In her acceptance speech Ms Obaid-Chinoy thanked a range of people who had made the Oscar possible, including those “strong women” who stood against the practice, but a hard road lies ahead. Despite the honour of an Oscar bestowed on a talented and resourceful figure and the support of the most powerful in the land, honour killings are not going away any time soon. Those who kill in the name of ‘honour’ are not going to be influenced by an award made far from the parameters that define their socio-cultural imperatives. The Oscar will briefly make local and international headlines but the film itself is unlikely to get a screening by any of the mainstream TV channels and it would need dubbing or subtitling into Urdu anyway to have any impact. There must be doubt as to whether it will be shown widely in colleges and universities, and there will be those who roundly condemn it for ‘showing Pakistan in a bad light’. It is even less likely to get an airing anywhere inside the public primary education system. Honour killing is murder with a sanitised label, and Ms Obaid-Chinoy’s film says that plainly — an important step. A bigger step would be to ensure that millions watch it, in their first language.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 1st, 2016.
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