“Marsoon, marsoon, Sindh na daisun” were amongst the last words of Hosh Muhammad Sheedi, the commander of the Talpur Army who died fighting the British Army led by Sir Charles Napier. The willingness to fight the invaders has never been as relevant as now. Yet, at the national level, there is none. The confusion largely owes to the lack of clarity about who we are. As an example, Mr Imran Khan relatively recently asserted his intention of coming to Sindh, relentlessly and multiple times like Sultan Mahmood Ghaznavi. Mr Khan has made one of the common mistakes; mistakes about our identity, about the beginning of our history. To give an example outside of our context, Miriam Ferguson, a former governor of Texas, is attributed as saying, “If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it ought to be good enough for the children of Texas.”
The Sindh Festival’s opening at Moenjo Daro was, at least, an attempt at finding out identity. There were people living in organised, planned communities, long, long before Muhammad Bin Qasim came to Sindh. Sultan Ghaznavi and Muhammad Bin Qasim are no doubt central figures in our history. However, these and others like them are not all there is to us.
One common refrain for anything to do with any particular culture and ethnicity is the criticism that it is somehow divisive. We are all Pakistanis and we are one, etc. Well intentioned as it might be, it proves to be quite silly on the slightest bit of examination. One preferred variation of this critique is that whenever ‘Shias’ are killed for being ‘Shia’, well-meaning patriotic people are quick to point out that it is appropriate that we say ‘Pakistanis’ have been killed, so as not to create divisions. All right, however, why stop there, why not say ‘Asians’, or better still, ‘humans’ have died.
To celebrate the culture of Sindh through a festival named the Sindh Festival does not create any provincial divisions; on the contrary, it seems to be the only way that a sustainable national identity can be formed. They would rather have a ‘Pakistan Festival’. Perfectly reasonable, however, identities do not start from the top or the most recent. Unfortunately, we have practically no national identity right now, apart from ‘we are all Muslims’ (makes the white part of the flag quite redundant, does it not), and hence, by some logical extension, ‘we are all Arabs’. The culture of Sindh (both the Urdu-speaking and Sindhi-speaking), of Punjab, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P), Balochistan, Seraikis, Hazaras need to be celebrated. To insist upon there being one nation in Pakistan as a starting point is to insist upon a losing position.
The Sindh Festival has achieved what it set out to do, to create interest in Moenjo Daro, to create interest in Sindh. The festival sets out to do another thing, namely to destroy the stereotypes and one would think, it has been successful in that endeavour. Criticism of the festival can be made, some legitimate and some not so. Yet, it has generated a conversation. It has shown that the culture of Sindh is not a monolith and nor is it fixed in time; fusion between the ancient and the modern was what the inaugural ceremony of the Sindh Festival allowed. If there can be a similar K-P festival, perhaps, the lazy narrative sold in the rest of the country (mostly in Punjab) of romanticising our ‘annoyed brothers’ might be put to rest.
The fault lines in this country are deepening to the point of implosion, God forbid. The fault lines are not only, ethnic and linguistic, but also rural-urban. They will not go away by us pretending they do not exist. Perhaps, the objective should not be to make them disappear, that never works, but create a common thread, where everybody gets to maintain individuality. We have tried the top-down model once and have not still fully recovered from the aftermath.
Raja Porus, Hosh Sheedi and Bhagat Singh are what we need; the natives who have refused to be cowered down. The dancing girl of Moenjo Daro belongs to an era before our primetime chat shows. She would have been lynched within hours now. Yet, the dancing girl of Moenjo Daro is ‘us’ and from long before hysterical anchorpersons invaded. We need to have cultural festivals to know what is it that we stand for. What is it which distinguishes us from the adversary? Presently, we and the opponent have almost the exact same claim; unnervingly the opponent’s claim is that they are better than what we claim to be.
The Sindh Festival is us pushing back. The Sindh Festival is a sign of what is possible, even now. Mian Sahib, Mr Khan, your move.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 9th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (23)
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@Islooboy: If you ever went to Mohenjendaro, you would know that it's older than Hinduism. European archeologists have acertained that the Indus Valley civilizations predate Hinduism by more than 1000 years so India has nothing to do with Mohenjedaro - Pakistan has everything to do with it because it is part of its history. Arabs only came to Sind in the 8 th century.
Excellent article. Jiye Sindh. Jiye Sindh's tolerance. Jiye Sindh's superb culture.
A very well written piece and makes a great deal of sense. Thank you
@Zalmai: I suppose a lot of the confusion that Indians feel when they try to understand Muslim history has to do with the difference influences of Muslim rulers on the region. For example Mahmud of Ghazni is from Ghazni in present day Afghanistan before modern Afghanistan was even a country. His father was a Turkic slave- solder Sikgtbutin of the Sassanid Persians meaning he was neither Persian nor Pashtun. However when he made an empire of present Afghanistan, Pakistan, part of present Iran and Northern India he promoted Persian culture and language as an orthodox Sunni ruler. It is wrong to call him simply an Afghan or Iranian or Pakistani when seen in this manner. He is part of Pakistan's history and culture. For example Ahmad Shah Abdulli is born in Multan Punjab Pakistan and later ruled a great empire in the region too. There are more Pashtun in Pakistan than Afghanistan so he too is considered part of the history of Pakistan and helped make our culture. Pakistan's history is a mix of all these influences that Indians choose to ignore.
@ What is this article about? We are a country which is at war with itself. Only the affluent have cultural activities going on during war times. Sindh festival was another reminder of how elite live differently from the masses. The festival was utter waste of time and tax payer's money. Why couldnt Bilawal visit universities both in Urban and rural Sindh and tap into what the youth is thinking and connect with them, we are poor and war torn, we have no time for such frivolous and wasteful activities.
Reading this piece by Saroop Ijaz as always makes me glad that sane voices are still around, silently working their way to try to educate this otherwise trolling-pied-piper-following so called educated class. Thank you for such pieces of writing.
What is this article about? We are a country which is at war with itself. Only the affluent have cultural activities going on during war times. Sindh festival was another reminder of how elite live differently from the masses. The festival was utter waste of time and tax payer's money. Why couldnt Bilawal visit universities both in Urban and rural Sindh and tap into what the youth is thinking and connect with them, we are poor and war torn, we have no time for such frivolous and wasteful activities.
Cultural events must be celebrated as they connect peoples past with the present. In Pakistan this is needed more so as it has nothing to show since the last 66 years except narrow mindedness and violence. That lands of the Indus Valley Civilization are falling in a country that dislikes its history and suitably falsified it has resulted in the burial of a glorious past. May many more events like the Sindh Festival must be celebrated with joy and fervour.
A laudable attempt to highlight what is wrong with us and what divides us. For those interested in a better and deeper perspective I would recommend the following recent video:
A new theory of Pakistan’s future by an ex-Pakistani in Canada.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hL2isWy0rzU
What is this article about? We are a country which is at war with itself. Only the affluent have cultural activities going on during war times. Sindh festival was another reminder of how elite live differently from the masses. The festival was utter waste of time and tax payer's money. Why couldnt Bilawal visit universities both in Urban and rural Sindh and tap into what the youth is thinking and connect with them, we are poor and war torn, we have no time for such wasteful activities. What is this rich kid doing in our world, any way
As always, a very sensible piece!
This map tells it all
http://www.paknewz.com/ethnic-map-of-pakistan/
watching Pakistani talk shows and the so called "educated" and "intellectuals" that participate in these shows as guests or as anchors, make me so grateful that I don't live in Pakistan anymore. Despite all the problems in the US, US is still a heaven for anyone who has a clear thinking in Pakistan, if there is anyone left there who can think clearly.
Why is Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi a central figure in Pakistani history? Is it because he was a Muslim and a proponent of jehad against Hindus of India, which included Pakistan and all its inhabitants, Hindu and Muslim.
How can such a figure be revered in Pakistan and what does an average Pakistani of Indian descent have in common with Ghaznavi? No self respecting country tries to co-opt other nation's emperors as their own simply because they share the same religion.
Saroop:
This narration makes me sad. While connecting to the roots is essention to know who a people are, yet preserving those roots for the future generations to come is eqaully important, if not more so. The dancing girl could have show the past else where leaving the sanctity of the mound of dead intact.
I look forward to read what you write, despite your bias towards those who contributed to the ruin and your obvious idolisation of 'Shaheed' BB. By that token, all the dead in Pakistan are Shaheed and all the living Ghazi. Pakistan must be a heaven built atop the ruins you talk about.
If the people in Sindh had a half way decent standard of living, nothing fancy. Stuff like power, drinking water, schools, hospitals, sanitation, law and order etc, things taken for granted by most other nations..........then a tamasha with the peoples money, to give a feel good moment to our up coming leaders could possibly be accepted. Under the present conditions even someone with your eloquence is unable to sell this.
Excellent piece Saroop! I am afraid words expressed in this piece shall remain voiceless because obscurantist have loudspeakers and the license to kill. Best of luck dear Saroop, you are a good man.
The point about rediscovering our identity is correct, but there is an inherent contradiction about this country. That even if Punjabis and Paharis (them being people confused about their identity, Sindhis not so much) realise who they are, there will be natural animosity between them and Pakhtuns. The latter do have their heroes in Ghouri, Lodhi, Suri etc; all of whom from a Sindhi or punjabi perspective are murderers and looters. And remember, Pakhtuns are not confused about their identity, invaders of india like Suri are very much their antecedents and countrymen.
Please, don't take this to be racist or discriminatory, these are just the plain facts.
Mr. Khan is ambivalent. On the fence. He needs a collective heave ho push to land among his peers. Riding on the coattails of decades old fast fading glory he is only interested in one thing : Himself. There is no empathy with the common man. The lion is still perusing, and studying and contemplating and thinking and consulting and getting advice and attending meetings, and forming committees and writing hand held notes, and...
Mr Cricketer cannot be bothered with these frivolous activities. His family is safe in London. Though they may change name to Goldsmith to escape derision, ridicule due to Papa's born again behavior. The lion of Punjab is busy selling the country, down river. The process has started in bits and pieces. He gets his cuts. Who knows, with his trade mark sad, tragic, bereaved ' just swallowed a lemon ' look, he might export himself closer to his money and businesses...somewhere,.. overseas.
Hope ET moderator will let this thru.