Ok, so I exaggerate. There have been moments in particular countries when the population there has come to think of somebody as the second coming of Churchill. But, in general, so far as I have ever been able to tell, the vast majority of people tend to be convinced that their particular bunch of hopefuls is the biggest bunch of eejits and crooks ever produced.
I mention this because, notwithstanding the sudden ascension of Imran Khan into the ranks of prime ministerial candidates, my general reaction to the current slate of nominees is much the same as being poked in the eye with a sharp object.
I concede that matters could be much worse. I could, for example, be a Republican voter in the United States where the leading choice is currently one Herman Cain, a man with no political experience, a penchant for sexually harassing his employees and a knowledge of policy so limited that The New York Times recently described him as appearing to be “someone who, quite frankly, has never opened a newspaper”. Not only that, but like the Khadim-e-Aala and the Earl of Edgeware Road, he too is fond of enlivening political speeches with solo musical performances. Great minds may or may not think alike but great political minds clearly do.
On the other hand, the fact is that Pakistan does not need a Churchill: all we really need is somebody slightly better than what we have now. Yes, a Churchill would help. But even Churchill wasn’t a legend for most of his life. Had he died in 1935, which would have been almost 30 years after his political debut, he would have been remembered as one of the more talented but also more inconsistent politicians produced by England, with the disaster at Gallipoli most likely being his epitaph.
Let me try and elaborate this point. I think too many of us are obsessed with the great man theory of politics. We, the electorate, keep on believing that the one thing keeping Pakistan from turning magically into Switzerland is the ascension to power of the ‘right man’, some deep thinker jo keh senior tajziyakaar ki tarah, ‘tamaam umoor pay gehry nazar rakhtay hon’. Ideally, of course, he should not even be interested in power, but should be the equivalent of Cincinnatus who, when summoned to the defence of Rome by its Senate, was found plowing his fields, harnessed to a horse.
Array logon, sun lo! Aisa koi hero hamari zindagi mein nahin aa raha!
More to the point, the search for the hero is not helpful.
The hot topic over Eid lunch some days ago was one NGO lady’s anger over what she called the colonial slave mentality, in other words the tendency of the Pakistani to shamelessly prostrate himself before his superior rather than take a potentially problematic stance.
I did not disagree with NGO lady that this was indeed one of Pakistan’s biggest problems. Instead, what I told her was that she was being unfair in calling our tendency to indulge in grovelling servitude a colonial legacy.
The truth is that leadership in the subcontinent has practically always been completely autocratic. Under the Mughals, the emperor was lord and master of all he surveyed, able to make every person bend to his will. All property was deemed to be the property of the emperor, so that when high-ranking advisers lost favour and were removed from their post, they tended to lose their belongings as well as their ranks.
By comparison, the subcontinental bureaucracy established by the British was a veritable haven of meritocracy. More importantly, a bureaucrat who displeased his masters could not be economically destroyed. Instead, a senior civil servant was free to give unpleasant advice to his political masters, confident in the knowledge that the most that could happen to him would be reassignment to a different post.
The protections enjoyed by the bureaucracy in 1947 have been systematically destroyed since then. Today’s bureaucrats are still formidable but they are a pale shadow of their predecessors. And while the faujis have a lot to answer for, the disemboweling of the civil service is not one of their crimes: instead, the blame for that falls on our civilian leaders who have tried their best to reduce civil servants to just servants
I don’t want to sugarcoat history or to imply that the bureaucracy in Pakistan has no sins to atone for. Instead, my point is very simple: good governance requires more than one man. In fact, good governance requires a whole team of good men and women. Most importantly, good governance requires that the relevant leadership be willing to listen to good advice.
The cult of the hero, by contrast, operates on a kun faya kun basis, the assumption that the grand leader needs only to snap his fingers to call forth blessings for the masses. Since the grand leader is the one responsible for the miracles pouring forth, the grand leader obviously knows better than everybody else. And since the grand leader knows better than everybody else, obviously no decision can be made except by the grand leader alone. And since the advisers to the grand leader have no insurance against falling out of favour, they make sure that the grand leader is continuously reassured of his infallibility and his importance.
In an earlier column, I had expressed some cautious optimism about Imran Khan. I don’t wish to walk that back but I do want to clarify that what he needs to do to win my vote and what he needs to do to fix this country are two very different things.
In order to win my vote, Imran Khan only needs to be better than the other alternatives on offer. But in order to fix this country, Imran Khan needs not just to come to power but come up with substantive policies and a core team of advisers whom he is willing to entrust with serious responsibilities.
We’ve had enough heroes in this country. What we need is somebody who knows how to get the job done.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 10th, 2011.
COMMENTS (26)
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Yeah massive gathering can not give you the asurity of their votes aswell. !No doubt i enjoyed the concert quite well:P
Faisal well written and @ Unpatriotic you need to get a life you can question everything if you have the requiste knowledge, criticising for the sake of criticising is getting boring!!!!
http://thinker-thinkingoutofthebox.blogspot.com/2007/08/choice-between-villains.html
@MD: ......and electing Imran Khan is not a democratic process?
@Salman:
so one has to believe blindly that imran khan is honest? is being a follower of imran SAME as being a follower of a religion? Show the proof... and make things simple and for god sake stop writing long stories...
@mirza. Imran was a professional cricketer. His job was playing cricket. After retirement he has had many jobs writing cricket columns for various newspapers around the world and also commentating for various tv channels. These job pay very handsomely. Hope that helps.
Liked what you said.
@Author: Time will tell you who is the Hero, names presented by you, no doubt are nobles but history will tell you a new HERO is about to overshadow all past heroes.
Hope for the best, only hope for the country is IK.
Can anybody please tell me, did Imran Khan ever had a regular job or has he ever worked for a living like most of us? Or he is simply too good to work and live off other people's money?
@Ali Tanoli:
Please read a book about churchill written by some one who does not belong to JI
Those 3 names honestly don't belong as 'heroes'.
Brilliant article.
Chruchill really is a myth, manufactured by his speeches. Considering his incredible flip flops, the other characters and factors in WWII win (though absolutely got it correct on Hitler's intentions), condoning of atrocities, Stalin love and bigotry, he leaves much to be desired.
As you pointed out the groveling isn't inherited from colonialists. This sadly is a deep inherent cultural trait. You'll see sadly that Pakistanis in the Middle East do the same pandering and sucking up there as well.
I find it funny how some romantically re-imagine Siraj-ud-Daulah being some great freedom fighter against the British, when he was extremely cruel, holding onto power and wealth and was a huge reason why many deserted him.
By natural extension we seem to condone nepotism and cult personalities, like one video-blog on ET seemed oblivious to when asking it's readers would they like Bilawal Bhutto or Fatima Bhutto to lead them.....ummmm...how about neither?!
The answer isn't a 'magic Caliph' or one man revolutionary leader, though it certainly helps a lot better than a hope and change religious pandering but no substance leader, or family feudal dynasties or the autocratic army and it's hierarchies.
We need an entire progressive community who are revolutionaries by acting by example rather than proclaiming themselves to be leaders. A governor doesn't necessarily have to be a charismatic leader. For example, like the Indian chief minister Nitish Kumar of Bihar whose literally transformed that once backward province.
Together Everyone Achieves More.
' We’ve had enough heroes in this country. What we need is somebody who knows how to get the job done.' Just love this phrase.
Imran khan is better than churchill murchall.
In politics there are no heroes. Only relentless ruthless and, above all, smart men and women who have waded the dirty waters and left a permanent mark on the swampy landscape as a team because those who go solo have always drowned.
Good one. I hope IK reads this.Pakistan is in a whirlpool of problems and it can not be solved with slogans and heroes. We need good 10 to 20 years of sincere, honest, efficient policies and good decisions backed by a competent team to see us through.No doubt IK is sincere and honest but that is not all which is required. We still need to see his policies and team (specially his finance and economics team). @Rehan: For god sake do not put BB in the list with those greats.To be a good opposition leader and to be good leader who could deliver when is power are two separate things.You have right to have your opinion but Lincoln,Gandhi, Ataturk and BB in the same group.There are people who will keep Dr.Albert Einstein and Dr. Rehman Malik also in the same group.....than as I said you have a right to have your opinion.
"I don’t wish to walk that back but I do want to clarify that what he needs to do to win my vote and what he needs to do to fix this country are two very different things." "But in order to fix this country, Imran Khan needs not just to come to power but come up with substantive policies and a core team of advisers whom he is willing to entrust with serious responsibilities." "We’ve had enough heroes in this country. What we need is somebody who knows how to get the job done." Everyone would agree with me that PMLN has got the best team who can fix this country, have substantive policies and a core team of advisers who knows how to get the job done.
In a country where Army rules the roost and politicians are no better than doormats for the deep state, Imran Khan stands no chance of making any difference to the plight of Pakistanis. Besides, size of rallies can never be taken as a sign of electoral success, you may gather a million people in an open ground, but, that is no guarantee that the masses gathered would vote for you. In India, many filmy 'megastars' or sport's superstars, tried their luck in the politics, mistakenly believing that their glamour would fetch them votes and lead them to the corridors of power, but, sadly, all of them proved miserably wrong and ended up as a huge losers. The recent example is the so called "mega star" Chiranjeevi from Andhra Pradesh, South India, who, many thought, would change political equations in the state, but failed so miserably, that he lost his security deposit in his home constituency( the place he was born) and ultimately dissolved his newly created political party and joined the Congress. When Imran Khan's supporter ask this question as to who they should vote if not Imran, because the alternatives are just Zardaris and Shariffs, no one can contest their dilemma. But, I think, you should give more time to democracy to evolve and mature, trust me, eventually, as the democracy matures, it would produce people with impeccable credentials, as that happened in the India's most backward state, Bihar. After 15 long years of Lalu's misrule, the state produced a leader of extraordinary honesty Mr. Nitish Kumar who eventually, made Bihar's economy to grow by a whopping 11%, that too consistently for 7 years in a row. My point is, give democracy a chance to evolve, as it will reward you eventually, all you need to do is to show some patience. And the most important thing is to get rid of feudal and the Army lords as well, till then, Pakistan will never see the salvation.
Feisal sb. Given the weak state and its institutions, constrained resources and no tradition/history of access to basic rights on the basis of citizenship, we actually elect 'patrons' and not 'representatives'. This has strong implications...including the search for superheroes. A preliminary development of this thought is on the blog below: http://pakistanpolicyideas.wordpress.com/2011/11/09/perpetuating-patronage/ The real question seems to be: is there a path from here to a working democratic system? Warm regards, Faisal
PTI supporter here, and I wont attack :) In fact I would go further and say that a good team can only be as effective as the active support of the masses, especially the middle class. Good governance is a partnership between people and a leader's team.
As for the PTI team, I believe it is growing and maturing. Some people say Imran Khan is not a man of teamwork, this is not true. When PTI first participated in elections and failed, Imran wasn't in favour of participating but he agreed because the team decided. We must also remember that Shaukat Khanum could not have been a world class cancer hospital if Imran Khan didn't know how to bring the right team. He succeeded even though a board of doctors said the hospital could not be sustained. The same case is with Namal college. He established an institution with a team. He is an institution builder, and we should support him in developing his team further and then reviving our most important institution: government.
Mr. Feisal, Get ready for an attack of PTI internet watch-dogs ....They are after you. They believe only one thing. "you are with imran otherwise you are with corrupt politicians"
How can you question imran polices and statements? How can you suggest him some thing?
Every thing is perfect with him and his followers