Wazirzada comes from the Rumbur valley, one of three where the Kalash cling on and he is on a PTI ticket having joined the party in 2009. He is a social worker attached to a local NGO and a graduate of Peshawar University. He faces an uphill task in terms of preserving his own legacy. The Kalash are an animist group and under a constant pressure to convert which a steady trickle do, making it ever-harder to sustain the indigenous population as deaths and external migration also eat at the numbers. Tourism has provided a small and seasonal income for the Kalash but even that has its downside as visitors, especially visitors from other parts of Pakistan, can be abusive of local hospitality. There are about 4,000 Kalash left.
Ring-fencing their culture is almost impossible and successive governments have paid little more than lip service to their preservation. At least Wazirzada has an opportunity now to maintain an above the horizon profile for the Kalash as well as other minorities, and he has declared himself willing to do so. If ever the minorities need a champion it is now. Our cultural diversity is shrinking before our eyes to the indifference of the majority. The Kalash do not just need to be preserved they need to be rescued.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 15th, 2018.
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