Last week, I went to Washington DC on personal business. I stayed at the Marriott Hotel on Woodley Road off Connecticut Avenue.
When I arrived at the hotel, and was taking out my luggage from the car, I could sense a commotion in the hotel — the sort of benign commotion that you see at Penn Station in New York during the rush hours or, if you are not familiar with New York, at Islamabad Airport during the Hajj flights. People were milling around, dragging their luggage behind them, going up and down the escalators and lounging around in the lobby of the hotel or wherever one could find a seat. There were Pakistanis all over the place —men, some of them in their ethnic dresses, women in their usual colorful dresses, and a lot of children, from toddlers to teens. I soon found out why.




The Association of Pakistani-American doctors, APPNA, was holding its annual get-together at the hotel. Hundreds of doctors of Pakistani origin from all over the US, along with their families, had descended upon the hotel. They do this thing once every year in different cities.
Khalid Hasan, in one of his columns, describes APPNA gatherings as mela-i-mawaishiaan (cattle show). Even though the impact, initially, is a bit overwhelming, I don’t quite agree with Khalid Hasan’s description. On the contrary, I quickly got over the initial impact and started enjoying the energy and dynamics of the scene.
Majority of the families who had converged at the hotel came from small-town-America where, in some cases, the total population of their town did not exceed the number of people gathered at the conference. Therefore, the exuberance of the delegates and their families at the sight of such a large gathering, in such a large city, in a large hotel, was understandable, even though it seemed to spill over at times.
Among the many helpful signs installed in the lobby that directed the guests to different areas and meeting rooms there was one indicating the timings of the 5 daily prayers.
Presence of religion in the hotel was palpable.




While I was walking down the corridor in search of my room, a Pakistani man, with a sparse beard, emerged from his room, his trousers rolled up above his ankles, water dripping from his hands and arms, and droplets of water hanging from his beard. It was maghrib time. He asked me if I knew which way the qibla was. Without a conscious thought I pointed to what I thought was the west. (In Pakistan the qibla is always to the west.) He thanked me and quickly retreated into his room presumably to say his maghrib prayer.
It occurred to me a little later that I had misled the good doctor. In the US the qibla is always toward the east. I felt very guilty. But then I consoled myself by telling me that I had given the information in good faith. To further pacify my conscience I also reminded myself of the verse that says something to the effect that to Him belongs the east and the west; so, whichever way you turn your face doesn’t really matter… 2:115
The APPNA managers had also arranged a delightful bazaar in the basement of the hotel, which catered to the needs of the delegates and their families not only in this world but also in the world hereafter. There were stalls selling clothes and jewelry, and stalls selling spiritual books and advice on cleansing the soul as well as the body. There were also stalls selling property in Dubai, and advice on managing your money. The variety of products and services on sale was amazing! The women folks thronged the bazaar most of the time.
On the second day of the conference or the mela, there was a political forum to discuss the ongoing ‘judicial crisis’ back home. APPNA had invited prominent politicians from Pakistan for this purpose. These sessions were open to everyone. Panelists included: Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan, Justice Wajihuddin Ahmed, Ahsan Iqbal (PML-N), Farooq Sattar of MQM, and Pakistan’s new ambassador in Washington, Mr. Husain Haqqani. The hall was full. All seats were taken and many people were standing in the back and on the sides of the hall.




From the response of the audience to the different speakers one could see that the crowd in the hall was clearly a microcosm of Pakistan. Not only their views were divided along the political lines drawn so deeply on the political landscape of Pakistan but they also expressed their views with the same emotions, bordering on anger, that have been visible in Pakistan since March 2007. A large and vociferous section of the audience was for the restoration of pre-November 3 judiciary.
Aitzaz Ahsan was heard in pin-drop silence and received a standing ovation from the audience both before and after his speech. He was even hailed as “Obama of Pakistan!” by someone in the audience.
Ahsan Iqbal of PML(N) was heard patiently. Farooq Sattar was occasionally heckled but managed to say what he had to say. However, all hell seemed to break loose when Mr. Husain Haqqani spoke.
Mr. Haqqani is a smart man. He speaks well and writes well. I have heard him speak on TV and he always impressed me with clarity of his thought and coherence of his speech. He has written a great book, Between Mosque and Military, which, according to Stephen Cohen, is ” brilliantly researched and written book that should be required reading for anyone who wishes to understand this increasingly important state.” But on stage, in front of a crowd, Mr. Haqqani looked and acted more like a fighter rooster. He would try to put down his “opponents” with a sharp rebuttal or repartee. This technique might have won him points in a school debate but did not win many friends among the APPNA doctors in the hall.
The acrimony generated in the political debate, however, seemed to disappear in the evening when, during a musical show, young Amanat Ali sang some fast paced songs and the doctors did a wild bhangra in the hall.
I checked out of the hotel a day before the APPNA mela ended.




I was going up to my room to collect my luggage. When I got into the elevator there were already a few, ‘non-Pakistanis’ (Americans or Europeans) in it. Just when the doors of the elevator began to close, an exuberant Pakistani mother, in her colorful dress, accompanied by 3 or 4 excited kids, ranging in age from about 7 to 12 or 13, rushed in. We squeezed ourselves and pulled in our tummies to accommodate the woman and the kids. When everyone was in and had pushed his/her destination-floor buttons (the children having pushed more than one buttons) the doors closed, and that usual awkward silence fell in the elevator. The mother broke the silence by loudly asking the children in Enlgish, like a schoolteacher would ask a class, “hey, let’s sing Pakistani national anthem”. The children bashfully looked at their mother with question marks on their faces. They didn’t seem to think it was a great idea to sing in such a closed space with strangers around. But the mother wasn’t deterred. Like the conductor of a choir, with one hand raised, she raised piped up with a full-throated ‘Paaak sar zameeen shadbaad … The children simply stared at their toes in embarrassment. The strangers in the elevator, more perplexed than bemused, slipped out of the elevator at the first stop. I listened to her solo performance in silence. Had she not been so out of tune I would have possibly joined her.
I guess patriotism, like nostalgia, affects you at odd times and at odd places.
Overall, it seemed that the doctors had a good 3 days of R&R. Recreation and Religion, that is. What they need to do, I guess, is inject a bit of Renaissance and Reformation into APPNA to make it a really meaningful organization both for the country of their choice as well as that of their origin.
Photos for this post are by the author himself and the full collection can be seen here









































Brother Ibrahim: You say that the acts of recitation of Qur’an and the national anthem of Pakistan at the same occasion are contradictory to each other.
May be you have a point there.
The anthem professes that the system of the state is based on the power and brotherhood of its people regardless of their religion. It does not say that the system of the state ought to be Islamic whereas Qur’an is the religious book of the Muslims only.
So may be at the non-religious events only national anthem should be recited and not the both. That would remove the contradiction. Would it not?
“…Reciting Qur’an and then proceeding with national anthem…there couldn’t be two more contradictory things done one after another….”
Ah… I love these catch22 situations… they have literally defined our nation and our society :)
Isn’t APPNA a professional organization of physicians of Pakistani origin in America? Or is it a political lobby for PML(N)? What business does it have in taking partisan political positions on the internal national politics of Pakistan? Shouldn’t they be more concerned with their professional and humanitarian mission?
I am a charter member of TIE, the organization of Indian entrepreneurs. I have never seen Indian politics discussed and political positions taken at their events. Their main mission and focus is on promoting entrepreneurship and help their countryman to reap the fruits of economic development through entrepreneurship.
And MQ and such think others are obsessed with religion/Islam. Of thousands of things that could have been talked about regarding such meetings, MQ made religion one of the focal points of his narrative. Good job. MQ almost seems upset that there was a prayer hall and some Islamic stalls. If this is his condition, he will have a heart attack if he goes to an Islamic convention.
As the commentator Jogi mentioned there were other stuff going on, but since they were normal for MQ and display of religion was repulsive and offending to him, he became obsessed with it.
One thing I learned though: Never ask MQ for directions, for he seems to be one of those inconsiderate people who don’t know what they are talking about but still give instructions. Instead of simply saying ‘I don’t know…ask the organizers’ he proceeded to give the direction of the qibla.
Reciting Qur’an and then proceeding with national anthem…there couldn’t be two more contradictory things done one after another. But, this is nothing uncommon. It’s common in Pakistan to recite Qur’an and then proceed with the evening that would involve singing and dancing. Once a guy told me with a lot of pride that he forced the organizers of an event to recite Qur’an before they proceeded with the evening involving sketches, mixing of sexes, singing and dancing!
Good post by MQ; I feel like I’ve felt the same way at the PIA counter at JFK and O’hare. It’s very interesting to see people speak to PIA employees with a demeaning attitude, and then all-but bow down to the barking homeland security staff nearby.
One thing that I think is very rarely brought up is how the Pakistani diaspora in the U.S. tends to lag at least a generation behind contemporary Pakistani society. There are obviously lots of differences, but I think the most important one is that the diaspora tends to be significantly more conservative and active in their religiosity. I’m not a physician, but I know the culture of Pakistani physicians well enough to say that there is no gender segregation at conferences.
I believe APPNA is one of the few pakistani organizations which are better funded and oraganized. Wish they can develop into a more influencial organization.
MQ: Although I agree with this, “I also reminded myself of the verse that says something to the effect that to Him belongs the east and the west; so, whichever way you turn your face doesn’t really matter… 2:115″, but most muslims, especially from pakistan, will be offended if they face the wrong way while praying.
By the way, calculations based on shortest “surface distace” between two points on a sphere (earth), would give Qibla being North East. Its 23 degrees East of North from Los angeles, and probably 45 degrees East of North from east coast.
I have also been part of a few APPNA meetings and the main theme of these seems to be how the ‘doctor parents’ can get their ‘doctor sons’ to find potential ‘doctor daughter-in-laws’.
Hina (Hanaa): Your recollections are funny. “No Mixing of the Sexes” is a familiar phrase in our Pak-Am gatherings. One hears all the time “Sisters sit with sisters & brothers sit with brothers”. [There is another version of it but it may not be suitable for this site.] But what I hear is that one of the attractions of these APPNA gatherings is the opportunity to ‘introduce’ young Pak-Ams to each other. Nay?