Let us admit it, we are a nation of cowards. But February 13, 2011 was the 100th birthday of one brave man, Faiz Ahmed Faiz. He was brave at a time when courage had not lost its true meaning. Anybody can stand tall on someone else’s shoulders, anyone can ride the popular tide, but what’s tough is to educate people about the sometimes huge contrast in what seems right and what is right. Such ideological evolution can be brought about only by the likes of Faiz sahab, who dared to stand against the sweeping tides of religious extremism, misplaced patriotism, moral policing, biased popular perceptions and judgmental public opinions.
Today, the media is a massive moulder of opinion and views, twisting the concepts of religion, ideology, morality, patriotism and sovereignty to feed the ever-growing appetite of an increasingly frustrated population. The bill to amend the blasphemy law deserved to be disseminated by the media fearlessly, but why would they have done that? Opinion making takes too much time, costs a lot of money and, most significantly, needs courage. Media is not free, it just waits for the perfect tide to ride and, sadly, the amendment in the blasphemy law was not one. Sherry Rehman doesn’t fit the stereotype our hypocritical society wants to put forth; her outlook is not ‘Islamic’ at all. I am sure if the same bill had been tabled by Maulana Fazlur Rehman’s lookalike, it would have sailed smoothly. Hail hypocrisy.
It is very easy to be upright when it is convenient but we are in dire need of brave men like Faiz Ahmed Faiz who are not apologetic about aligning with the truth, even when it is not convenient. Salmaan Taseer did it just the way Faiz sahab prescribed.
Is ishq na us ishq pey nadim hai magar dil,
Har daagh hai is dil mein bajuz daagh-e-nidamat
Published in The Express Tribune, February 15th, 2011.
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