by Qandeel Shaam
What is patriotism but the love of the food one had as a child – Lin Yutang
There are many questions I struggle to solve – for instance, does the soul weigh 28 grams, why 72 virgins and why not just 1? Is Lichtenstein a country? Why do the Brits call private schools ‘public’, why is the green tea pink? How does Kamran Khan always manage to look like a very sad and cynical koala bear?
But there is one question that has persistently sat like a shrapnel in my mind: What does it mean to be Pakistani, what is Pakistaniat?
I’ve yo-yoed between Pakistan and Europe all my life, and with the passage of time this question has come to mystify me more and more. Moments of reflection over what your national identity is, and what it means, usually occur when you’re not in your home country. Maybe it has something to do with being labelled a “Pakistani†or feeling like an outsider, but living in the West can really intensify one’s ethnical awareness. This often results in an exaggerated sense of national identity where you see Pakistanis in the West acting more Pakistani-like than those living in Pakistan! For a brief time I was also overcome with a disposition to jingo, but then I moved to Pakistan….
Now you have to understand: for a Pakistani to move back to Pakistan after having proudly performed a stint of patriotism in the West can be quite a shocking experience. Whatever you thought was Pakistani can very quickly evaporate into the coiling miasma of confusion that shrouds our country. The contretemps first jolts and then disillusions you, because you slowly come to the realization that Pakistan is positively mired in an identity crisis.
You have the Western-wannabe’s and the religious extremist-wannabe’s. An extant grey zone that falls in between is either too small or too muted to buffer these two extremes. The Western-wannabe’s are primarily concerned with being liberal without embracing liberalism: for example, aunties who mull for hours when deciding just how deep they should let their plunging necklines plunge before it starts to look too inappropriate for a charity fundraising event to help emancipate the poor. The same aunties are also dedicated to ensuring that the only ‘liberty’ their maids ever see is a market in Lahore.
On the other hand you have the religious extremist-wannabe’s. Their narrow, retrograde interpretation of Islam creates new lines – and intensifies old ones – of demarcation based on belief, sect, creed, even beard length (!). It preaches Islamic unity but is practiced on the paradoxical premise that intolerance (even violence) against people with differing isms is condonable.
Western- and religious extremist-wannabes have their own sets of insecurities and prejudices and view everyone through such a discriminatory prism. These groups and the forces they exert deserves exclusive attention, but for the purposes of this article it is suffice to say that the dichotomy of Westernism and religious extremism in Pakistan has caused more friction between Pakistanis, propelling the drift away from a core Pakistaniat, a sense of oneness.
So when I moved back to Pakistan I found that oneness to be lacking; after years of living up to the facade of a “Pakistani†in the West I found Pakistan itself to be devoid of any such identity. I think that generally speaking Pakistanis have always had a clique mentality, but it’s augmented and intensified. So you see now multiple little groups all bopping their heads against one another.
And yet we speak of being Pakistani and Pakistaniat. We don’t just speak of it we feel it as well. When I am in Europe I again feel Pakistani. How can we feel something that doesn’t really exist?
The article opened with a quote from the Chinese writer Ling Yutang,
“What is patriotism but the love of the food one had as a childâ€
. I interpret this as memories of our childhood and the nostalgia they bring, and how it’s from these memories and nostalgia that there emanates a sense of self identity. So if I’m in Europe and eating samosa chaat or listening to a Pakistani song or qawali that was popular in my youth, it will almost always invoke a warm feeling of nostalgia that reminds me of where I come from. I’m not sure whether I should consider it a tragedy that the only vestiges left of the Pakistaniat I used to feel and know have become hazy reminisces, or whether I should feel glad that the feeling is not lost all together.
Photo Credits: Photos for this post are taken from flickr.com
Very true when I read of what Social Mistri has written it reminds me of my beloved India which I love very much but I guess we as 2 nations are beset with same legacy of treating our countrymen with contempt when we are in our own land ……….. its a shame but I guess it has a lot to do with the 190 years of british rule which has made our mentality a friggin slave mentality
JAI HIND
The article came to a rather abrupt end, or may be it’s just me who was expecting more? Were we to supposed to discuss Pakistaniat as a concept or as a feeling that engulfs us?
Maar dia, Qandeel Saieen, Maar dia. How true and how well written! When you are abroad, the idea of “Pakistan” seems to be so clear and so endearing – so unified and coherent. But not so when you are actually there. If it hard to look past the garda, mitti, the odd dying donkey lying by the side of the road, the poor motorcycle-wala pulled over for no reason by an oily-looking cop, the handicapped beggar in a beat-up wooden trolley pushing himself through a maze of cars spewing black death, and the loud, obnoxious honking of a black BMW 7 series followed by a Toyota Hilux bursting at the seams with guards, wanting the rest of humanity to disappear so that a path can be carved for its occupants.
Where should we go, and what should we do? While you’re in Pakistan all of the above and myriad other problems slap you in the face every day. And when you are away, while the memories of childhood and “home” are sweet, everything also seems temporary and unreal… as if this were a vacation that has to end at some point.
At times I really want to take the blue pill… (Matrix reference)… make me forget it all so that the mental torture can end.
Bukhari records Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) as saying he was enjoying breeze wafting from India laden with fragrance of Tawhid (unity of God). May be that is Pakistaniat?
Brutus.
Words before blows; is that right, countrymen?
Octavius.
Not because we love words better, like you do.
Now may be that is Pakistaniat?
Pakistaniat died for some of us on 16 December 1971—Indira Gandhi claimed it had sunk in the Bay of Bengal.
As Muslims , we divided our country into two , even though it had been given to us as a whole by British Christians.
May be there is a Christian Pakistaniat which fights the Jihad of Hind better than Muslims?
The fact that the corrupt and cursed progeny of Bhutto, the war criminal of 1971 is returning to rule Pakistan again, shows that even our national collective unconscious has not learnt any lessons from 1971.
May be touting our rudimentary and largely dissembled nuclear arsenal is Pakistaniat?
May be humiliating our benefactor Dr A Q Khan and arranging his “rendition” to Israel and India is Pakistaniat?
May be paying our hard-earned tax-money to the Nawabzadas, Sahibzadas, Khanzadas and Haramzadas of the feudal Jurassic Park so they can rule over us from the Army, bureaucracy, Parliament and Judiciary is Pakistaniat ?
May be selling our souls to please the American Viceroy in Islamabad is Pakistaniat?
God brought us out of misguided ways of Hinduism for a reason, I am sure .
Standing guard on Mr Bin Laden’s cave ? Now that is Pakistaniat !
Few years back in a Pakistani gathering it was urged to
define the term Pakistaniat, many took it nonseriously,
but as the time passedby I realize that 60 years of
existance with lots of turmoils, ups and down,Pakistani
nation has learned to survive with quite limited resources.
Many “civilisation” very hostile against Islam being the
corner stone of Pakistaniat, and the fact of having two
dimentions so rich and unequivocal, i.e. Indus valley
civilisation and Islam, many can be jealous !!!
Pakistaniat ” is” holding on to the heritage we are
gifted by AlMighty. Pakistaniat zindahbad