Picture of the Day: How We View Young Women?

Posted on November 30, 2006
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Photo of the Day, Society, Women
58 Comments
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Adil Najam

Sepoy, of Chapati Mystery fame, sent me this picture before. It is a crude sheyr (verse) crudely written at the back of a bus.

Roughly translated, it says:

Girls these days are so proud of their beauty
They don’t know the first
kalma, but speak in English

Sepoy said it made him chuckle. It makes me chuckle too. But it also makes me shudder a bit. And not just for the (lack of) poetic skills displayed here. The verse and its display probably says more about the way we view women – especially young women – than it does about the state of poetry in the country.


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Notwithstanding the fact that not just rhyme but reason is also missing here and the first and second misras have little connection, the verse does suggest what is viewed good (knowing the pehla kalma) and what is not (speaking in English).

All too often people will presume that a certain behavior correlates to certain moral positions. I remember how we wrote on ATP about an Ad in Dawn’s classified section for

an executive secretary for (a) the MD of a large educational network, who is (b) female with cute personality (c) willing to work on “anything & everything” (d) for “long hours”, and (e) “be able to keep MD pleased and relaxed.”

Thinking about the ad and all the societal assumptions imbedded in it still makes me mad. As did this interesting post from ATP friend Mansoor on Metroblog Karachi, where he writes about a new way of stealing cellphones that as practiced in Karachi.

A girl is standing at a bus stop, waiting to catch a bus to go home and talking on her cellphone. There are quite many people around and its daytime.

Two guys on a bike pull up in front of her, the guy on the back gets off the bike, comes in front of her, and without warning, plants a loud slap right on her face! The girl is stunned, cant even utter a word. He then shouts (for the benefit of whoever is listening) “kitney dafa bola hai! Abba ka cellphone nahi lay kar nikla karo” (how many times have i told you, not to take dads cellphone out), grabs her cell, gets back on the bike, and they both drive away.

The girl is too shocked to say anything and just stands there, her hand holding an imaginary cellphone to her ear. People around ignore the situation thinking its just some family tiff or the other…. till she screams out “ye mera bhai nahi tha!!!!!!!” (he was not my brother!!!!!)

What I found notable is that even though the post generated intense discussion it was mostly focused on crime prevention and law enforcement and very little about what – to me – was the most shocking line of all:

People around ignore the situtation thinking its just some family tiff or the other…

Wait, wait, wait. Please. It is OK if someone comes and slap their sister or wife or daughter in public? Or even in private? And the rest of us will say, ‘OK, its a family tiff.’

I must confess that I am shocked most because in my heart of heart I know that many people will, in fact, do exactly that. And, that, is the tragedy of it all.

58 responses to “Picture of the Day: How We View Young Women?”

  1. mazhar butt says:

    I don’t understand what on earth has beauty to do with ‘Kalima” or ”english”?

  2. uroojbakht says:

    ????????????????????????????
    ????????????????????????????
    aaj kal ki ladkiyan husn pe naaz kerti hain..
    Pahla Kalma ata nahin english mian bat kerti hain
    ????????????????????????????
    ????????????????????????????

  3. jaz says:

    I don’t understand why everyone here is complaining about the poem… that’s really not the point here folks.

    It’s pathetic that this type of b.s. is still taking place in pakistan…

    we’ve got big problems and social etiquettes need to be taught on a state-wide level.

    maybe they need to put up signs like they’re doing in beijing- stuff along the lines of the ‘no spitting’ except it should read ‘no slapping or publicly humiliating women.’

    if anything, this type of crap would’ve probably never happened in LAHORE. but alas, that’s another tale to dispute, isn’t it?

  4. Amna Raheem says:

    I can’t believe how readily Pakistani men are condemned for staring. Has anyone thought that the men who are staring are just looking at something that is beyond off limits to them? Like chocolate for me. Not to get perverse, but there are so many social constraints on women and men interacting, it is just curiosity on an extreme level. Accusing them of hate and wanting women not to be in the public place is just another form of racism! Compared to the West where interaction between men and women is much more commonplace and men are more comfortable with women as they ‘know’ them (not nec in the Biblical sense); in Pakistan, there is minimal permitted interaction.

    Unless you are buying clothes. Notice that the fabric shopkeepers don’t stare? They know how annoying Pakistani women can be and the mystery has long since vanished.

  5. Jami says:

    Nisvaniat-e-zan ka negehbaan hai faqat mard. (Dr. IQBAL)

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