In The Village, a movie by M Night Shyamalan, the residents of a medieval village live in fear. Dark and mysterious things abound in the woods surrounding them. Dead and mutilated animals show up from time to time. The only way the villagers know how to protect themselves against the evil stalking their lives is through the rules passed by the Elders: no use of the colour red, stay away from the forest and to barricade themselves in their houses whenever the warning bell rings.
The villagers know that they are not the only people and that there are towns out there within walking distance; but these are “wicked places where wicked people live”.
Matters come to a head when one of the main protagonists gets stabbed. As he lies in agony, his girlfriend (Ivy) decides to go to the towns for help. That is when she is told that the creatures in the forest are only make-believe, invented by the Elders to make sure that the villagers don’t wander. In fact, when Ivy finally makes it out of the woods, she finds herself suddenly in the 20th century. It turns out that the village is in the middle of land owned by one of the Elders and that the Elders had decided to wall themselves off from the outside world after various traumas. The movie ends with the Elders still undecided about whether or not to continue their deception.
I mention all of this because I see the movie as a wonderful illustration of Pakistan today. We live walled off from the outside world. We deliberately terrorise our citizens with self-created monsters. And our elders try to keep us in line with fake rules designed to mystify rather than to enlighten.
Let me elaborate. There is a reason why the phrase ‘Indian subcontinent’ exists. Look at a map of South Asia and what you will find is a vast flatland flanked by the Hindukush, the Karakoram and the Pamirs to the West, the Himalayas to the North, the Patkai to the East and the Indian Ocean to the South. Yes, there are vast differences of culture and geography to be found within that landmass. But the cold hard truth is that 80 per cent of Pakistan’s population (i.e. the people living in Sindh and the Punjab) inherited a culture that is largely similar to the people immediately across the border from them.
Does this mean that the two-nation theory was wrong and the Partition of India a mistake? Frankly, I don’t give a damn. What I do know is that guilt is no basis on which to decide questions of policy and public identity. What I do know is that I am tired of being penned up behind the walls of our village and scared with talk of the Indian bogeyman.
Pakistan is once again inching towards a more liberal trade and visa regime with India. Every time this happens, the usual pundits emerge from the woodwork. Some of them talk about cultural annihilation. Some of them talk about economic annihilation. But between the protectionist lobbies of our local manufacturers and the fear-mongering of our religious leaders, the end result is invariably a stalemate; a preservation of the status quo and a continuation of our ghetto status.
The point here is not the validity of economic protectionism. I am not an economist and cannot properly answer the question as to whether free trade with India can help us or hurt us. My friend Savail Hussain, however, is an economist (and a damn good one at that). His view is that the smaller economy tends to benefit from access to the larger economy and that Pakistan will be a net beneficiary of trade with India. On the other hand, there are certainly people who disagree, and that includes well-respected authors such as Ha-Joon Chang. In his well known book, Kicking Away the Ladder, the Cambridge professor argued that most of today’s leading economies protected themselves in the beginning through high tariffs and only allowed outsiders into their markets once domestic manufacturers could handle the competition.
To return to my point, what I want to emphasize is that we cannot allow even legitimate economic fears to justify our cultural isolation. Pakistan today is in danger of becoming the cesspool of the Muslim world, home to all the poison draining out of the lands of our religious brethren. What is needed to counter this growing radicalization is contact with the outside world. Like the residents of The Village, we are being terrified through fake monsters created by people who think they are defending us. It is only if we managed to see for ourselves that the outside world is not full of monsters that we will be able to break away from those fears.
To a certain extent, the barriers that isolate us are already being whittled away by technology. Millions of people tune in daily to Indian soap operas. Millions more relax by watching Indian movies. But, at the same time, there is no substitute for people to people contact. It is one thing to read of a different world or even to see it on a screen. It is another thing entirely to see it for yourself.
But what will happen to Pakistan then, ask the Elders? Will it not wither away? Will it not become absorbed back into India?
In all honesty, I don’t think so. I have been to India numerous times and would like to go there many times again. But I have no desire to be an Indian or to live anywhere else other than where I currently reside. What I do know is that you can’t thrust nationhood down the throats of an unwilling people. What I do know is that fear is no basis on which to build a country. Our Elders can either learn that lesson now. Or they can wait for the explosion which follows when the villagers learn the truth.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 21st, 2012.
COMMENTS (37)
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The moderates of all religions and of all countries are the same. They have the same liberal instincts. It is the blinkered in every religion and in every country that are the problem. For them, ideology and blind faith are more important than our common humanity. It is the blinkered that outnumber the open-eyed. At any rate, they are more strident and more violent and so they can shout down or cow down the other category.The silence of the rest is the strength of the blinkered. A viewpoint of this type is the voice of sanity and hope.Technology seems to be giving some scope for the sane voice to be heard.
Dear Faisal, I must commend you for this bold and refreshing perspective on Pakistan's future. I hope your wise counsel is seriously deliberated by the people of Pakistan, and embolden them to get rid of radicalism and extremism which seem to threaten the very existence of Pakistan as a nation. I specially liked your dispassionate and genuine concern for your country. Good luck and all the best.
@Javaid R. Shami: like Nepal,BD and Bhutan do not have big armed forces like India and never try to compete with India and also do not fear India
Let us be clear about one thing, GHQ will never allow us to have a better relationship with either India or Afghanistan for if we have peace then we don't need the armed forces to 'defend' us!
@Feisal H Naqvi . Trading with India will be even more dangerous than Pakistan's Trading with China where Chinese Imports have destroyed and paid put to over Thirty Pakistani Industries. . In Free Trade with India Pakistani Industries will suffer similarly as they suffered in respect of Free Trade with China. . Pakistanis have accepted their Fate with China destroying over Thirty Pakistani Industries without a Dicky Bird but a similar outcome with Free Trade with India will be considered as an Act of War. . As such Pakistan cannot afford to have a Free Trade Agreement with India.
@Shakir Lakhani: Your Indo-German couple just wanted to get out of Pakistan alive. Do you really believe that foreigners can wander in Pakistan without fear of assassination or kidnapping? Can you truthfully claim that you have personally seen any foreigners?
@shakir lakhani: "In Karachi, I had to ask you to show me the slums, the whole city of Mumbai is a slum"
Brother, the biggest slum in southasia is Orangi town slum in Karachi which with a population of 2.5 million is much bigger than the largest slum of mumbai(Dharavi with 1 million).
The HDI of mumbai city is also much higher than Karachi.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orangi_Town
Sometimes, collecting information from neutral sources can help people reduce their trolling online!
@ Author, A very articulate and well thought out op-ed! Like my fellow Indians, i must compliment the Author for thinking global and of 2012.
In India, no one wants to reverse partition. We are happy with our Indian identity despite our huge diversity and have absolutely no interest in eyeing anyone elses country/territory.
India respects its neighbours such as Sri lanka, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh. we dont want an inch of their territory, nor want to interfere in their culture. Same goes for Pakistan.
In some way, as the Author says, Indians broke the village barriers and migrated to the city in 1991 when we liberalized and opened our country. We still have fears because we have huge numbers of vunerable poor, but with a better grasp of the process, we are willing to pave new roads.
Millions of people tune in daily to Indian soap operas. Millions more relax by watching Indian movies. That is from Pakistan side, how many Indians actually Know the real Pakistan? Depiction of Pakistan in Indian movies is like 19th century Lacknow or a Taliban infested Afghanistan. People to people contact may also tell the Indians that Pakistan is not bad than India.
Dear Faisal, when i saw the movie few years back, had the same thoughts, living outside the village you do find a lot of NRP and NRI having similar ideas. Just like the Elders who because of the past wanted to close the future, similarly the Elders in our both countries need to adjust their vision to bury their past and look to the future. The road is difficult but not impossible. Imran Khan may be a good move by the Elders but the Dafan-e-Pakistan Council is a disgrace for all Pakistanis
Excellent article, lot of wisdom displayed. There is much to be gained by the people of both countries through open interaction but nothing to be gained by those who call-the-shots on our side and so the impasse remains.
India too isolated itself against Pakistan (until recently, that is). Most Indians (even those settled in Europe and America) think of Pakistan as a very dangerous place (where no one is safe). A German with an Indian wife came to Karachi three years ago. His wife was convinced he would never get out of Pakistan alive. He was amazed to see that Karachi is much cleaner and safer than Mumbai, where your nostrils are assailed by a powerful stench the minute you get out of the plane (Europeans call the smell "Bombay perfume")! He went around freely in the city, he asked us to show him the poor areas like Lyari. He said, "In Karachi, I had to ask you to show me the slums, the whole city of Mumbai is a slum"!
You and your kind are most welcome in India. Its the rabid bearded Mullahs that are the problem.
I would be happy if many Pakistanis commented on this article. But, I know I'll be disappointed.
Sir, the article is refreshing, coming from a Pakistani writer. There is hope for all of us is what I feel now. An Indian perspective at this moment is needless. Good luck and thank you
I read somewhere that culture can be divided into two parts ... physical and intellectual. Changes in the physical culture (food , things of daily usage etc), across religions, in a particular region, is very little and it was subject to availability of local resources and opportunities. I think this was true during the time of partition especially in the vast rural hinterlands of our subcontinent. What really made the difference was the intellectual part of it.(strict observance of religion, faith and trust in people of other religions, differing ideas of the society... etc). This was exploited by the angrez and our 'overly' enlightened religious leaders and scholars with a big ego. Otherwise I think things were pretty manageable on the the whole cultural front.
Bravo ! Superb article !!
@Mirza: "I also agree with you that we do not want to become Indian. " And why should you? Even within India there are vast differences in clothing, food, language and culture not to mention diverse religions. If as Indians we can appreciate the diversity of other Indians that do not share our food and language, surely we can appreciate the Pakistanis and their distinct culture as fellow South Asians. The fear of having to assimilate is simply unreal. Would India not have tried to assimilate East Bengal in that case (I am not saying it would have been a successful experiment if India had tried but the point is India did not even try).
I would like o clarify that I do not believe in the 2 Nation theory which says that Hindus and Muslims are incapable of living together in harmony as one nation because 150 million Muslims and 900 million Hindus CAN and do live in harmony in a nation called India. But that does not mean I, or for that matter any other ordinary Indian wants to roll back partition. If there are such people , I can assure you it is a small fringe smaller than the number of Pakistanis who believe in Ghazwa-e-Hind.
@Mirza: "I also agree with you that we do not want to become Indian. " And why should you? Even within India there are vast differences in clothing, food, language and culture within India not to mention diverse religions. If as Indians we can appreciate the diversity of other Indians that do not share our food and language, surely we can appreciate the Pakistanis and their distinct culture as South Asian. The fear of having to assimilate is simply unreal. Would India not have tried to assimilate East Bengal in that case (I am not saying it would have been a successful experiment if India had tried but the point is India did not even try). SO there is no reason for Pakistanis to fear taht Indians want to roll back partition because we don't.
I do say (as would my Hindu countr
Good piece in deed! One thing you cannot accuse of the Indians is the death wish -- of thrusting their nationhood down the Pakistanis throats.
Love your blogs. Contrary to what people say, 'The Village' in my eyes is one of M. Night's great films from his heydays. But I would have never thought about a comparison between the film and idea of Pakistan. And this is what gifted writers like yourself do. We all know this hypocritical pious-than-thou and entire-world-is-our-enemy attitude, but looking at it through hollywood lense makes it more vivid (and frightening).
I am with you brother. We will take it NO MORE. The days of elders are over.
Wonderful article! And, much like Ivy, when Pakistanis manage to get out of "The Village", they suddenly discover a world which is very different to the one which thought existed. That's when they realize that the Elders were lying, that the world isn't as evil as they were led to believe. In the case of Pakistan, that's also when they realize that much of the evil is in the Village itself, personified in the Elders.
In basic terms the hatred for India has made Pakistan follow a policy in which religion is made to dominate an ordinary citizen's life to the extent of some 90% (my estimate), whereas it should be of the order of 10%. If hatred for India (you can use other prime reasons) is the reason for this and removal of this reason can bring Pakistan from the brink, then it is all to the good.
excellent article. we need peace and trade with india and peace and prosperity for the people of both countries, InshaAllah.
"Like the residents of The Village, we are being terrified through fake monsters created by people who think they are defending us." While I agree that those defending you have created an imaginary fake monster in the outside world, they have also created real monsters inside your country. With this addition/without this addition, an excellent piece on the current status of pakistan.
@Feisal H Naqvi
Latteral thinking at it's best.Would like to see more people like you at both sides of the devide.
Sir,Faisal Naqvi,your analogy is apt.But you are preaching to deaf.What is the use?Besh ke samane been bajana".Besh is not going to dance.We all know,India does not want to retake Pakistan,it is a done deal.As you said European,China and USA wants to get in to trade with India more.It is already way late for you guys,if you start at earnest it will take 10 year at a minimum to have a half decent trade at best,what is there for Pakistan to lose?It can not be worse than what it is?Usa,has for good turned their back,it will never be the same.It will be good,if Pakistan see the writing on wall.After the draw dawn,USA will be be full tilt in alliance and trading partner,the days of '1000,cuts has seen its best day Good people like you ,seen all that has to be seen. I'm extremely disappointed at the way Pakistan is going,but we can only see and weep and be helpless spectator.Hope better sense prevail,that's all we can wish.Good day.
Faisal you said "Pakistan today is in danger of becoming the cesspool of the Muslim world, home to all the poison draining out of the lands of our religious brethren. What is needed to counter this growing radicalization is contact with the outside world".
This says it all. I also agree with you that we do not want to become Indian. We like them but we like our local culture better. The same way a person from Karachi would not want the team from Lahore win against the locals. We can be distinct and diffrent flowers in the same vase. Thanks again for such a wonderful op ed. As long as there are people like you there is hope!
@feisal h naqvi: Awesome. Loved it, bro. I knight thee as an honorary indian:)
A very good article by the author. Regarding how people(and groups of people) constrain themselves by imagined fears - I think it is a natural condition of the human mind(which arises from the brain). People belonging to a tribe are suspicious of a neighbouring tribe, people belonging to a particular caste are wary of people belonging to other castes and so on. This can be extended to the country, continent, religion, economic doctrines and probably even to extra-terrestrial life forms. How many movies have we seen where aliens are considered to be friendly. In most sci-fi movies aliens are always portrayed as adversaries to humans. So I think the fear of the other is a natural condition and it will remain with us until we evolve into something else(which is bound to happen anyway).
Pakistanis begging the Europeans for market access and 'trade not aid' is funny from an Indian perspective - these same Europeans are queueing up outside Delhi mandarins' offices, hat in hand, wanting 'market access'!!
Pakistan, just next door is seeing a golden opportunity go past, hostage to the blinkered "Elders".
Bravo! Would that your brethren heed this call - but it is extremely unlikely given vested interests of the security state that you currently inhabit.
Nice Article !! You are welcome to India anytime :).
People should stop creating monster out of nothing and alienate a huge population from mingling with the similar culture existing on the other side of the border..
Feisal, this is simply brilliant! Keep writing please, thanks
Great article. a very accurate description of current psyche of Pakistan.
hope we had more such people in both the countries.