Bilal Khan (Quwa)
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100%.For those that come to the west as teenagers or adults, perhaps it is the Hollywood effect. A kind of Fear of missing out. While those of us that grew up in the west, learned/were taught to ignore things that were Haram; so we never drank, ate pork, dated, etc. (I say this as I live next to 3 bars, a liquor store, a place that probably sells pot, all within two blocks)
Paris is the equivalent FOMO for many Americans.
There are pros and cons to living anywhere. But where you grew up is what you will probably feel is home the rest of your life. But home is also people. The people that you feel close with and are welcoming. Also, those of us the grew up in the west, practically lived our entire lives in the west, know how to function here. Could we function in Pakistan with the knowledge and experience we bring back? Does anyone want us to come back, or to just keep sending the money?
Look at the example of AQ Khan. He volunteered himself to serve the country he choose to become a citizen of, despite having a Dutch wife and two mixed race children.
This is a matter of national security for Pakistan. Over time, the older generation are passing away and many in the younger generation don’t want to maintain ties.
Remittances will drop unless this bond is kept alive. All the expatriates really ask for it a stable, well run country. No red carpet. That is probably why many expats like Imran Khan, a person that has lived the expat life. he gets it; it’s not about how much money you have but enjoying what you have where everyone is taken care of and able to enjoy a decent life with you. He cares about raising the nation to a higher standard of living is his priority, which he alluded to in his speak to Russian TV in a recent interview.
Here is the silver lining, if Pakistan can get its act together, economically and politically, the world bank predicted (a few years ago) Pakistan can become a $2 Trillion economy by 2047 (approx. avg. 7% annual growth for 25 years). This would make Pakistan, on a per capita basis at the level of Turkey or Malaysia. Two decent enough living standards, that I think most Pakistanis would be happy with. So as an aspirational metric of living standard; we should compare Pakistan to Turkey and Malaysia, and aim to catch up with them rather then a western country.
If the government focuses on good governance, the economy and outreach to the diaspora, the chances the bonds will be maintained will be a lot higher the they are now. Until then many would rather live a substandard life abroad then live in Pakistan. (Their are many definitions of sub-standard, but one is socially. Many people chase the “rat race”, and don’t give enough tike to family and friends. One can be materially well off but socially stunted)
P.s. gonna remove the video on Paris syndrome as not to detail the thread. But if interested search for “Is Paris Overrated?” By Nathaniel Drew
This is something people forget or don't realize. Expatriates never walked into luxury. Most of us came to the West and started from the bottom. Some of us made it to fairly high levels, while others have not. But in both cases, we've lived through hard times and we're fully willing to do it again provided the ones running the country are sincere and competent.
We'll pay that price to be sons of the soil over and over provided we get a real shot at success. However, our parents left the country because that shot was taken away from them the first time, so how can anyone expect it to be available the second or third time?
Sadly, the way the PPP government in Sindh treats Karachi is, for the most part, the way our establishment treats Pakistan as a whole. IK is individually good, but the underlying system is borked beyond belief.