Benazir Bhutto: Remembering the Dream

Posted on January 2, 2008
Filed Under >Yasser Latif Hamdani, History, People, Politics, Society
54 Comments
Total Views: 57765

Yasser Latif Hamdani

Pakistan is mourning. It is not just Benazir Bhutto but the dream of Pakistan itself that is in pieces.

Pakistan was envisaged as a modern democratic homeland for the Muslim minority of British India as a last resort by Pakistan’s founding father Mahomed Ali Jinnah, who had fought for it to ensure the political and economic future of his people. Jinnah‘s Pakistan was to be a land free of exploitation, religious exclusion, bigotry and intolerance. It was this dream that Benazir and her father echoed, though not always consistently, making the Bhuttos immensely popular amongst the people of Pakistan.

Today this dream looks to be coming to an end. Pakistan stands at the threshold of a great tragedy. We are gripped with uncertainty, with Bhutto‘s home province of Sindh ablaze with agitation and violence. The whole country is paralyzed. Benazir was known as the common link and leader who brought all four provinces together behind her, making her the one truly national leader we had at present.

The elder Bhutto had authored in 1967 “Myth of Independence” about Pakistan and its role in the world which definitively shaped Pakistan’s foreign policy especially the way ZAB played a pivotal role in bringing the US and China closer together and cracking open the anti-US eastern bloc and in one smart move creating a counterbalance to India. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto viewed the survival of Pakistan as part of a thousand years struggle of the survival of Muslim community in the subcontinent. His own passionate love affair with Pakistan had a lot to do with how closely the Bhutto family’s fortune had been intertwined with Pakistan from the start. The house in Naudero played host to Jinnah many times during Bhutto‘s childhood and people forget that it was the wily Sir Shahnawaz Bhutto who had managed to get the Junagadh document of accession for Jinnah thereby upsetting several British calculations.

Bhutto himself had played a key role in organizing a successful student strike in Bombay in 1946 for the Muslim League or so Bhutto claimed in his last days. This is why anyone who has read his biography is struck by how far Bhutto went to identify himself in the public perception with the memory of Jinnah. His deeply personalized involvement in the Jinnah propagation project through out 1976 and his distribution of his own photograph in the Jinnah cap was an indication of this. If there was ever a politician who was an ultra-nationalist in Pakistan it was Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.

Throughout his career as the foreign minister he subscribed to the idea that India was out to gobble up Pakistan. Remember Bhutto started his career as firmly an establishment man inducted by Sikandar Mirza and retained by Ayub Khan so he furthered the national security thesis which at the time meant extra-reliance on the US but bitter experience in the 1965 war taught Bhutto that Pakistan needed a range of options in foreign policy. The menu Bhutto created included a combo of China and US aimed at Soviet expansionism which he saw as the prime backer of India. It was this reason that forced Bhutto to famously declare that

“if India makes the bomb, then we will eat grass but make our bomb”.

ZAB was a remarkable politician and a diplomat. He was no anti-imperialist though. Whatever his posturing he was at the end of the day a US ally who drove a hard bargain. Throughout his half a decade in power he continued to try and convince the US that he was a more reliable ally than the Shah of Iran. It was Bhutto who started the Afghan insurgency against the pro-communist government there at the US behest. PPP, ZAB and BB were the greatest champions of the Kashmir cause. The Bhutto family had very close ties with the Mir Waizes and this shows in how Srinagar reacted yesterday. Kashmir was a central tenet of the original PPP manifesto.

That ZAB gave the country a unanimous constitution is an undeniable fact. Unfortunately his use of religion was theological and not as a tool of identity formation. In contrast Jinnah had to put theological issues on the backburner to bring shias, sunnis, ahmadis, ismailis, etc on one platform. Bhutto‘s unfortunate action opened up a pandora’s box of theological disputes. That said Ahmadis did not face persecution per se even after their constitutional excommunication. It was Zia ul Haq who tormented us. All in all when one says that BB continued her father’s mission through out her life, the mission was always the preservation of Pakistan and not some undefined imperialist agenda which the elder Bhutto used a political slogan. No one would have said it 10 years ago but Benazir Bhutto as a leader and global figure stood head and shoulders above her famous father. Not above opportunism and manipulation, the mercurial Zulfikar Ali Bhutto banked on cheap popularity and often followed the sentiments of the people (Friday as a weekly holiday, ban on horse racing, alcohol and gambling, all of which he himself enjoyed, and ofcourse the Ahmadi issue being a clear example of it). Benazir was an intellectual of a much higher ability and a leader who was in 2007 finally ready to lead instead of being led

This is why the loss of Benazir Bhutto is greater than that of her father. Her loss is more akin to the loss of Shaheed-e-Millat Liaqat Ali Khan, Pakistan’s first prime minister, who was assassinated in the same place and whose death remains a mystery. The crisis that followed paved way for people like Bogra and then the Military, who didn’t threaten to go to Moscow, as LAK had done, to derive a greater bargain.

Now the world is beginning to point fingers at Pakistan’s nuclear assets. The difference between all previous such events and now is that Pakistan was strong enough to withstand the sudden eliminations of Liaqat Ali Khan, Bhutto and Zia. But Benazir Bhutto was, as the slogan said, charon soobon ki zanjeer, the true symbol of the federation. The fact that even the Baloch nationalists cried out for her shows how above and beyond Mr. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Benazir had proved to be. Her sudden disappearance from the scene has given many enemies of Pakistan a lot of ammunition with which to destroy the country. Some elements have gone so far as to question the very existence of Pakistan. In this hour of great darkness, we see a resolute Pakistan People’s Party standing committed to the federation. Will this be enough to keep ethnic separatists as well as Pakistan’s international detractors at bay? Only time will tell.

May Bilawal Bhutto Zardari now have the courage to follow in his illustrious mother’s footsteps. His politics must be guided by the fine egalitarian principles that Mahomed Ali Jinnah gave to Pakistan, for which his grandfather and his mother toiled through out their lives.

54 responses to “Benazir Bhutto: Remembering the Dream”

  1. legaleagle says:

    Wow! The photo of a twice-failed, highly corrupt and now deceased ex-PM is a nice pictorial frame? I like the sentimental yet mythical transition of BB from what actually she was to almost a surreal fairytale like once a upon a time there was an angel in Pakistan…….

    What Rubbish!! Lets stick to the facts on the ground about BB her party and her performance before we let our heads float in the clouds of another fool’s fairy tale.

  2. taban.khamosh says:

    “but growth and development in India is a myth.”

    YLH: You are in denial bro!

  3. YLH says:

    As a modern Muslim Jinnah sought to protect the Muslims

  4. YLH says:

    Politically we can’t compare… but growth and development in India is a myth. Most impartial commentators seem to think Pakistan’s infrastructure and development are far superior. These include roads, airports, connectivity, Wimax etc.

    On the superficial indicators that Indians come up with with Pakistan having the highest cell phone density in South Asia (1 cell phone per 2.5 Pakistanis as opposed 1 per 6 or 7 Indians) … Pakistan is better.

    So I am afraid I don’t agree that we can’t compare. I think Indians play up their successes and we play down ours…

    The real difference is that India has had an unbroken chain of civilian constitutional rule. It has historical reasons… such as Punjab’s historical position as a regulated province but needless to say on paper India’s secular democracy looks sexy.

  5. Shariq Riazi says:

    It was a sad demise and this is not at all the way to get rid of anyone and all this happens is really worst BUT
    One should not forget her role in coutry’s worst ever situation we are facing now.
    First of All, the Party is no more a democratic party. It is not Pakistan Peoples Party(PPP) it should be Bhutto Family Party(BFP). This party was founded by Z A Bhutto as a milestone towards democracy and almost 4 decades of operations, this party conatins services of M Amin Fahim, Aitzaz Hassan and Sherry Rehman who spent their entire life struggling for the sake of this party is been now handed over to Miss Bhutto’s son who is just 19 years of age and also place some amendments in his name as well. He should start as a worker and should atleast struggle otherwise it is genuinely a Bhutto’s Family Party(BFP)…
    Secondly BB was holding the parliament’s highest office twice but all her rules were always filled with corruption and instability leaving everything in the hands of those around her and enjoying the rule whereas she must be doing something for the country’s future but she was never ever inetrested doing something for the people of Pakistan instead doing everything for the party workers and party stability by inducting irrelevant and incompatible recruitments in Pakistan’s profitable organizations like PIA, KESC and WAPDA ending these organizations with lots of debts and a stage of dying. Pakistan has been always in a state of moribund at her rule and she never turned out to be serious in the affairs of the state. Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad was never given attention w.r.t their Education and Financial stability.
    It was a sad demise and any one having a little bit of sympathy to humanity would consider this tragic incident as absoultely filthy but apart of from humanity if she was considered a daughther of Pakistan then what she has done for Pakistan. She was a graduate from Oxford, how many girls from larkana are able to reach Oxford probably she was the only one and on her way back should do something for Larkana(her hometown) but larkana is still the same with dust and mud and standard of life is not for a so called human beings.
    I am sorry to say these words but they are all part of the reality and nobody can forget them and forgive PPP for all this.

    We can compare with India as they were having the same Congress ruling them from generation to generation but with respect to growth and development we are way behind what they are now. No comparison. Need to take serious measures otherwise things would be miserable.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*