2. The lack of progression. I’ve only been to Pakistan three times, but it’s clear our native Pakistani brethren are years ahead of us in terms of ideas, fashion and entertainment. Your women wear sleeveless kurtis with jeans, we’re still in patiala shalwars. Let’s use our politicians as a crude metaphor: you have Hina Rabbani Khar, we’ve got Sayeeda Warsi.
3. The pitiful selection of spouses. Is it just me or are we facing a bit of a crisis here girls? It seems we have a few options. 1. The Cousin 2. The Rudeboy 3. The Mummy’s Boy who won’t leave his postcode 4. The Imam wannabe 5. The Party Animal or 6. A mixture of 4 and 5, depending on which day of the week it is.
4. The need for role models. Apart from the boxer Amir Khan — and he really doesn’t have universal appeal — we have none. I’m not talking about ‘successful people’ here, I mean genuinely famous ones. On the Wikipedia page for ‘List of British Pakistanis’ our famous ones include a fictional television character, a Michael Jackson impersonator and someone called Nigel Le Vaillant.
5. The outrage at mixed marriages. We arrived in Britain a very long time ago. Aunties, Uncles, larkis and larkas, it’s natural that a few of us will marry white (or even black) people.
6. The feeling of inadequacy. Although British Pakistanis have formed a strong community of our own, the facts remain unchanged. We will always just be a bunch of BBCDs to ‘real’ Pakistanis or a load of ‘Pakis’ to the (far rightish) British people.
7. The invasion of privacy. My father has nicknamed one of my Aunties ‘Radio Pakistan’. You might have thought Twitter was the quickest way to spread information/gossip. That is, of course, until you meet this Aunty and many others like her.
8. The expectation that we can all speak Urdu. Jinnah didn’t speak it well and desi films have subtitles now, so there are enough excuses not to be fluent. Don’t be surprised that to some, Urdu might as well be Swahili.
9. The “Are you X?” question. Fill X in with any other brown race you can think of. “No, I’m Pakistani!” should be tattooed on my forehead.
10. The assumption that all Britpaks know each other. There are more than a million of us here. Although most of us come from the same region (i.e. somewhere in the Punjab), no I really don’t know your doctor, taxi driver or the lady who taught you how to make a curry last year.
Published in The Express Tribune, Sunday Magazine, September 11th, 2011.
COMMENTS (48)
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Finding this in 2021 and wow this is some cringy self-flagellating un-funny stuff. Congrats
Great!
Any comments about?
http://www.pkhope.com/preserving-culture-in-west-mission-not-impossible/
@Maria:
We Pakistanis easily beat the Europeans at this. We can discriminate even against our own countrymen of the same color even though they have been staying here long before Bin Qasim got here.
10 things i HATE............... don't you hate always..... insted praise or encourage good things , that to flourish......
No it is not this bad in the US.
Being born and raised in Pakistan and coming to UK only lately I can't agree more to this article. Fantastic !!! Some of the points just come from the heart !!!
british pakistani....can't ever figure out what the hell these are?....the piece has been written with a great deal of positive sensitivity, but really, when will brits of paki origins stop calling themselves pakis....because they simply aren't
@Haroon Riaz: and they sympathize with us
I can understand your situation in the UK. Who is forcing you to live there if you are not happy? With the UK passport you can go to any other country and try that out. When would we the Pakistanis be patriotic to any country no matter how long we have lived there or born there? Try living in Pakistan for a few months!
Nice article dude ! - Presents not just the social akwardness of Oakistanis but Indians like me too. Someone above made a right comment that irrespective of whether you are born in USA or UK, your skin color will automatically classify you to one of the ethenicity unless you are lucky like my brother who is slightly more fair then me and has light brown hair and eyes making him look like any other new yorker and people hardly believe we are brothers. Well coming back to topic, it is not our classification but our social behavior, and thinking which defines us. Even though classified as American Indian I never found it difficult gelling with Americans or never felt that they see me as someone else. My best friend is Pakistani and he and myself never knew of ancestral enmity until we grew up. And this we owe to our parents taht they did not indoctrinate hatred in us but taught us well to live in harmony. But there are neighbourhoods in jersey and man I know few people who are second generation desis but as soon as they open their mouth they sound worse the fresh off the boats. And by sound I dont mean the language but their general thought as the author has pointed out. Our parents not only settled here for better livelihood but also better quality and good quality of life comes when you have open mind and not rigid about our past belief. World is changing and there are good changes ad bad ones. We can choose to adopt good changes even though they may not exactly match our old "glorious " cultural background.
..Wearing a sleeveless kurti with jeans is NOT in fashion and has NOT been for a long long time! It is a fashion no-no. The current trend is a long kameez (with or without sleeves) with pants on the looser side..:P
BRILLIANT ARTICLE. loved it, everything is true. very talented and humorous, straight to the point writing. where can i read more of your articles? are you on twitter?
I thought all of you were from Mirpur.
British Pakistanis generally come from rural backgrounds, which is why there might be a culture shock when a BBCD meets people living in islamabad, karachi or lahore.
Oh yeah and i forgot to add, Pakistan Zindabad, and God bless the Queen!
It's all about perspective my dear!
Ten things I love about being British Pakistani
I am bilingual (actually trilingual) English, Punjabi and Urdu (Our mother actually made the effort and taught us) I have an insiders view on two cultures, which has allowed me to look at the world in a different way. I have the most amazing childhood memories of my amazing family in Pakistan, when we would go every summer I have a British Passport and can travel easily around the world and have a Pak ID card allowing me to go Pak whenever i want without visiting the horrible embassy in London I am blessed to have opportunities that my cousins in Pakistan unfortunately don't have - although i wish they did as they are equally good if not better in many ways I can cook real Pakistani food - not the gora version I don't need to go out in the sun to get brown like the natives as i already have an amazing skin tone thanks to my Pakistani heritage I have good friends from all over Pakistan - kashmiri, balochi, KHI folks, Punjabis and sindhis who like me were brought up in the UK and i have learnt about these various cultures - something i couldn't have done if i only stayed in Punjab. I have great friends who are of Indian and Bangladeshi origin and we can see how futile and non-productive this hate game is - i also have freinds from all other parts of the world and get a different view point My parents gave us a fantastic work ethic which has helped me in my life as well as self belief.Pakistanis are hard working people wherever they are, given the same opportunities as anyone else they excel. There are so many good things we have got from Pakistan and Britain, we are in a lucky position to take the best of both worlds and get rid of the worst.
Its time we started to look positively at ourselves instead of negatively. Instead of having ten things i hate about xyz, why not ten things i love about xyz?
I have been living in UK for last 10 years and I can understand what you are talking about. But remember the Pakistani who went to UK in 1960s and 70s were mostly labour class, unskilled, most illiterate from villages. The educated class of that time was happy living in Pakistan and didn't move that much. So the problems you are talking about like overinvolved families, force and arange marriages, dress codes, conservative religious views, strict parents, and lack of sense of fashion are all issues belonging to a class of Pakistani. These values do not represent true Pakistan. Now when you go back to Pakistan and compare yourself with girls of Karachi, Islamabad abd and Lahore. It's a little unfair as things u just mentioned still happen in villages
@J
Shukriya mere mujahid...
@Madiha:
No Madiha these are real problems. Perhaps you need to see certain areas of birmingham, luton and oh bradford. Yes not everyone is like that but the younger generation cant say much about them. Please open your eyes and start facing the reality
I can say with absolute confidence that this article is completely accurate! I live in Australia and the same points apply. In Pakistan the fashion has evolved from conservative shalwar kameez to sleeveless, low cut tops with three quarter jeans (which is a horrendous combination!), and they say it is us that are being lead estray of our cultural and religion! The older women in our community can't seem to understand that there is such a word as privacy! Gossip is merely common conversation. The lack of suitable spouses and ingnorance 'out of culture' marriages is ridiculous! I have a long way to go till I get married but let's hope our society shape up their thoughts and broaden their minds, because I'm not marrying some villager. Overall, we are an odd bunch, with some dreams our culture and religion can't cater. Love the article:)
Brilliant, one of the best articles about British Pakistanis.You should have mentioned something about Babas of Gujranwala.
LOL!!
Do for Nothing or Die for some thing. We don't have a cause to live or die. Problems are for the best peoples. Because they can manage them best! See with open eyes what we r, what we do, what we get?
@Cautious: The British and Europeans in general don't see migrants or the native born children as real Europeans- regardless of passports. This is the harsh reality and explains why so many Turks in Germany are marginalised after over 50 years. The same for the frustrated Arab youth in France who are excluded from jobs. The dislike of Afghanis and Iranians exists throughout Europe too. When we hear of race riots, unemployment, second class status and all the radicalization of Europe's Muslims, I wonder to what extent this has to do with how they are treated badly there. As for most Pakistanis in the UK, I always thought that the majority were Kashmiris. I always come across another Kashmiri there but you are right, I always hate to be identified as some other South Asian or race. I think that's what is meant by saying we wish Pakistani was tatooed on our forehead.
very funny article, you should look up the following link.. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IrkrlLKKaY4&feature=related this will fill you in on all things being a pakistani in england...
Useless piece. Wasted my 5 minutes..
Im a british paki but get this idea out of your head, having a beard or wearing shalwar kameez does not make someone backward and wearing skirts doesn't make one a progressive.
@Zaid Hamid: Good joke dude, good joke!!!
Useless article much? Just a way of self glorifying your egotistical non chalance as to how you're "British" while the rest of us are merely "Pakistanis". If you've got so much reason to hate your Britpak status, you should suck up the courage and return to the place of your roots.
@SK: The link is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Pakistanis
you're British, you have nothing to do with Pakistan except some connection with a fake idyllic nostalgia of the country pumped up by your grandmas and grandpas
excellant article anella.
@Cautious: This just shows how ignorant you are! Yes, we are british, but in that point the writer is referring to ethnicity, which for us is pakistani!
Lol, I can so relate to all of these! Numbers 2 and 3 are so true...
i am an indian living in britain and i found pakistanis very successful and hard working... Of course every community has few stupid elements and pakistani community is no exception.. The moment i identify myself as indian, there is always a friendly smile on the pakistani's face..
Totally agree with all your points. Having studied in Britain for four years and worked for 3 odd years, I have witnessed it all first hand and totally agree with all your statements. Real Pakistanis are the ones who live in Pakistan. It's more to do with history of British-Pakistanis and their tale of immigration to Britain. Most of British-Pakistanis, even if they are in someone's eyes successful today, were either cheap factory labour force working in positions no other nationality, let alone the British would be willing to take up, or illegal immigrants who later managed to naturalize themselves due to government amnesty rules. Therefore, majority of the British-Pakistanis have a past or present marked with poverty, crime, deceipt, corruption, and of course honor crimes for which they are well-known in United Kingdom.
It not only about being a British Pakistani. I think a German, French or an American Pakistani face the same problems.
Hahhahahahahahahaha ! Nice :D agree with and have experienced most on my trips to Britain :P
Doesn't get any worse than this. I sympathize with you.
B.B.C.Ds.
haha nice..although I dont quite agree with no. 4 "The need for role models." I do believe that British Pakistanis are a very successful community. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:EnglishpeopleofPakistanidescent
“No, I’m Pakistani!” should be tattooed on my forehead." . And there lies the problem -- you should consider yourself British which would eliminate most if not all the other items you have listed.
What a terrible and inaccurate article. I live in the UK and there are several successful Pakistanis here.This article is a rant of an attention seeking teenager who has her facts skewed.
Come back to Madina-e-Sani and defeat the Americans/British and Indians.