Curtain call: Exiled from Peshawar ‘Janan’ longs for home

Three years ago revered actor Alamzaib Mujahid was forced out of his country to work as a cab driver in Singapore.


Hidayat Khan December 10, 2012

PESHAWAR: Alamzaib Mujahid, a veteran in the Pashto television industry and one it’s most famous comedians, did not bow out of the limelight for reasons common amongst stars of his calibre.

His story befits the dramas that he had spent most of his life working on. First kidnapped by militants, then released only on the condition that he will never work in showbiz again, Mujahid currently works as a cab driver in Singapore.

Alamzaib Mujahid

Known by fans as Janan, after one of the more famous characters he played on television, Mujahid performed a variety of roles both as an actor and as a producer. He had a huge fan-following in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) and neighbouring Afghanistan, working in some 250 Pashto comedy dramas, mainly for PTV.

Speaking to the Express Tribune via phone, Mujahid said he left Pakistan three and half years ago and took refuge in Singapore, after being kidnapped by unidentified militants. Their condition for not killing him was his departure from the silver-screen as, according to them, acting and anything to do with television is un-Islamic, he said.

“Even when I stopped working, I was not left in peace in my country, therefore, I moved to Singapore taking my family with me,” Mujahid said.

Mujahid, who hails from Charsadda District of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, was initially encouraged to work in Pashto dramas by well-known PTV producer Shaukat Ali. Mujahid’s foray into Pakhtun television started from Draim wada (third marriage) in 1989.

The actor was doing his masters in Pashto literature from the University of Peshawar, but dropped out prematurely. He said that educated people were needed if Pashto culture and art were to be promoted through stage or drama.

250

“I was part of the famous stage-show ‘Abaseen’ for a very long time. I performed 52 different roles for that, which I believe was one of my best performances,” he added.

Fearing for the lives of his family members, the artist even refused to appear in interviews, saying his brother and other relatives were still in Charsadda. “I want to come back to Pakistan as life in this unfamiliar country is very difficult. I am just languishing here along with my children. The people of K-P have given me a lot of love, but now I am unable to even put my foot on my motherland.”

Mujahid’s predicament seems to be part of a trend in which Pashto artists are being forced to leave the country. These also include Haroon Bacha and Sardar Ali Takar. Several female singers have even been killed, all for their chosen profession.

“A society is recognised by its culture and literature; and literature grows and develops through artists and writers,” said Saad ullah Jan Burq, who has written dramas for Mujahid. Burq said: “In our society we are not only destroying our culture and heritage, but artistes are either being killed or expelled from the country on the pretext of doing things against Islam.”

Published in The Express Tribune, December 10th, 2012.

COMMENTS (1)

Dr.A. K.Tewari | 11 years ago | Reply

When the golden days of these writers , attists and singers will prevail in Afghanistan . My heart sinks by finding their pathetic condition . I think we have to ultimatly nuke the land of demons to root out them from there . But the situation is now turning in right dirrction , now they are trying to enter in Islamabad . The breeding ground it self is now being attempted to engulfed by these terrorists and hence a civil war is eminant which can not be avoided . Emtire world is now ready to side liberals and army in their attempt to revive true Islam in Pakistan .

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