Three Poems for Troubled Times: Abhi Tou Kuch Nahin Hua

Posted on January 13, 2011
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, People, Poetry
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Adil Najam

A cascade of horrible recent events, all involving an outpouring of violence – in thought, in words, in deed – and culminating in the brutal murder of Salman Taseer continues to haunt the Pakistani psyche. We are left numb in disbelief of a reality which we always knew: the dysfunctional divisions in society are not just a scar on the face of modern Pakistan, it is a bleeding wound that threats the very body politic of our fragile being.

The fanatical murder of Salman Taseer, and even more than that the reaction to it, has shaken us as we should have been shaken well before. As one tries desperately to make sense of the senselessness that surrounds us, this line from an old poem by Himayat Ali ShairAbhi tou kuch nahiN hua – keeps coming back to hound one’s senses. Indeed, this, along with two other poems – Obaidullah Aleem’s ‘Meyray shehr jal rahey hain, mairey loug marr rahen hain’ and Ahmed Faraz’s ‘Aaj aisa nahiN, aisa nahiN honay daina’ – resound today even though all three were written inn very different times for different (but not unrelated) crises. They are all worth a listen again:

Himayat Ali Shair: Abhi tou kuch nahiN hua

Obaidullah Aleem: Meray loug marr rahey haiN

Ahmed Faraz: Aaj aisa nahiN, aisa nahiN, honay daina

All three were written in very different times – Aleem in 1971, Faraz and (I think) Shair in the 1980s – in different contexts and about different but very related challenges to the ones we face today. Each was a cry of pain and a warning to the nation. Warnings we did not heed. One listens to them today and one wishes we had paid attention then. One also wonders if, in fact, we are paying attention even today.

The self-righteousness and intolerance on everything that everyone seems to have is frightening. Even on the most minor things and even in our comments section, just disagreeing seems to be never enough; there seems to be a compulsion to be disagreeable and uncivil, and forever angry. The hatred we display for anyone who we do not agree with and the violence we justify on the basis of that hatred boggles the mind. Intolerance is everywhere.

Anyone we disagree with becomes not just a subject of  disagreement, but a fair target for slander and character assassination, verbal abuse, and ultimately murder. Indeed, there is a huge difference between venting anger with words and anger that leads to murder. But both lie on the same progression. A society that tolerates – and promotes – too much of the first will inevitably harvest too much of the latter.

It is good that at least some discussion has begun on what is happening to this society where everyone seems forever angry, forever incensed, and forever aggrieved, and forever at the tip of blowing up. But in proportion to the air of self-righteousness that pervades society the discussion is too little, and may well be too late. Some of the chest-beating is also self-serving and itself so angry as to lose its own meaning. But, at least, we are beginning to talk about things we have been ignoring for too long. That is a good sign. Maybe we should also do a little listening. It would be good to begin by listening to the reasoned words in these three poems. Reason is often the first casualty of anger. Ultimately, it is also the only antidote.

P.S. We are adding a fourth poem, sent to us by a reader, called Abhi kuch dair baqi hai by Shakil Jaffery:

35 responses to “Three Poems for Troubled Times: Abhi Tou Kuch Nahin Hua

  1. Ghulam Ali says:

    What is with the sudden poetryfest at ATP?

  2. Asif Ali says:

    nice post btw this is same Himayat Ali Shair who has written one of my favorite song “na chura sako gey damnn” sung by madam noor jehan that was around 1968 i wonder when was this one
    and unforgettable patriotic song sung by Masood Rana and Shakuat Ali “jaag utha hai sara watan”

  3. Asif Ali says:

    @ Rafique
    what are you some sort of “Dr. No” sitting in front of echelon console ?
    how did you arrive to the conclusion that ATP readers are ” lynch mob”
    you are wrong if some how you were slightly right choice of wording in your comment makes you “pot” who is calling the kettle black

    @ kafir Sahib
    تسی بندے بنو ایہ ایک ھور نوا شوشہ کافراں والا شروع کرن لگے او ؟ اگے پاکستان وچ ہر طرح دے کافر تھوڑے نے
    ویسے میں تے اینجے تواڈے نال دل پشوری کرن لگان وان مینو پتا لگ گیا تسی مشوری کسے ھور چیز دی کرنے دے چکر وچ ہو
    میرا مشورہ منو تسی کوئی ہور گھر تآَڑو کیوں کے اس بلاگ تے بڑے بڑے سیانے بابے آندے نے اوہ تواڈے چکر وچ نئی پھسن گے

  4. Tahir says:

    You ask: ” Each was a cry of pain and a warning to the nation. Warnings we did not heed. One listens to them today and one wishes we had paid attention then. One also wonders if, in fact, we are paying attention even today.”

    The answer is NO, we are still not paying attention. Only filling air space with silly chatter.

  5. Durrani says:

    Very well said:

    naara-i-hubb-i-watan maal-i-tajarat ki tarhaan
    jinss-i-arzaan ki tarhaa deen-i-khuda ki baatein

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