Unlike those types, Tony Soprano was overcome with feelings of inadequacy. A baby boomer, who would never feel the purpose of wartime, a family business heir cheated out of his father’s self-made success, Tony felt that “I came in at the end … that the best is over”. The story was an original one — a monster in midlife crisis, seeking meaning in manhood. But yearn though he did for Old World values, much of Tony’s own manliness was a lie. Terrified of emasculation, he murdered, philandered and overate his way to pure misery.
As was expected from the role of a lifetime, it was punishing for the actor as well. James Gandolfini died from a heart attack last Wednesday at 51, leaving behind a depth to television programming never before thought possible. But the impact wasn’t just higher quality TV. For a man whose breakout film role, too, consisted of 10 minutes of savage violence, his work was itself an indictment of violence and the machismo that fed it. Gifted at playing unglamorous men with uglier souls, the cost was heavy: Gandolfini, prone to self-harming rage in real life, may have fallen into an abyss he created.
It makes one wonder whether we’re truly at peace either, operating in the culture we’ve created at home. Nearly 10 years and two novels ago, Mohsin Hamid wrote, “Ours is a society bombarded with machismo. We have a commando as our president. We read about warrior-martyrs in our schoolbooks. We pull wheelies on speeding motorcycles in heavy traffic for no apparent reason. We grow beards and buy guns and get into fights over imagined instances of disrespect.”
And that’s grazing the surface. Witness our Lollywood films exploding in blood and body parts, or all the locales we’ve stamped with martial goodness: Cavalry, Cantonment, Defence, Teen Talwar. We celebrate dead foreign invaders with our Napier Roads and Port Qasims. Even our gardens are named for serious men — Ayubia National and Jilani Park — though both generals were at least fond of natural beauty (and durable protégés).
Why expect anything else from what is, inarguably, a hard country? “We are tough”, Mr Hamid rationalised, “and we need to be. Ours is, after all, the most dangerous neighbourhood in the world”. But he went on to say, “A great deal of strength is required to be un-macho in our society. And strong, dedicated, un-machoness is essential. It opens up space for expression which might otherwise be bullied into silence”.
But before expression, the first casualty of a knuckle-dragging society is, well, its women. Yes, there is the argument that the more butch a society, the more extraordinary its ladies. We are home to the Muslim world’s first female prime minister, men with moustaches say and it was a Samina that scaled Mount Everest this past May. No doubt, these are encouraging outliers, but that is what they will stay. The problem is a cultural one, and it hits us where it hurts; the way we treat our women, how we exhibit girls’ illiteracy rates to the rest of the world year after shameless year, how we feel the female fraction in the workforce chimes with Pakistan the Nuclear Dynamo.
It’s the same problem in different places. India’s very real rape endemic is being combated with more machismo, like doctors prescribing a drug addict another shot of heroin. The idea is less studied sociology and more ‘80s Bollywood: “real men” don’t let women get hurt, or experience the “shame” that rape victims must feel by obligation. Campaigns in the Indian press (calmly lifted by their Pakistani brethren) beseech men to be men and protect women ... as opposed to raping them. Celebrities like Farhan Akhtar pledge to make Delhi safer for ladies, and then ask “Are you man enough to join me?” As rebutted by Indian activist Kavita Krishnan, “patriarchal male protectors” aren’t the solution. But the point is an even simpler one: claims to manliness need not be wrestled away from the rapists. Had anyone stopped to notice, it was never being claimed by them in the first place. Of all the adjectives the media could have chosen to attack rape with, naamard was a poor first choice.
The late Qazi Hussain Ahmad, doubtless a “patriarchal male protector” for Ms Krishnan, spoke on the subject with a clean heart and the same conviction that turned countless teenagers into town criers yelling, “Zalimon, Qazi aa reha hai”. Phrasing Iqbal’s beautiful words on scent and prayer, Qazi sahib thought a woman’s person sacred and her role mumtaz, sublime. For Qazi Hussain, the Holy Quran held the rights of women and men as equal. To protect them was a trust. Qazi sahib arises strong opinions, but it was an explanation that tugged at the heartstrings. The Jamaat’s last gasp of air, he passed away last January, two months after a failed suicide attempt on his life. Allah bless his soul. The suicide bomber, meanwhile, was a woman.
These are strange times we live in, but seeking the truth is for when you’re not busy surviving. And if being the strong, silent type is linked to survival, so be it — making peace with ourselves can come later. Dr Johnson once wrote, “He who makes a beast of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man”. But as with Jim Gandolfini punching himself in helplessness, there usually comes a toll with too much testosterone.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 25th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (22)
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I think the underlying theme of this subtle, perceptive article is that men too suffer from the soul crushing effects of patriarchy, and that everybody and everything is suffering from the sociopathic bloodlust and exploitative abuse that has come to define our entire civilisation. We encounter violence on our streets, our screens, behind closed doors.
Men are being indoctrinated to LITERALLY get off on violence, to seek pleasure from inflicting pain.
Being a "man" has come to mean stifling every impulse to empathise, to consider, to care about anyone or anything other than fulfilling the sadistic Capitalist ideology of compulsive gain no matter what the consequences or cost.
It's hurting our economies, our ecology, our psychology and it's hurting humanity. It's a tragedy that most men can't even consider the possibility of their lives, or their souls having a higher function.
Sometimes a problem is so insidious, so dissolved in the atmosphere we're living in that it's hard to notice something is terribly wrong, let alone identify what that is. Connecting seemingly disparate dots can be an effective mechanism for issuing a wake-up call when an issue is so systemic, and a certain sex's basest desires are so enabled by it that we can't even acknowledge there's a problem.
Another misconception so freely bandied about that now its commonly accepted. sigh. Four witnesses are for adultery to prevent allegations against women for wrongful conduct. For rape, 4 witnesses are not required.
I like this piece, it is t indulgent of the authors interests in tying it up, but writing quality is so powerful that it manages to do it. though must say ayub park and jilani park were after all made by them, guess they should have their names on it. good show.
Sublime piece of writing.
@Lala Gee - "You need to realize that every story published in the newspapers is not always 100% correct"
Point taken. Hope you understand that everything bad you hear about Modi or rapes in India (from Indian or Pakistani press ) is not 100% correct either. And BTW gp65 was alluding to that Shariah law that u guys wildly clamour for... when she made that statement abt 4 witnesses.
the writer has simply wasted time of the readers of this esteem newspaper. This article has no substance, it looks more like a casual tea chat thn anything else. Whats the mesage? whats the issue? whats the point? On a whole a very wayward , cohesion lacking, and direction-less article.Need a lot of hard work and writer would do good to remeber just attending Lincoln and studying law do not make it mandatory for his readers to be impressed.Hope this writer would do better next time. All the best.
Thankyou
Thankyou
I like what you say! Walking the road to where one may be a "man" or a "woman" is hard!
@Np: True, there were/ are daughters of former PMs etc. However, their father hardly played any role in getting them elected. Nehru died in 1964 and then Shastri followed as PM. Mrs Gandhi became PM in 1967 much after Nehru was gone. Same is true of Sheikh Haseena and Benazir Bhutto etc. There have been many other PMs and their sons and daughters did not make it to the top.
@Gp65:
"At least in India we do not require evidence of 4 good Muslim men in order to register a rape case"
You need to realize that every story published in the newspapers is not always 100% correct. As I know, there is no such requirement to provide evidence of 4 good Muslim men in order to register a rape case under Pakistan Penal Code, which is essentially the same as Indian Penal Code. However, if the rape victim wishes to file a case under Sharia Law, which has extremely strict punishments, including death penalty, for this crime, and hence places more stringent requirements for evidence, only then 4 witnesses are required. It is important to note that this requirement of 4 witnesses in Sharia was put for cases in which a women is accused of adultery, and to protect her honor, the blaming party has to provide these witnesses.
"and we hope to never have the type of leaders that you seem to be applauding."
And your heroes like Narendra Modi, Bal Thackeray, Rana Paratab Singh, and Vinayak Savarkar are all saints of the highest order.
@Razi:
"Yet you hope to have leaders like Narendra Modi, and can go to any length to defend and applaud him. We hope to never have someone like him at the helm of our affairs. "
Hz^ = 1025.
Does that equation make any sense to you?
Well, it should, because you are weak in simple logic.
What has Narendra Modi got anything to do with Rapes in India?
@abc: True but all the 4 PM I our subcontinent were the widows/daughters of a former ruler. Not like the women leaders of Israel, Australia, Germany, UK.
Rather brilliant.
@Gp65
Yet you hope to have leaders like Narendra Modi, and can go to any length to defend and applaud him. We hope to never have someone like him at the helm of our affairs.
@Author: When it comes to the place of woman in power politics, there is no parallel to Indian subcontinent. India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Bangladesh are the only contiguous four countries in the world where we had woman Presidents and Prime Ministers. Even today Bangladesh has a woman Prime Minister and a woman leader of opposition. Even during the most conservative period in history we had a female sultan (Razia Sultan). Please note that Razia Sultan was chosen to be queen on merit over her brothers. We had many queens between Razia Sultan and present day Bangladeshi queens. Rani Laxmi Bai of Jhansi, Chand Bibi,, Ahilyabai Holker,Rani Rashmoni, Kittur Rani Chennamma..and many more. History of subcontinent is full of powerful women who contributed immensely in politics. Mughal queen Noor Jahan literally ruled Delhi. USA, Russia and China are yet to open score when it comes to a woman president.
you're better when you only do one post a month.
The Qazi part is loaded with irony. Especially the fact that the assassin was a woman. Readership usually misses out on the subtler points in this article
I some how just could not connect the dots to get a clear picture of what you were trying to say. Tony Soprano - James Gandolphini - Indian rape cases - Farhan Akthar - Qazi Hussain Ahmad - Dr. Johnson and then Gandolpini again..........all strung together to make a case which for some reason did not land on me with a thud. Now tomorrow some kind soul will make it all clear for me in two sentences.
I agree with you. But many won't be able to fathom the fact that a supposed 'liberal' praised Qazi Hussain Ahmed. I am no religious or fan of Jamat, but I think Qazi Sb was a true gentleman and honest to whatever he believed in. . Still I am more worried about those who will criticise your opinion and it would be obvious from their comments that they have not read it... just jumped to comment section after finding a line or two that they could attack!