristan, the Tehreek-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) have forbidden vaccinations since years. Pakistan thus
has 59 polio cases to report, the most of any in the world.
Being a mother, it scares me. It keeps me awake at night. It reminds
me that even if I run far far away from the borders of my own land, its
demons will continue to haunt me and my future generations. I Google
"Pakistan" on the news and everything that is reported is
about death, destruction, squabbling politicians, ailing children,
extremists blowing up things and a struggling economy.
I raise my eyes to our neighbouring country and see what could
have happened if we were still a United India. Maybe we would have been
polio free too. We would have been a unified part of a process of being
the world's next big force to reckon with. Of being a part of the next
blazing economy.
I find myself deeply wishing that Jinnah hadn't made this mistake,
that he had thought about the future of Pakistan. He didn't think of the
obscurantist mindset that he had propelled forward, the countless
millions that died at the hand of this vague agenda that fails to unite
us as a nation. I look at the years of struggles that Pakistan faces,
the fall of Dhaka, the provincial wars, the stark separatist mindsets
and I wonder what Mr Jinnah was thinking when he decided to leave the
Indian National Congress (INC).
We share more with our Indian brothers than our ancestral DNA.
Our food, language, clothes, lifestyles are more like them than the
Arabs we so badly want to mimic and ape. I stare at the green passport
with the same self-loathing as the fat 16-year-old girl with pimples on
her face who is told that she cannot get married because she will always
be blind, diseased and fat and her elder, stronger, prettier, better-educated
sister will snag all the good catches because she ended up with the
better caretaker after the divorce of their parents.
·
I I am ashamed
of being a Pakistani today.
·
I am ashamed
that I belong to a country that kills human rights lawyers and sitting
governors, and issues death threats to university professors.
·
I am ashamed
that we believe in spaghetti monster theories and pie in the sky
conspiracies and risk the future of our children.
·
I am
ashamed that we have rejected our scientists just because they believe
in a different dogma.
·
I am ashamed
that we cannot protect our women, we cannot protect our children and we
cannot protect our men from the evil that is extremism, fundamentalism
and the foolhardy idea that Pakistan is a great nation.
Pakistan is a fledgling, flailing state.And those 59 children,
whose legs can never work anymore, the family of Raza Rumi's driver,
those who shed tears for SalmanTaseer, for Perveen Rehman, for Rashid
Rehman, for Dr Murtaza Haider and his 12-year-old son, every single
person who went out to have a normal day and never made it home alive,
are all paying the price of the empathy, respect and awe. YOU show
cowards like Mumtaz Qadri.
So, to every single person who defends their patriotism blindly
and their religion with a bullet, I hope you know exactly whose side you
are on. I hope you sleep well at
night knowing that you are on the side of the murderers.
night knowing that you are on the side of the murderers.
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