And for what?
On paper, all this is seemingly legal. The police have laws to quote, the magistrate has sections to cite, and the government has sanctioned powers to justify this wave of arrests. This is how troublesome activists have always been nabbed in Pakistan. This is how nuisance-generating crowds have always been dispersed in our country. This is how power-wielders have always dealt with challengers to their authority. All legal, all official, all permissible.
And all wrong.
Wrong because hidden under the folds of this legalese, is a reservoir of poisonous ill-intent. Such ill-intent strikes at the root of our diseased system. It has seeped into laws that aim to control, not serve. It has polluted the spirit of democracy and infected the norms of governance. Ill-intent makes right seem so wrong; just so unjust; pure so toxic.
Which is why the Science of Stupid reigns supreme in Pakistan. For what else can explain why the most glaring of wrongs cannot be righted? What else can explain the near-absence of common rationality among the rulers? What else can explain why the men and women donning imperial robes cannot see hypocrisy when it comes and slaps them across the face?
Sounds vague? Not really if you stare into the glowering eyes of the Predator State. If the government wants you picked up and thrashed, you will be picked up and thrashed. Legally. If the government wants you in jail, you will end up in jail. Legally. If the government wants to make your life miserable one way or the other, it will. Legally. There is a certain social sickness imbedded in this form of governance; a sickness sanctioned by law and justified by precedence: This is Pakistan, and this is how the system works here.
Baloney. Six decades of pure rot is enough. Six decades of exploitation, manipulation and suppression is enough. Six decades of abusing power and privilege is enough. Something, somewhere has got to change. This something is right here, in front of our eyes, looking straight at us, pleading, and begging. Look at the police beating people mercilessly in thanas; look at the endless line of citizens crying for justice in kachehries; look at the semi-naked children begging for morsels on the roadside; look at the nauseating arrogance of midgets growing fat on taxpayer money; look at the elected aristocrats twirling their moustaches and licking their lips while you grovel for your rights; look at the misery of life you have been served by those entrusted with State power — a life that ravages you in hospitals, lacerates you in courts; whips you in government offices and flays you on the streets. It is a life built around laws that chain; norms that stifle; traditions that crush.
But what do you do when those who should see these ruins of existence, strut around with their eyes wide shut? What do you do when these lords of our destiny refuse to feel the pain of the father who cannot send his child to school; who has to choose between buying food and buying shoes for his daughter? What do you do when these pharaohs cannot internalise the tragedy of a mother who has to bury her infant because she couldn’t afford proper health care? What do you do with these dynastic rulers who just cannot comprehend, imagine or visualize a Pakistan where all would be equal before the law; where they would be accorded a level playing field; where the rulers and the ruled would be equal citizens of the State?
Change has to be internalised before it can be implemented. Before it is internalised, it has to be visualised. Before it is visualised, it has to be imagined. Before it is imagined, it has to be dreamt. Before it is dreamt, it has to be felt. If the feeling gives you goosebumps, the flame has been ignited.
Has the flame been ignited in their hearts? Minus this flame, leaders are nothing more than managers. And managers just manage what they have. In our case, what we have is a rotting status quo strengthened by decades of decadent rule. This system that we suffer, and this governance that we brave, this is not changing because the managers of this system do not have the capability of the capacity to create something new. They are a product of this very system, where power is achieved through a certain well delineated exclusionist process; where who you know is more important than what you know; where kinship trumps merit, and personal agendas dominate institutional ones. Why would they cut the branch they sit on?
So they unleash the police on their opponents because that’s how this system has always worked. They steal elections because that’s how elections have always been won. They stuff government offices with their cronies because that’s the way they believe loyalty is rewarded. They build dynasties in the name of democracy because that’s how state power has always been used to guarantee generational dominance. It’s how their elders ruled. And that’s how they and their off springs will rule.
But if such a system continues, there won’t be much left to rule. It does not take trillions of dollars to change the system. All it takes is will. And intent. All it takes is for one person to stand up and say “Enough. No more”. All it takes is for a refusal to live a life this way. All it takes is for a determined citizenry to stand up and say no to this tragedy that we call life in Pakistan.
The mighty structures on Islamabad’s Constitution Avenue today signify nothing more than tall edifices of political vanities. Under the shimmering September sun, they look like concrete dinosaurs, frozen in time. Perhaps the roar of the citizenry will rattle them back to life in a world that has learnt to exist without dinosaurs.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 14th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (65)
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Excellent work Fahd Husain! Just like pre-Independence it was Iqbal's writings that helped a lot, inshaAllah people will remember your writings for this! Thanks and God bless you!
Poorly written article, in pedestrian English. Blaming the leaders with gilded verbosity serves no purpose, none. The leaders come 'from' the nation, are 'of' the nation, 'part' of the nation, 'representation' of the nation. They are our own reflection. Magnified perhaps, yet our own reflection. Ooops ...that must have hurt. Sorry.
A good article! I find it extremely important people must not wait for others to speak. Be the first person to take a step. All one need is believe in himself, dare and initiative. Very beautifully quoted by someone ‘I said, "Somebody should do something about that." Then I realized I am somebody.” -Lily Tomlin
Nonviolence is the answer to the crucial political and moral questions of our time; the need for mankind to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to oppression and violence. Mankind must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression, and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love and respect...
The article no doubt a good read.
An excellent article on the true picture of our dear homeland. Salute you Fahd. If there were more brave young men of pen like you to make noise about what all is wrong in Pakistan there might still be a chance for our next generations. God bless you.
simple brilliant so true and voice of most of literate people today. i say "ENOUGH NO MORE"
very nice!
An excellent and brave eye-opening article on the 'Six decades of Pure Rot' and all the ills in our country of the Pak. Salute you Fahd for putting thoughts of millions into words. If only we had more of your kind to kindle hope in the present hopeless situation by making more and more people aware through your pen that 'Enough is Enough' and that all need to chip in to bring CHANGE in the status quo.
This article is an emblem of intellectual sobriety and of poetic cum rhythmic stunt of the writer. Dressed with declamatory zeal and motivated by emotional appeal, the article pierces into the deepest tiers of our conscience; stuffs bloom which is to rise ; knocks at the doors of sluggish and sordid minded persons; creates rebellion among the generational slaves of the colonial mansion; and finally shows us the mirror-miserable, wretched and hapless visages attired into moth eaten dress. This was Pakistan. This has been Pakistan.And if we are not awaken then this land of pure will be the land of the pureless in future.
Party workers are picked up in the dead of night, blindfolded, handcuffed, bundled into caged vans and driven to unknown locations. There they are maltreated, harshly interrogated, booked on flimsy charges, produced before magistrates, thrown into waiting buses and rushed to jails.
That is the problem with Democracy. It is too messy.
Contrast this with the 'saviours'.
Step 1- Man is picked up.
Step 2- Man disappears.
Step 3- Saviours tell Supreme Court they know nothing about this.
Se, No Arrest, No Charge sheet, No Mess. No op ed.
@Sami: all the slums u are going to mention are prepaid,never to be fair nor are capable like fahd hussain,they are not privileged to be called analyst,journalist etc,
Question is. Can you write something similar on Balochistan issue?
A superb essay - for a nine-year old. For a grown up, .................. alas!
If verbosity be the music of revolution, play on! Khan's followers follow him in his prolixity. However, as a great English poet once said, 'words are like leaves, and where they most abound. Rarely is a fruit of sense, beneath them found.'
Neither IK nor PTI have achieved any political results to 'demand' or deserve a revolution. World Cup was a team victory, the Hospital a philanthropic effort of which there are many parallels and the KPK government has done nothing special, failing even to hold Lab elections in one year, the foundation of governance.
Simply awesome piece of writing
The system under the current setup has failed to deliver justice, education and security(every form of security). Hope the mix revolutionary-reformist agenda of IK and Dr. Qadri bring some light to this rotten system
@Yasir
for someone like you there are always some Attaulhaq Qasmi, Irfan Siddique and Mushtaq Minhas. Please dont bother frustrating yourself with something which is beyond your comprehension.
Beautiful.
@Irfan Qureshi: Ia there an English version of your comment?
I've never read an article this anywhere except in the New York Times and LAT. Cool dude.
Pray recount Mr Hussain's flawed rhetoric! The people of Pakistan have been continuously hammered with a wrong application of democracy. The status quo remembers the odd constitutional arguments that protect their right to stay in offices, offices that are exceedingly inefficient and out rightly out of order. The elite are clinging on to the last threads of hope that link their expired mode of conduct to the prehistoric structures on constitution avenue in Islamabad, to the ruins of a monarchy on Lahore Mall Road and to the various unjust, unneeded and expired venues of power. We need to deserve change, we need to crave change or be forever cattle for those in power to herd, milk and butcher at will @GS@Y:
I am not sure whether when will we get rid of two family limited companies (sharifs and bhutto), but i am sure about one thing that next generation of these families (hamza shahbaz, maryam nawaz and bilawal) will not be able to rule Pakistan. These families and Pakistan can not advance at the same time anymore.
I couldn't have said this any better. Brilliantly put......Its time to awake the nation whose blinders have obstructed their view of reality. It was only when I left Pakistan that I realised how little we settle for in Pakistan because we feel no change will ever happen! Its time to demand change.........but not the George Orwell version of 'Animal Farm'!!
Wow!! You have spoken from your heart and, while doing so, have given a voice to my heart too!! This current 'democracy' is rotten to its core. The current set-up is in place for one purpose only - to make the powerful and corrupt even more powerful and indestructible, and to make the life of the miserable and dispossessed even more miserable and hopeless.
Expressed very deep feeling, I guess, we are to take this advance way step by step.
@sabi:
We are not brining revolution the way revolution took place in those countries mentioned by you, though it is not difficult to do so unless you are prepared to see bloodshed. However, all ingredients are in place, if today these gansters in the parliament & their supporters do not CHANGE their mindset about the way the poor people in general are denied their right to live like a human being & denied justice, because there is no accountability of anyone in high places. People have been made aware of their rights & right to justice & this is just a beginning & insha Allah CHANGE will come.
These gansters in Parliament & their supporters do not like to see CHANGE from the present system, because it suites them to cover their loot & plunder & keep on denying the poor people of their rights & justice.
These gangsters have ganged up in the name of democracy & constitution & I ask them & their supporters " have these gangsters followed 41 basic articles of the constitution which they claim to be the sole protector ? I ask you Mr Sabi the same question ? then on what ground are you supporting these gangsters ? You & your bunch of gangsters are scared of the awareness that has been created through this dharna & this is what was being denied to them through constant denial of basic education ( again it is enshrined in the constitution to be given free ), basic health, local govt system etc; to name few by your gangsters & supporters. Is this what democracy is all about ? Is this Parliament where with 33 % attendance ( yet all elected members take all perks & benefits ), for the last 16 months not one law for the benefit of the poor people has been legislated, let alone passed...so what, democracy are you talking about. Please have the courage to face facts based on ground realities. If people continue to be denied their rights, people like FH etc; will speak up. And, if not through peaceful means, people will be forced to get by force. This is a natural action for every re-action...if that what you expect ?
I can understand the apprehensions of this so called democracy supporting guys. It is fear of unknown, because they haven't witnessed role of law, equality of rights etc in Pakistan in last 67 years. "The oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown” H.P. Lovecraft.
Fahad;
You spoke for the majority, and spoke from the heart, very well said.
Our rulers (read parliamentarians) are grandly talking about the lofty ideals of democracy and protecting it - but for whom?
Even if we believe for a second that their intent could be fair, the results fail them. So its high time that not one but all of us who can think should say Enough. We must demand change, it doesn't matter if the change is Imran Khan or anyone else, the change should be fair, free and equal for all.
@sabi: The fact that you included Fidel Castro in your list was not understood......he took a principled stand against a super power and along with his country is alive WITH DIGNITY.
@Sharjeel:
I respect your courage & at the same time sympathize with what you went through. Having said that, it is part of CHANGE that we must endure if CHANGE is what is needed to end the present system of denial of our rights & justice etc; as enshrined in our constitution, by all those elite class in the glass house call " Parliament "...
@sabi:
We don’t want such revolutions we are not that stupid.
Correct. You are only heartless darbaris, trying to protect the pillage on which your parents raised you and you are raising your children now!
Excellent Fahd.That was straight from the heart of a common Pakistani
hit the nail on the head, unfortunately it will not resonate with people without a soul.
Looking for Messiah is an idealism that has always captured our imagination. And the fact is we have found proportionally more in our midst than many other nations. From Liaqat Ali khan to Nawaz everyone claimed this elusive title. Aren't we fortunate enough that even right now right in front of "edifices of political vanities" not one but two Messiahs with some known junior messiahs have placed their revolutionary and rather messianic political services at the disposal of citizenry. Having so many Messiahs around, looking for one additional could exacerbate the already Messiahs-driven deteriorated situation. This Messiah-riddled cartel is not receptive to loosen its grip. Let us be patient for sometime.
BELOW LINES GAVE ME GOOSEBUMPS: Change has to be internalised before it can be implemented. Before it is internalised, it has to be visualised. Before it is visualised, it has to be imagined. Before it is imagined, it has to be dreamt. Before it is dreamt, it has to be felt. If the feeling gives you goosebumps, the flame has been ignited.
Fahd! Such a fine pen you are equipped with..! Thank You
@GS@Y: @GoofaSingham @Yashtra,..the state does not have it's writ ANYWHERE! They bombed the courts in Isloo,..[is that what you all call the Capital?] and killed a judge, lawyers and supplicants. After Nisar declared it safest in country!
Brilliant writing ... True to each word narrating existing situation. God bless you for taking it up.
Sir, Salute to your thoughts, salute to your pen, very well written, it is the true representation of the loyal Pakistani, Congratulation on collecting words in such away that give passion to us to change, and please please forward it to Ansaar Abbasi, Saleem Safi, or it should be on the agenda of the CEO of GEO and Mir Shakeel in their next meeting, hope it is.
Reform, not Revolution
Aitchisonian spirit; buck up Kelly in yesterday's march against Mombai Indians took me back in time. I am happy that it paid off. Your article today is a realistic analysis of current scenario. Beautifully chosen theme and carefully crafted sentiments has made it a masterpiece. I wish and hope that our young generation will come forward to salvage lest it is too late. In the end let me pay tribute to Late Major Azhar who produced writers like you.
There are plenty of intellectuals who can narrate the flaws of the system but lack the guts to locate the responsibility exactly. When one ask them who is responsible (architect) they point to the grave yard.
Fahad Hussain: You are looking for One Person who will bring for you stars on earth.Herr are some of your ideals who were given the task; Che Guera of Venezuela Akino of Philippines Castro of Cuba Qaddafi of Libya Kim il sung of North Korea Eidi Amin of Uganda Khomeini of Iran Hugo Chavez of Venezuela (again second attempt in that country) Tell us where do stand above countries in the list of successful nations? Nowhere. We don't want such revolutions we are not that stupid.
WHEN??? Grass is greener after chaos. I am a Tax Filer, I am Crushed under compliance. When I as a dinosaur will be able to roar fire as they keep burdening me with more Taxes. Yes, I want improvement but I cannot Soar with Ducks. Entrepreneurship being killed within me before taking off. There is no intelligent Life in Islamabad left to help those who want to help themselves. Citizens of Pakistan are doomed. We are Failing in Big Picture. I ask my government to bring good change, Now. World is pacing ahead and the Parliamentarian have become Dinosaurs with no Roar.
A new political class in the making baked in by typical thrashing. Good for Pakistan's political future.
@GS@Y: What democracy you are talking about, fragile democracy, there is no such thing called fragile democracy, either you have democracy or you don't, it is simple as that. There was and is nothing democratic about NS and his brother Shahbaz, , there is this thing called nepotism and they are the masters of it. It is common saying that when the State becomes tyrant then it is the right of the citizens to stand up to it and it is exactly happening in Islamabad now.
No one has been able to give sense to the recent events and put them in more better and piercing words than the author. Excellent piece!!
Beautiful piece! Great stuff Fawad Bhai.
Very nice encapsulation of the challenge that Pakistan faces.More such voices need to reach the self-proclaimed peoples' representatives who keep thriving at the blood and sweat of poor voters
The structures of state organs in Islamabad are frozen dinosaurs set to be animated by the roaring public? The "predator" state is abusing its power and "controlling" the public through ill-intended violence? Where has Fahd Husain been for the past 30 days? Dreaming some sweet Utopian dreams in his director's chair at Express? Does he know that the state's writ has been challenged and laws have been flagrantly flouted in the heart of the country's capital? Does he know that a "scripted" attempt has been made and continues to made to push aside our fragile democracy? Worse, where was his strong condemnation of the abuse of state power when the more nefarious abductions of nationalist and/or religious Pakistanis were taking place all over the country over the past decade? FH needs to relearn some basic political philosophy about the state's contract with its citizens, reacquire the respect that is due to laws even when they may be wrong, and revisit the murky history of palace intrigues in this country before waxing lyrical about dinosaurs facing public fury.
An excellent piece of writing. Thanks ! Hope and pray we as a nation wake up
Excellent piece of writing! May Allah free us from the clutches of this rotten system and its despicable managers.
Simply Brilliant.
I salute you sir and God bless you. We need more just like you. To do What ? Make those in power accountable ? Remind the voters how they are being taken for granted ? Remind the population to ask the leaders to do more for ROTI. KAPDA and MAKAAN. We have been reduced to the level of BEGGERS. Don't we know this?
Nowhere I read anything about the solution. Please give one ( not-- vote for the honest candidate).
Thank God you have not gone mad yet as only honest people can think the way you think.
Thanks
suresh kumar from India
" Under the shimmering September sun, they look like concrete dinosaurs, frozen in time." ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ And Pakistan a Jurassic Park.
The words in my heart but so clearly and eloquently stated. But dear author, the most saddening thing is the seemingly large number of people supporting this government and their sick mindset. I pray Allah opens their eyes and hearts. Truly heart wrenching situation.
Look at Nawaz, the omnipotent, merciful ruler. He only has $1.8 billion[US] and counting. Look at his brother Shahbaz, Khadim i Alaa, culpable in 14 deaths, and father of the next ruler Hamza Sharif. Look at Zardari, $2.3 billion[US] and owner of a fort in Karachi. 'Cabal House.' Look at the esteemed Mohtarma's legacy, $1.5 billion[US] cold cash. And one $300,000 necklace. Look at Mulla Fazl of JUI-F,.a man of God, and a $millionaire[US]. Look at Nisar with the Beatle haircut, a simple fastidious man and $millionaire]US] many times over. Look at Kwaja, of the BCCI fame a $......
I don't think I should say this but reading this gave me goose bumps.......it was so powerful, so true, so right. It feels as if all of a sudden the people have woken up and said ' we have had enough ' but our leaders refuse to listen......and that is their mistake.
I hate overt praise lest it gets interpreted as sycophancy but I truly admire and salute your clarity and courage--you are many cuts above the concrete dinosaurs in media with their ill fitting suits, horrible ties and despicable partisan paid-for views. If only we had a dozen more like you amongst us, we could have ended the needless suffering a longtime ago.
You said it only takes one man to say "Enough". Well, we are lucky to have that one person: "Imran Khan"
Godspeed to both of you, one with the pen, the other with the dais! Free us from the medieval thugs.
Bravo , Bravo.. all truth and nothing but the truth.. thanks for putting words to the passion that so many feel and chastizing the insolence of the silent, dead fabric of the society. wonderful read!
Where can I find that 'determined citizenry' who can stand up and say "Enough! No more."? Because I tried to be that citizenry but they beat me and locked me up.