I have been indifferent most of my adult life to political change. But here I was, in line, voting. The politicians tugged at my heartstrings and compelled me to question my long-standing apathy. And then, Imran Khan toppling over was the clincher. I was hooked to the unfolding soap opera that started with a cloaked cleric from Canada marching his way to the capital and ended with a teary Nawaz Sharif appearing to fight the campaign of his life. So, I stood in that unending queue, feeling proud and patriotic, magnanimously directing fellow voters in the right direction so they queued appropriately. Not once in that sweltering heat and the unusual delay in the voting process did I question the system. I let myself believe that since the country is held together by a healthy democracy, voting in a leader is only the natural result I am a part of.
And now, after the tinsel dust has settled and the clouds of euphoria have blown south to free my impaired reality, I feel much better. I am my old apathetic self again. Now and then I reprimand myself: what was I thinking? Did Imran Khan and all those politicians really convince me that one morning, we will wake up and a new Pakistan will just spring up in this age-old Indus Valley? We in Pakistan, who cannot give up even the most mundane of cultural rituals, thought that we were reborn.
It takes time to accept reality. For some, it is taking even longer. I watch the sit-ins and sadly read the various invitations on social media for these protests and feel a distant sympathy for those who are having trouble simply seeing the light. I want to tell them that they are living in make-believe. We live in Pakistan and not a socially and politically correct state. Most people do not vote based on democratic ideology. We are a poor country and most of the heartland is used to looking to their local bigwig for their freedom and their next meal. Yes, voters live in cities, too, but most of us who can read this article do not belong to neighbourhoods where mobs rule and local and religious ties are stronger than any notions of rebuilding a distant dream of a democratic and socially fair country.
The sweeping change was supposed to be the PTI, at least, in the minds of the so-called idealists. Sadly, for the idealists, voting habits are hard to change in this vast diaspora of far-flung polling stations and a deeply polarised people. Imran Khan has only emerged as the drone buster, a dream he has sold to those war weary people of Pakistan on the border of Afghanistan and they voted for him and made it the region for him to make a difference in. There is nothing unconvincing about his dream for a better future. Two weeks ago, I believed it too. I forgot though that we live in Pakistan and ideals and idealists make good fiction. The process of life in Pakistan is slow to turn and no cataclysmic tsunami can wash away its daily grind and the slow-turning cogs of its political structure.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 27th, 2013.
COMMENTS (10)
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Democracy is the fig leaf of elitism.
For lasting change to take place, the fight is long and hard, this is only the first round and talk of throwing in the towel at this stage is pathetic.
Those who wait for change will go on waiting till eternity; change does not come on its own, why should it, it comes when you bring it about by fighting for it through various means.
I totally agree with you change has come and we all are witnessing it but its not the way we expected it “IK to be the PM” .PPL are voicing for hijacking of their vote and in Karachi where in presence of so called mandate holder party no body ever dare to voice against them for stealing of their mandate by Power.The problem of Pakistan is that PPL like the author of this article does not standup for the wrong doings rather decide to live with it we all have to change our behaviors 1st for good not temporarily for a day or week and should standup for right and its we who have to change the PPL who are enslaved by bradrizam and corrupt Political parties,we have to give them vision as IK has given us .we have to do for them what IK did for us.Ik has awaken us and every awaken has a duty to awake the remaining sleeping ones .
Not to forget that an Idealist made this country !
@Muna Siddiqui
It was also the first time I had ever voted. I queued up with hundreds who were also voting for the first time. The ambience was festive and for that brief moment in time, I think everybody in that line thought they were instrumental in bringing some change.
Madam, change has already come. The only problem is this is not the change you hoped for and hence are denying it. Look at it this way,
A. Why did you and counless others vote for the FIRST time?
Because, for the first time voting was taking place under Civilian supervision. It was a genuine effort to find out the people's mandate as opposed to 'Election Management' by undemocratic, uncivil ( I use the term intentionally) organisations.
B. And why did 'everyone in the line thought they were instrumental in bringing some change'?
Because that is what they did. They set out to change a Government they did not want and they ushered in representatives that they did want.I don't think they ever told you that they will vote for your 'Leader' alone.
Now, tell me if that is not change what is? Having a preelected leader ratified by a referendum is not neccesarily the only change possible.
Pakistanis should stop dreaming for a change? Nothing will change unless basic ideology changes.We want to change the world leave alone Pakistan.We want Islam to be the religion of the world. Kill any one who does not fallow his version of Islam. Religion is a personal matter of individual, let them fallow what they belief. Allah will take care of Islam. If you still want to help Islam than fallow its teaching. You are not custodian of Islam. Allah is custodian.
Say no to corruption and stealing.
Stop killing any Muslim or non Muslim who does not fallow you Ideas. If you are true believer than under stand that every one have to answer for his sins.
Stop following to half baked Preachers.
Educate your children and help others to get education. ( this is key to success).
This country cannot be changed unless thinking of individual is changed.
Allah bless Pakistan.
Absolutely spot on! Sadly, the star struck youth of Pakistan will still not see the reality.
wow.......what a pessimistic approach.... disappointed
The most industrialized and educated section , in Pakistanis terms, is GT road corridor. Bhutto used to dominate it without having any tribal or feudal links. Nawaz Sharif crushed opposition here this time, practically no competition.
So all is not about tribalism, religionism etc.
Seventy Percent of people here are connected with small businesses. This Mercantile class is backbone of PMLN support here and I dont see them relinquishing their support very soon. They have only one demand from PMLN, energy. If they solve it , they gonna Redo 2013 in 2018 for PMLN.