People still want to go out for coffee, visit new restaurants and enjoy the cities they reside in. When we walk into a restaurant, coffee shop or wedding, are we necessarily disconnecting ourselves from the world outside? There have been ongoing debates about how the Peshawar attack will soon feel like a distant memory. The anger and hurt that consumed us weeks ago will slowly dissipate. Are we extremely resilient or utterly forgetful? Are we already done mourning? Maybe these questions do not have to demand a staunch ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer.
From sectarian violence to ruthless honour killings and heinous attacks on innocent minority groups, Pakistan is a country that has witnessed a great deal of pain. Since 2003, approximately 55,000 people, including security forces’ personnel, have lost their lives at the hands of terrorist violence. The death of more than 130 children in Peshawar must not be treated like another string of fatalities that Pakistan will, as always, face resiliently. Tahira Qazi, who fearlessly risked her life for the children in her school, should not have died in vain. However, at the same time, people should not be judged for trying to carry on with their lives. Considering Pakistan’s turbulent past, having the ability to fall back into a normal routine can be helpful since hearts and minds that remain continuously distraught might not possess the strength to endure future ordeals. One should find a gratifying balance in which the country’s plight is not left behind in the midst of an increasingly busy lifestyle.
How can this be done? We should consistently remain vigilant of the promises being made to us instead of turning numb in the wake of mounting difficulties. We need to see initiatives moving beyond committees, subcommittees and press conferences. People should not be wary of challenging elected leaders under the presumption that our institutions will be destabilised. At the end of the day, the Constitution is supposed to protect the people. The great effort politicians are making to preserve Pakistan’s fragile democracy should filter down to the security and safety of the country they are leading. If we are being told that the presence of terrorism in the country will no longer be tolerated, then the government should be clamping down on the epicentres of these hate spewing radical ideologies that continue to thrive. Arrest warrants should not merely be issued, but legitimately acted upon. Guests speaking on news outlets cannot, under any circumstances, be given airtime to overtly criticise minority groups that are already suffocating under the weight of misconstrued beliefs. This reflects poorly on an organisation’s personal values and ethics.
Verbal and written pressure on our governing bodies should prevail. Ideally, life can still go on without us forgetting. If the Peshawar incident does not wake us up, then nothing will.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 16th, 2015.
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Some nations grow out of a tragedy while others crawl out of it. I hope Pakistani ppl don't just crawl out of it in the name of resilience.You are right in saying that if this barbaric incident can't wake us up as a nation; nothing ever will.
Very well written and expressive views that was my school also way back and the Principle was our english teacher at tht time. Allah Bless all the departed souls Ameen.
Resilience in our country means COMPLACENCY....this is what a has overtaken this nation overtime due to our overall attitude of our civil society, literate class and political dispensation....we have no value for human lives otherwise we would have taken the monster by its horn long time ago.....
Its neither being resilient or being forgetful. Its compulsion (majboori) to grin and bear it and move on. This is plight of common man in subcontinent.
I remember the mood in Mumbai after the 26/11 terror attacks. Every body expected the Mumbaikars to pick themselves up as usual and display the famous spirit of Bombay. That business as usual stoicness. Mumbai has suffered so many terror attacks. In the crowded local trains, bazaars and even the stock market. One thing the city has taught all of us is to get on with the daily routine and not turn the incidents into some revenge match. The Muslims in the city, along with their brothers from every religion, mourned the dead and showed deep solidarity towards the victims. They carried the wounded to the hospital, donated blood and refused to bury the dead terrorists. This is the true spirit of Mumbai. To never give up, to stand shoulder to shoulder and to go out there and show that you are not afraid. Hats off to the brave children of Peshawer who returned to school in spite of threats. The best revenge after all is to live well.
"If the Peshawar incident does not wake us up, then nothing will"
Actually, when Hazari community wept over their bodies of beloved ones for days without burying them contrary to the islamic custom, it should have shaken the conscience of everyone living in PAK.
PAK moved on as if nothing happened, since they were of different sect. Dead Ahmadi was exhumed,and their graves desecrated, dead Christian girl body in Muslim cemetery was made to exhume by her own father in Rawalpindi for wrongly burying her in Muslim cemetery, Historical heritage churches were burnt, Hindu girls were kidnapped, Malala school was attacked but PAK stayed in their utopian Islamic dream and said they were asking for it, and they were not the problem of upper class. Peshawar school attack is yet another one, as far as PAK is concerned.
If they can dare to murder children in schools, no one is safe in PAK.
PAK is doing too little too late. I am afraid that no institution in PAK is strong enough to stop the deluge which is coming in glacier pace. PAK will be confronting this problem for years to come.