What's new

What is there to celebrate?

fatman17

PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
32,563
Reaction score
98
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
What is there to celebrate?

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Roedad Khan

Every year, we commemorate March 23 in remembrance of ‘The Pakistan Resolution’ passed in the historic city of Lahore. Memories come back to me like shards of glass. I was in Lahore, the city of my dreams, on that memorable day. Yeast was in the air. The idea of Pakistan was about to be born.

A day earlier, on March 22, 1940, Mr Jinnah had arrived in Lahore by the Frontier Mail to preside over the Muslim League meeting. When he entered the packed pandal, he faced a sea of humanity – all his admirers who had converged on Lahore to hear what he had to say. The Nawab of Mamdot, Chairman of the Reception Committee, presented Mr Jinnah to the vast multitude. It was Jinnah’s largest audience, his greatest performance to-date. On that day, the Muslim League led by Mr Jinnah declared its support for the idea of Pakistan. His Lahore address lowered the final curtain on any prospects for a single united India. It was a ringing repudiation of Sikander Hayat’s Unionist Party’s basic platform of Hindu-Muslim-Sikh co-existence. That is why generations of Pakistanis will always remember March 23 with profound reverence and respect. Seven years later, on August 14, 1947, thanks to the iron will and determination of Mr Jinnah, I was proud citizen of a sovereign, independent country – a country I could live for and die for.

As he left the constitutional convention of 1787, Benjamin Franklin was asked by an admirer, “Dr Franklin what have you given us”. Franklin turned to the questioner and replied, “A Republic, if you can keep it”. Not too long ago, we too possessed a great country earned for us by the sweat of the brow and iron will of one person. Where giants walked, midgets pose now. Our rulers, both elected and un-elected, have done to Pakistan what the successors of Lenin did to the Soviet Union. “Lenin founded our State”, Stalin said, after a stormy session with Marshal Zhukov.

The German army was at the gate of Moscow. “And we have …it up”. This is exactly what we have done to Jinnah’s Pakistan. Today it is neither sovereign, nor independent, nor democratic. Today it is not just a “rentier state”, not just a client state. It is a slave state, ill-led, ill-governed by a corrupt, power-hungry junta running a puppet government set up by Washington. The dream has morphed into a nightmare.

Sixty two years after independence, are we really free? Are the people masters in their own house? The kind of Pakistan we have today has lost its manhood and is a ghost of its former self. Our entire political system has been pulled into a black hole caused by periodic army intervention and prolonged army rule. Today if Pakistan were to look into a mirror, it won’t recognise itself. The contrast between Pakistan in 1947 – idealistic, democratic, progressive, optimistic, and Pakistan today – leaderless, rudderless, violent, besieged, corrupt, uncertain about its future – could not be sharper or more disheartening. If you want to know how a people can survive despite their government, or leaders, well, visit Pakistan.

What is there to celebrate? There is no reason to celebrate! But there are myriad reasons to reflect. We lost half the country in a suicidal civil war in 1971. Like the Bourbons of France we have learned nothing and forgotten nothing. Today Pakistan is dangerously at war with itself once again. The federation is united only by a ‘rope of sand’. Sixty two years after independence, we have a disjointed, dysfunctional, lopsided, hybrid, artificial, political system – a non-sovereign rubber stamp parliament, a weak and ineffective prime minister, appointed by a powerful accidental president.

This is an eerie period, the heart of the nation appears to stop beating, while its body remains suspended in a void. What has become of the nation’s core institutions? The militarised state has destroyed the foundations of all our political institutions. The army has been enthroned as the new elite. The level of fawning and jockeying to be merely noticed and smiled upon by any pretender in uniform speaks of a nation that is loudly pleading to be crushed underfoot.

The independence of Pakistan is a myth. By succumbing to American pressure, we managed to secure a temporary reprieve. But at what price? Everyday American aircraft violate our airspace, and bomb our villages. In 2009 alone, they killed 667 innocent men, women and children with impunity. No questions asked. No protest. No remorse. Today Pakistan is splattered with American fortresses, seriously compromising our internal and external sovereignty. American security personnel stationed on our soil move in and out of the country without any let or hindrance. Pakistan has become a launching pad for military operations against neighbouring Muslim countries. We have been drawn into somebody else’s war without understanding its true dimension or ultimate objectives. Nuclear Pakistan has been turned into an ‘American lackey’, currently engaged in a proxy war against its own people.

Parliament is one of the chief instruments of our democracy. Today, it is cowed, timid, a virtual paralytic, over-paid and under-employed. Parliamentary membership is the key to material success, a passport and a license to loot and plunder. Who says it is a check on the arbitrariness of the executive? Nobody takes it seriously. Today it is the weakest of the three pillars of state. It has suffered a steady diminution of power and prestige. Its image is tarnished and has been turned into a fig-leaf for unconstitutional and illegal practices.

To no nation has fate been more malignant than to Pakistan. With few exceptions, Pakistan has long been saddled with poor, even malevolent, leadership: predatory kleptocrats, military dictators, political illiterates and carpet-baggers. With all her shortcomings, Benazir Bhutto had undoubted leadership qualities – charisma, courage, political acumen and articulation. After her tragic assassination, Mr Zardari’s sudden ascension to the presidency caused panic among the people. His record since then hasn’t exactly been an exercise in the glories of Pakistan’s democracy.

To settle back into your cold-hearted acceptance of the status quo is not an option. The present leadership is taking Pakistan to a perilous place. The course they are on leads downhill. This is a delicate time, full of trepidation. Today it is a political and moral imperative for all patriotic Pakistanis to fight for our core values, to resist foreign intervention in our internal affairs and to destroy the roots of evil that afflicts Pakistan. That is the best way to celebrate March 23.

“Every country has its own constitution”, one Russian is alleged to have remarked in the 19th century. “Ours is absolutism moderated by occasional assassination”. The situation is not so very different in Pakistan. In democracies, constitutional amendments are especially solemn moments; in Pakistan they are easier than changing the traffic regulations. After 62 years, a parliamentary committee is busy rewriting the Constitution of Pakistan! If you want to know what happens when constitution, the fundamental law of the land, is periodically decimated, disfigured, defiled with impunity and treated with contempt, well – visit Pakistan.

The recent spontaneous demonstrations and outpouring of anger witnessed in and around Islamabad are ominous. With such ripples do tidal waves begin? Who will tap the anger, the frustration and the resentment among millions of our people? Both military dictatorship and corrupt, fraudulent democracy, have failed them. The country is impoverished and humiliated. Democratic forms remain, but democracy itself is in effect dead or dying.

The writer is a former federal secretary. Email: roedad@comsats.net.pk,[url]www.roedadkhan.com[/url]


ouch!, ouch! ouch!
 
.
I guess...the article is an intense critical introspection...
from a neutral perspective...I can't agree or disagree with the author....
you compare the problems of Pakistan with the other South asian countries...then I'd say that it's a bad neighborhood and a very long dispute with India...a bigger country with more resources...has taken a toll...on the political fabric of Pakistan...and just that...the will of the people is another story.
the Army's position has been greatly elevated...for long...and it has seriously dented the democratic system...most leaders have no experience running the country...the constitution is often tinkered with...lack of veteran leaders...who guide the next gen of leaders...
but even then you've done great....in most fields..
 
.
Sir where are the solutions or suggestions??

I know the writer. But i am failed to understand why these uncles and aunties are repeating the same thing which we already know.


Our generation wants suggestion to these problems what is there they have suggested so far????
 
.
Sir where are the solutions or suggestions??

I know the writer. But i am failed to understand why these uncles and aunties are repeating the same thing which we already know.


Our generation wants suggestion to these problems what is there they have suggested so far????

I know I'd sound like a douche...but my father used to tell me...
"you are either a part of the solution or the problem"
 
. .
Sir where are the solutions or suggestions??

I know the writer. But i am failed to understand why these uncles and aunties are repeating the same thing which we already know.


Our generation wants suggestion to these problems what is there they have suggested so far????

Everyone knows the solution. Its just that people want a miracle and whoosh! clean streets, great economy, big houses, no fear, great jobs, etc etc.
But it ain't gonna happen. You know what your country needs. Its high time you as an individual act and people shall definitely follow you.

The problem is not with the solution, but the people who are not ready to get their hands dirty.
 
.
:pakistan:The problems are well know and understood by Pakistanis <All of us incl people ...politicians & Army > We have learnt the hard way and paid a huge cost for our mistakes .

We wil survive InshAllah and we will come out even stronger !
 
.
Whatever problems we have, we are well capable of sorting them out,
Successive governments of the day implement their policies as they deem fit for the eventuality.
Pakistan, if anything represents hope and security for other smaller countries in the region.

MOD EDIT: no vs. war pleace
 
Last edited:
.
Whatever problems we have, we are well capable of sorting them out,
Successive governments of the day implement their policies as they deem fit for the eventuality. At least we are under no illusions that by having a few hundred thousand IT workers and the life is silicone valley.
Pakistan, if anything represents hope and security for other smaller countries in the region.

As the writer states " If you want to know how a people can survive despite their government, or leaders, well, visit Pakistan. :pakistan:
 
.
:agree::agree: but these skeptical oldies do not want to be part of the solution

I guess they did their part, their part being usurped by others with ulterior sinister motives and ultimately causing your armed forces or rather the Army to step in.

Paritosh was talking about your/present generation, if I am not mistaken. Its now up to this generation to pull up yourselves up by your bootstraps! Find someone capable from your area and elect him/her to your Parliament!! Set that chain reaction into motion.
 
.
Good article, just one thing though. This applies to many countries in different forms and even the mighty US is criticised by certain people for what it is to what it was supposed to be.

Moral of the story, gotta move on with time and try and correct our mistakes to strive for a better future. We have to follow what Jinnah laid out for us, that is our ultimate motive.

Also remeber sometimes someone who is part of the solution is also part of the problem.
 
.
I completely agree with the article...
my grandpa told me once that earlier pakistan was stable country....

I think the root problem is pakistan leaders didn't concentrated only on development of the country... & it might be due to bad politics played within the country...
 
.
i have noticed we pakistanis have a far greater tendency of criticising ourselves. its lik pessimism and optimism in one cup.
every nation sees some difficult times but instead of cursing urself you should encourage each other and contribute something towards finding a way out of crisis lik situation.

werent we in a crisis in 1947 when many thought we will fall and probably taken over by india in few yrs? but Quaid e Azam stood up to all those challenges and made us sail out of those seas.

wasnt 1971 a crisis as well? but instead bhutto decided to come out of pessimistic syndrome and lead the country in right direction.

lets come to present time. look an year back and wat was the situation in pakistan? baluch people demanding separation, half of NWFP was under the cloud of insurgency, crisis on our eastern border bec of mumbai, US and international community talking about sending ground troops in pakistan from our western border, 2.4 million refugees, our nuclear assets, army and ISI being targeted by global meida, judicial crisis, political crisis, economic crisis, is that any less than a crisis? but today we are very much out of it.

for a moment we should pause and thank God for even existing in this world today. i still wonder and am rather proud of my nation whose confidence could never be shattered despite all the hardships.

i completely agree with Jana

but these skeptical oldies do not want to be part of the solution

ask these people if they opened their doors for IDPs during the crisis or were they too busy criticising pakistan and demoralising people with their writings. may God save us from people like these who see the problem but dont do anything.
 
.
as far as "where we have come" has concerned...I don't think the whole sub-continent has achieved much...and I say it without even a shimmer of patriotism...
yes we've shown future potential...but the ground reality is that while the ASEAN and China(similar newly independent countries without oil and other resources to hasten their growth) have had a very high Per -capita driven growth...many of our villages are still feudal...many of our beliefs still feudal...
and the plethora of disputes have made us spend a hell of a lot on military and arms...other fundamental issues suffered....
for Pakistan...it caused a traditional over-bearance on strong powers like America and China(as against India being dependent on the USSR..but only a bit more as majority of the industries from the British era were in India and the ones in Pakistan took long gestation periods)
The hold of the military in the governing of Pakistan has also been over-reaching.
For India...we've had a larger poor population...a larger illiterate population always...instead of reaching out to meet our primary pre-independence objectives...we've been totally side-tracked in the pursuit of trying to become a military power of sorts...rather than fix ourselves up.
There is a big gap in the people in Cities and the people in villages....it's huge...it's like there are two Indias...
Bangladesh has potential..they haven't had much disputes...they have rampant poverty and illiteracy...but in an extended time frame they'd reap the benefits of working in peace...
for the last sixty years..the countries of the sub-continent have made other countries stronger instead of doing that for themselves...with their constant issues...
 
.
i have noticed we pakistanis have a far greater tendency of criticising ourselves. its lik pessimism and optimism in one cup.
every nation sees some difficult times but instead of cursing urself you should encourage each other and contribute something towards finding a way out of crisis lik situation.

werent we in a crisis in 1947 when many thought we will fall and probably taken over by india in few yrs? but Quaid e Azam stood up to all those challenges and made us sail out of those seas.

wasnt 1971 a crisis as well? but instead bhutto decided to come out of pessimistic syndrome and lead the country in right direction.

lets come to present time. look an year back and wat was the situation in pakistan? baluch people demanding separation, half of NWFP was under the cloud of insurgency, crisis on our eastern border bec of mumbai, US and international community talking about sending ground troops in pakistan from our western border, 2.4 million refugees, our nuclear assets, army and ISI being targeted by global meida, judicial crisis, political crisis, economic crisis, is that any less than a crisis? but today we are very much out of it.

for a moment we should pause and thank God for even existing in this world today. i still wonder and am rather proud of my nation whose confidence could never be shattered despite all the hardships.

i completely agree with Jana



ask these people if they opened their doors for IDPs during the crisis or were they too busy criticising pakistan and demoralising people with their writings. may God save us from people like these who see the problem but dont do anything.

Ajpir : I had a different point. The Author, i believe is lamenting the dysfunctional democracy existent today in Pakistan. Yes, its the people who define the very fabric of every society and who shoulder the blame equally for how it is looked upon by the world. This very people lapped up the vision provided by Zia. This very people have been failed by successive Military and Elected governments.

And now .... they have resigned themselves to Status Quo.

I had a discussion with Fatman17 sir on the possibilities that exist for our region, if we keep aside our differences for time being and focus on economic growth. Let people taste the fruit of economic growth. People in our region need to taste the benefits of a cash rich economy. Social Benefits. Keep aside the distrust, maintain the status quo , give discounts to each other ......But Alas .... This will need some more mature statesmanship than what exist in our respective countries.


On lighter side, My dig on the post was this :
After 62 years, a parliamentary committee is busy rewriting the Constitution of Pakistan! If you want to know what happens when constitution, the fundamental law of the land, is periodically decimated, disfigured, defiled with impunity and treated with contempt, well – visit Pakistan.
 
.

Latest posts

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom