Nasr says the Muslim middle class will be a force that will be in favour of openness, and trade, and commerce with the rest of the world and within the Middle East itself. “Some of this is true in Pakistan where economic growth has been very limited, but also where a new middle class seems to have emerged, energised and given a voice by the rapid expansion of electronic media, making the ordinary Pakistani far more aware of the world than before”.
Stephen P Cohen in his book The future of Pakistan (The Brookings Institution Washington DC, 2011) disagrees because he thinks that the Euro-centric slogan of “no bourgeoisie, no democracy” will not apply to Muslims. He sees no inherent connection between an urban middle class and pressure for democracy. Rarely unified or motivated by collective social interests, the middle classes across Asia and Latin America have shown themselves to be quite capable of backing illegitimate, autocratic governments for their narrow economic and material interests.
The Pakistani middle classes, he says, are no exception: “Moreover, any prospective material benefits of trade with India will not necessarily accrue to a particular class and could easily be counteracted by the anti-India psychosis that permeates popular media and the public education system where the middle class tends to be schooled”.
The Indian Constitution informs the attitude of the Indian middle class, which is tolerant of secularism. In Pakistan, the Constitution inclines the middle class to desire Sharia and consequently, prefer the ‘harder’ interpretation of al Qaeda over state ideology. It is the sentinel of the unchanging character of the medieval state presented as a utopia by state ideology, as interpreted by the clergy.
Many factors are common between the city-dwelling middle classes of India and Pakistan. The middle class lives in the city and votes rightwing. The Bhartiya Janata Party gets its vote in the city; the Congress party gets it from the rural areas. The PML-N gets its vote from the cities of Punjab; the PPP gets it from the rural areas of Punjab and Sindh. In Karachi, the middle class is conservative but its ‘secularism’ is strongly tinged with ethnicity, which means it is being unnaturally blocked from its internal dynamic by the leadership-in-exile of Altaf Hussain.
The middle class of Punjab disapproves of the middle class of Karachi and Hyderabad. Can we call the latter an ’unnatural’ middle class? If its conduct had not been dictated by an overarching force, wouldn’t it have persecuted the Ahmadis and other minorities or acquiesced in their persecution just like the middle class of Punjab as influenced by Pakistan’s Constitution? Or wouldn’t its lawyers — the vanguard of the middle class in the country — have celebrated the killers prowling the land under blasphemy law the same way as the lawyers of Punjab?
The Arab Spring has been betrayed by the Arab middle class. Olivier Roy wrote (Washington Post January 21, 2012): “Everywhere, the Muslim Brotherhood is benefiting from a democratisation it did not trigger. There is a political vacuum because the liberal vanguard that initiated the Arab Spring did not try, and did not want, to take power”.
The bazaar in Iran brought on the ayatollahs. Pakistani nationalism is tinged by Islam and anti-Indian passions. Nationalism is a middle-class exceptionalism.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 8th, 2012.
COMMENTS (19)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
Every time I come across the term 'middle-class', I wonder where exactly is the 'middle'.
@fus, my friend fus u are talking of 1970 karachi not the 2013 karachi which is totally diffrent and by the way go visit where peoples got killed and houses burned in mix neighborhoods.
@Shakky Are you kidding man karachi is so civilized and educated that every other month few hundred peoples get killed and MQM is against the feudals but allways form govt with them and last twenty to therty years members of MQM who elected in election became multy millionare in $ and education institutions in karachi are located only in muhajirs area where other communties some time can not enter even what u talking about man and karachi west has more pukhtoon and other ethanicity lives and there are not even one college located there should be a university they needed compare to populations.
Cohen , as the writer points out . finds ' no inherent connection between an urban middle class and pressure for democracy ' . This is abundantly borne out by what we see in Muslim societies . The explanation for this phenomenon ? In an important sense , the middle classes in Muslim countries are souless : they have no worldview or ideology of their own .They continue to be shackled by the patriarchal-tribal worldview of the bygone ages . A middle class unarmed by an ideology is spineless and barren : it lacks the wherewithal to lead any real and lasting social change . The Aligarh movement in the Sub-continent , launched ideological chages to meet the needs of the Muslim middle class emerging during the colonial period . Armed with a reformed ideology , this clas pulled out Muslim from their stagnant past .Unfortunately , we sidelined and have buried Aligarh after idependence . What happened to the Iranian middle classes after the uprising against the Shah , and is happening to Egyptian middle classes now after exit of Mubarak tells us a lot about the middle classes in Muslim societies .
Why to wirte so difficult articles which ordinary person like could not understand what message it contains. I have to read at least three to four times to digest it. Your ideas and materials appears to interesing please make readable/understandable by me.
With all due respect to the writer whose articles I like very much and wait for, I have something to say, which I have noticed over a long period of time.
Comparing themselves to India is something that comes naturally to all Pakistanis. There is nothing wrong with that, but in most instances the comparison is based on inaccurate information, and thus misleading. I would like to see such comparisons, if unavoidable, to be based on accurate and authentic information.
India is a very fast changing society, besides being so diverse that there is probably nothing that applies to all Indians at any point of time. Pakistanis in general have some similarities with Indians mostly from North India, and no similarities with people from other parts of India. What applies to a Punjabi will probably never apply to a Tamil. and what applies to a Gujrati will not to a Naga. It is therefore advisable to be careful.
The middle class everywhere is recognized as a big market feeding fuel to consumerism. It can play either a constructive or destructive role in orienting the direction the country takes. In India the middle class will stop in its track all forces that slow down Economic progress. In Pakistan too the middle class can play a positive role, the real question is will it ?
Few from the Indian middle class vote either the Congress Party or the BJP. In most of the big states (UP, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Bihar, Orissa, etc.) the middle class vote the local parties which are staunchly secular. The local parties are Samajwadi Party, Janata Dal, Rashtriya Janata Dal, Trinamul Congress, Communist Party Marxist, DMK, AIDMK, etc. The localization of Indian politics has contributed to communal harmony, secularism, and has reduced the threat of a military takeover to zero.
dear sir. accurate regarding India.
I do agree that the Pakistani middle class is completely screwed up and is tending more and more towards religious fanaticism. But the Karachi middle class is a bright beacon in the midst of all this conservatism. While it may have Mafia tendencies and operate protection rackets in Karachi, MQM has nevertheless managed to throw off the yoke of the feudals, the military and the religious extremists. Instead, this party of Karachi celebrates professionalism and education as embodied in the Mohajir population of the country. And that is intrinsically admirable and worthy of respect.
The author is totally out of touch with the Indian politics.. I am an indian and i can tell you that there are many states in india where its the local party which are really dominant. Congress and BJP are national parties but not really the vote winners in many states.. Author must stop generalising india based on pakistan..
Islam is the future sir..................
Interesting point of view. I have come to understand from writings of Mr. Khaled over time that he tends to look for information out there that matches his own preconceived notions than reality on the ground. This might be a good op-ed exercise but raises questions about an intellectual's objectivity. As for the content of the article, I would disagree with the thesis of Stephen Cohen because in my view, there is a middle class consolidation and ideological convergence at work. Rise of new urban political forces is testament to this counter-thesis.
The whole concept of Pakistan, based on the supposed "two-nation" theory is an illusion. People of all major religions live peacefully in one country, those in "a separate nation" have never figured out what that nation is. One thing is for sure, Pakistan seems constantly to be falling apart despite its birth based on the fallacy that one religion equals one nation.
This is a well-formulated article. I agree that there is a tendency to vote on nationalistic lines in the middle class (often represented by the right wing); however, given that the middle-class has relatively small size and the least propensity to go out and vote, they form the bankable vote base of no party. Further, with ref to India and the importance of caste dynamics, it is simplistic to say that BJP wins in the cities; India has only a 29% urban population and the BJP only has a presence in 14 of 29 states, so considering that it has 25% of the seats in the Lok Sabha, it must be relying on a significant base of voters from other segments (mainly Hindu forward castes); similarly, the Congress depends on the desire of Muslims to keep the BJP out - thus giving it a confirmed 5-6% vote base; it also has a presence in all states.