But when we exchanged visiting cards, there was this brief moment of unease, this epigrammatic flash of political angst. There we were — two journalists — an Israeli and a Pakistani, sipping pineapple juice in the land of the killing fields. It was a seminal moment in our lives. Neither of us spoke for a few seconds. But eventually, we both found the situation quite hilarious and burst out laughing. The Israeli had been chatting with a citizen of a country which is supposed to have a cottage industry that produces suicide bombers and I had been conversing with a resident of a republic with whom we have fought no wars, that never had an empire and that, according to our foreign office, technically did not exist because it hasn’t been recognised! It was a case of judicial solipsism.
Actually, Pakistan and Israel have a great deal in common. Both countries were created around the same time and on the basis of religion. Both countries have embryonic infrastructures, economies based largely on agriculture and light industry and long, virtually indefensible borders. Both countries have spawned fierce nationalists, large swathes of ordinary nice people who are sick of war, who hate their politicians and want peace. Both countries have been victims of some form of oppression: the perceived domination of the Hindu majority in one case; and centuries of targeted persecution followed by intense widespread ethnic cleansing, in the other. Both countries have had hostile neighbours and faced military threats from an enemy that was many times larger.
And yet, in spite of the exceptionally brutal treatment that the Israelis have been repeatedly inflicting on the Palestinians — their infinite reluctance to grant them their own state and their disinclination to pay heed to the counsels of the United States, Russia and the European Union about settling the Palestine issue — I have never really come across any obvious flagrant display of anti-Semitism in Pakistan. Other than the time when the religious right protested quite harshly against the overtures made to the Jewish state by former president Pervez Musharraf and critics did wonder why the dictator felt it necessary to consult Saudi Arabia rather than members of Pakistan’s national assembly. One still hears the educated denizen of Karachi or Lahore who studied at an American university utter the old cliché about some of his best friends being Jews. After all, a race that has produced violinists like Josef Hassid and Jascha Heifetz, pianists like Solomon and Horowitz and chess masters like Emanuel Lasker and Akiba Rubinstein can’t be all that bad. It’s the Jewish leaders headed by Benjamin Netanyahu who are the bad guys and who are behaving no better than the Nazis of World War II. The Palestinians are not Untermenschen. They have a right to their homeland.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 15th, 2012.
COMMENTS (25)
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@hammad, if you think Ideologically Kashmir is pakistan's, why did you attack for the first time? similarly to Balochistan also. Physically ( Bengal - Bengali language as prominent) EAST Bengal was not yours, why did you accept, then tried to supress then LOST. You don't have to be ‘Taleem-e-Balighaan’ to any body in the world. infact you NEED ONE ‘Taleem-e-Balighaan’
to learn true history
@Author,
There is a difference between perception and historical truth. For example, there is a difference between an actual Arab and a typical Pakistani who imagines himself to be an Arab.
@numbersnumbers: You obviously haven't heard of the Likud Party.
brilliant brilliant brilliant
thank you for calling a spade a spade and creating space for accommodating humanity. the most treasured possession of any society. i am thrilled at ET's publishing policy. thank you for keeping up with the times and the age we live in.
God created all men equal and its how we conduct our affairs rather than our creed or caste that makes some more equal than others.
long live muslims, christians, jews, hindus, buddhist, humans of this world.
@Indian: Wow. I'm sure you feel proud of yourself for attempting to explain the ideology along with a smattering of your own logic. Here's a cookie. Now go and read up on Pakistan ideology. I cannot do 'Taleem-e-Balighaan' here.
The author is trying to bring some kind of moral equivalence between only two states ever formed on the basis of religion.But sadly there are too many holes in the narratives. They (Pakistan and Israel) are more dissimilar than similar.
@Abhi: Pray explain how you can use the same logic when Pakistan was created based on muslim majority areas in British India. Hence, the ideological reasoning for Kashmir being Pakistani since since it has a muslim majority. But go ahead.
to hammad
Kashmir is not an ideological part of Pakistan. Islam was created in Makkah - neither in Kashmir nor in the Sindhu river basin. Islam is alien to both regions. Kashmir and Sindhu river basin are hindu lands taken over by the agents of islamic global imperialism and finalist totalitarianism.
State terrorism is not the correct word. The whole world acepts that a state alone has the right to use violence and that the state should be controlled through elections and judiciary. Otherwise governance becomes impossible. Violence was introduced into the Kashmir question/dispute unilaterally and suddenly by Pakistan in October 1947 and again in 1989. All the later violence by the Indian govt. is a reaction to that.
Pakistan could not have been founded without slandering hindus and glorifying islamic imperialism and totalitarianism and you are a product of the resulting pakistani education system.
No comparison between two countries! They are LIGHT YEARS ahead of us.
@Hamad; If kashmir goes to pakistan it will become a singular proof that hindus and muslims cannot live together. Then Pakistan must be prepared to accept all muslims who are living in india. somehow pakistan not only exports terror to india but to Iran, Afghanistan, Usa Uk etc.
@hammad "ideologically part of pakistan", if we go by this logic whole pakistan is ideologically part of India.
@India: It's funny how most of my Indian friends too are prone to seeing things in black and white (e.g Ana Hazare being equal to Gandhi). Pakistan a weak state that struggles to control non-state actors (terrorists), threatened by a bellicose neighbour that commits state terrorism on a land which is ideologically part of Pakistan. But like I said, things are more complex than that.
unlike Pakistan army, the IDF had no jurisdiction within Israel.
@hamad so you accept pakistan is a state sponsor of terrorism
@narayana murthy: "You wage all wars on us, you send terrorists to kill us and say you have a hostile neighbor!!! What kind of a logic is that?" You just answered your own question. How Pakistan perceives India is very similar to how Israel perceives the Arab/Muslim states. You might say the perception is incorrect, but that doesn't change anything. What you said is exactly what Arabs complain too.
@American Desi: A democracy held hostage by the military is not really a democracy. The case is similar in both the countries.
Percieved Hindu Domination? Then why are muslims still living in india they should go to pakistan. JInnah said Hindus and Muslims cannot live with each other. "worse than nazis", NO jew blew himself up in a german restaurant. it is the blasphemy law which is similar to nazi law.
I don't recall the Israelis building gas chambers and concentration camps to "exterminate" 6 million Palestinians, like Hitler did to the jews! Nor do I hear the Israelis talk about "wiping the Palestinians off the map (like Hamas and Iran want to do to Israel)! Saying that the present Israeli leaders are no better than the Nazis of WW2 should earn you the "Joseph Goebbels" prize for Journalistic honesty!
@Author
You write "Both countries have embryonic infrastructures, economies based largely on agriculture and light industry and long, virtually indefensible borders."
Have you ever seen Israel in photos? Israel has wonderful infrastructure. Their economy, is driven by technology and not agriculture.
You write "Both countries have had hostile neighbours and faced military threats from an enemy that was many times larger."
This is something that I don't understand from learned Pakistanis. You wage all wars on us, you send terrorists to kill us and say you have a hostile neighbor!!! What kind of a logic is that?
Wrong, totally wrong. All the time we only read of the three agencies responsible for all the ills of Pakistan - India, USA and Israel. So how can you say that there is no antisemetism in Pakistan. Pakistan cannot be compared to Israel and Pakistan is not confronted with the existential threats from outside that Israel is subjected to. Pakistan is only threatened from within.
@hammad: Not really!Israel had been a democracy since it's inception! Only commonality is both countries don't let the minorities and neighbors live in peace!
You've got to be kidding!
Both countries have embryonic infrastructures, economies based largely on agriculture and light industry
By what measure is Israel's infrastructure "embryonic"? Israel has a productive agricultural economy (with amazingly high productivity given its arid land), but it contributes under 3% of gdp. Israeli economy is mostly driven by high-technology, spanning biotech, semiconductors, defence electronics, software, etc. Of late renewable technology has dominated growth.
I have never really come across any obvious flagrant display of anti-Semitism in Pakistan
This really cracked me up. Only someone who has been living in a cave for the past couple of decades (and even Bin Laden didn't live in a cave, contrary to all expectations) and has never watched Urdu TV would agree with this.
Wonderful article. Pakistan and Israel have more in common than an ordinary Pakistani might think. In consequence of similar birth, both the countries suffer from similar problems. For instance, an overbearing army using right-wing groups for political gains is a common feature. One difference is how they have nonetheless managed to provide their people with proper education and a high standard of living despite the existential threats facing the country. Israel should not be precieved as enemy simply because it has never directly hurt Pakistan. What is our problem with them? How many Arab countries have stood behind Pakistan over the Kashmir issue and pressurized India? It's time for us to make decisions for ourselves and stop being used by Arabs in the name of Islam, it takes two to tango. About Israel's rhetoric on Iran, my question is this: How would Pakistan react if a traditionally enemy country said Pakistan had no right to exist and should be bombed?