Me Tarzan, You Pseudo-Puritanical-Silent-Maid-Who-Slaves-To-My-In satiable-Ego-For-Life
It is very, very tempting to lump the male of our species under a single category – i.e. insecure, self-indulgent imp who boasts a chauvinistic pride based solely on an alphabetical mishap (designated ‘XY’ by geneticists.) But, I shall temporarily lend credence to the postmodernist notion of diversity and resist such a temptation.
Not too long ago, Raza Rumi made a humorous contribution to the issue of gender stereotyping by creating different boxes Pakistani women must inevitably fit into “or else….†I would like to attempt a similar parody – of Pakistani men. I have socio-politico-feminist reasons for doing so. Nothing too personal, rest assured. My meagre understanding and observation of Pakistani men has led to the groupings you find below.
The aim is to see if the boxes “tick†and what the Pakistani man has to say to that. There’s no denying that in our society it has almost always been the woman who has had to defend herself, no matter what the circumstance. The man prosecutes but is seldom prosecuted. Has he no responsibility for the debilitated condition of women in Pakistan? I include in this the “liberal†Pakistani male who is well-versed in the slogans for woman’s lib, but silently and secretly accepts the sexist codes embedded in our social make-up. Perhaps the Hudoods and the Hisbas offer him a kind of a guilty comfort – a telling reminder of his superior rank, making for a very cushiony fallback position should his ego get so desperate?
The point is that by just keeping quiet he is perpetuating the status quo. Now it is easy to forgive an ignorant man, but not an educated man’s passivity.
Chichora extraordinaire: he is the plankton of our society. You will find his type, always flashy and smirking, floating about in abundance in the dirty waters that make up our bazaars and gallis (mind you, he has also been spotted on the streets of Southall and many other desi ghetto areas across the globe). Blessed with a natural affinity for ogling and elbowing, he cannot help but make the woman feel like she is the first and only woman he has ever seen. The ability – to effortlessly yet expressively reduce the woman to an object – is truly unique to this group.
Proud owner of a whirligig-wife: “marriage†was a business transaction and “wife†his purchased item. He actually believes he owns her like one would a 15 sq. m. utility area, or a whirligig to be spun at his whim. Her very existence is defined by his demands/moods/wants/needs.
I used to know a woman in Pakistan, mother of four, who was owned by such a man. One day she set herself on fire. Alas, fate can sometimes have a very cruel sense of irony: she survived the suicide attempt, and now lies paralyzed and strapped to her charpai, dependent on that evil man to feed her liquefied food from a straw.
Men from all socio-economic backgrounds can fall into this category. On the one extreme of this group you find a battered and broken-spirited wife who has been used and abused throughout her marriage. She may try to kill herself or avoid doing so for the sake of her children. On the other extreme you have those jittery, slightly neurotic, wives, who jump at the mention of their husbands. They are trained poodles, craftily brainwashed by their owner to always behave in accordance with his specific and strict code of ethics and etiquettes. Constantly fearful of making a wrong move at the grave displeasure of her owner, I can’t imagine life to be any more than a litany of lament for her. (I’d equate the relationship to bonded labour but I don’t wish to benumb your senses with too much reality.)
Napoleon-complex: also known as Small Man Syndrome, its members subscribe to a rather intense, at times aggressive, policy towards women. Having nurtured his own inferiority complex by fixating on a physical or mental “inadequacy†of some kind, he seeks compensation for his “shortcomings†via dominance. Caught up in a maelstrom of self-doubt and suspicion in others, he projects his insecurities onto women (conveniently considered the weaker sex.)
Whereas most men would be inclined to judge women based on unfair stereotypes, I feel the tendency is more accentuated in this group. He has a need to prove and establish his superiority. He may adopt a more machismo look; buffing up to resemble Salman Khan or flagrantly affronting innocent passer-bys in public displays of aggression. Or he may try to convince you that he is very funny, or very rich, or very clever, or a ‘very’ of something that is enough to delude him to thinking that he commands more power in relation to someone else. Such extreme competitiveness can be channelled positively in the workplace, but his unfortunate misgivings reinforce the sad power plays between the genders.
New Age sexists: he is of the variety I mentioned at the beginning: sexist by his sheer silence. He doesn’t ogle other women or try to “own†his own. But he passively accepts the system; acting immune to the discrimination he sees around him.
He is the liberal parvenu and poseur: more concerned with affecting the manners of a woman’s-liberationist rather than making any effort to understand and implement the principles he’s supposed to espouse. Because at the end of the day, he’s not the victim, and so why should he bother? And let’s not forget that he actually gets to enjoy the many perks of living in a sexist, patriarchal society.
So, do Pakistani men continue to be conscripted into the groups outlined above? If so, Why? What can Pakistani men do to break these moulds – thus breaking a very entrenched and harsh form of gender discrimination in our society? Finally, is there a Pakistani man who is doing something/anything to combat sexist attitudes towards women? Please come forward and bewilder us all.
excellent analysis of pakistani men. their might be sexist men in other parts of the world but they are far more reasonable, liberal and sensible than pakis men can ever be.paks men suffer from mental blockagea anyway. women in pakistan are like animals kept in a downtroden zoo.
me HULK HOGAN not tarzan
because tarzan( as they depict in the comic books ) is not that muscular, after all tarzan has to swing from one tree to another and with that bulky body he wouldnt be able to do so.
and I think even JANE wudnt want her man to develop that ABNORMAL shape.
Are these really the boxes urban Pakistani women try to fit their male counterparts into? Or is this a list of what’s wrong with Pakistani men from a strictly feminst perspective?
In Raza Rumi’s article the boxes represented the different stereotypes that men try to categorize women into. Whereas your boxes don’t seem to do the same for women. This, in my opinion, takes the humour out, and is simply inaccurate and unfair because you have only listed some pretty negative boxes.
By the way, I had to get my dictionary out to read this one. Can’t believe “parvenu”, “whirligig” and “maelstrom” are actual words. :)
I accept your humor, but will take you seriously for a moment. Your lament is not of a Pakistani woman alone; it is universal. Do a search and replace Pakistani with each nationality, (and your name, just as well) and post this article those nations blogs. You will be just about right.
The problem is more complex than with the simplicity you have laid out. It is rooted into both patriarchal and religious (all) concepts that cannot be simplified for either humor or the brevity of these columns.
While the problem is universal, its solutions are harder in authoritarian societies. That leaves about 5 to 10 countries. Even in those ‘advanced’ countries, the results are mixed.
I invite you to study:
The National Voting Rights Act of 1965
Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978
Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993
Glass Ceiling Commission (1991-1996) (ask Carly Fiorina)
The above will give you greater insight on how long it has taken to achieve simple ‘rights’. My personal opinion is that it will take another 100 or 200 years when an equilibrium will be achieved between sexes for both rights and power.
BTW, I will not say that Pakistani women have it good, but universally Pakistani women were voting before ‘all’ the American women (Black women got universal suffrage only in 1965). Do a research on paid maternity leave rights in Pakistan and compare it with other countries.
Incidentally, your description leaves men like Jinnah out. Perhaps Ayub Khan did more for women in Pakistan than any before him. No doubt Zia did worse than any other.
Lastly, I am not going to count the number of Pakistani men I have know in my life who do not fit your descriptions. I hope you are able to expand your research and find better models.
Good Luck!
I don’t know in which Pakistan you live… I don’t know what happened to you in Pakistan that makes you feel like that.. I don’t know what kind of men have you met in your life… but there are alot of “good” boxes that I don’t see here…. Good and bad people are everywhere in all societies in every part of the world.. but man! I have never seen so much hatred for men, so much complex of some strange kind; anywhere but on this site… And the way you crafted the whole article carefuly choosing your words; it seems you have had bad experiences, but not everyone go through the same thing.. so don’t put everyone in the same sort of categories.. I’ll take your article as a sequel to Raza’s article, as good humor and not more…
If it was so simple to categorize people like that then we would’ve understood and found a cure for the differences between both sexes and we would’ve created a balanced soceity a long time ago… I have said this before; the nature created both sexes different but with a balance that most of us don’t understand.. but here despite of understanding this balance we are not getting tired of point fingers at each other…. My suggestion to you is to think and try to understand what secrets the nature holds and why is it like that…