I am a Mumbaikar: In Prayer and in Solidarity

Posted on November 28, 2008
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Disasters, Foreign Relations
240 Comments
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Adil Najam

I, too, am a Mumbaikar today.

I wish I could reach out and for just one moment hold the hands of the woman in this AP photograph. Maybe shed some tears on her shoulder. But I do not know what I would say to her. I do not think she would want me to say much. The expression on her face matches the feeling I have at the pit of my stomach and in the depth of my heart. I think – I hope – that she would understand how I feel. I can only imagine what she is going through.

And so, in prayer and in solidarity, I stand today with Mumbaikars everywhere. In shock at what has happened. In fear of what might happen yet. In anger at those who would be so calculated in their inhuman massacre. In sympathy with those whose pain so hurts my own heart but whose tears I cannot touch, whose wounds I cannot heal, and whose grief I cannot relieve.

The solidarity I feel with Mumbaikars is deep and personal.

The first time I ever visited the Taj Mahal Hotel was with my wife. We had been married just weeks and were not staying at the Taj but went to the historic “Sea Lounge” at the hotel for tea and snacks during a short visit to Mumbai. We went to the Oberoi Hotel the same visit in the naive and mistaken belief that we would find Bollywood bigwigs hanging out there. In later years I would come back and stay at the old wing of the Taj – down the corridor from where Ruttie Bai Jinnah and stayed – I would even present in the grand ballroom whose pillars, supposedly, had been brought from her father’s estate. Each time I passed through Victoria Terminus I stood in awe of the pace as well as its presence. In awe of the architectural structure, but also of the sea of humanity around me. I cannot hear of terrorists attacking these places without my own muscles twitching in anger.

But my feeling of solidarity with Mumbaikars is much much more personal than these few fleeting visits over many years. Deeply etched into me are the horrific echoes of 9/11 in New York and the string of terrorist attacks on Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Quetta, Peshawar and all over Pakistan whose reports have become all too familiar – but never bearable – on this blog. I know what living with terror feels like. I have thought too much and too deeply about what it feels like to be the target of violence propelled by hatred. I know the pain of helplessness one feels as one stands stunned in grief, wanting so desperately to do something – anything – but not knowing what to do. This is why I identify with the expression on the face of the woman in this picture. This is why, like so many others in the world, today I too am a Mumbaikar.



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This is why I stand with Mumbaikars everywhere, in prayer and in solidarity. At a loss for words but with an urge to speak out. My words of condemnation will not change the actions of those who have committed such heinous murder and mayhem. Nor will my words of sympathy diminish the agony of the victims. But speak out I must. In condemnation as well as in sympathy. To speak against the inhumanity of hatred and violence. To speak for the humanity in all of us that we all must hold on to; especially in the testing moments of grave stress.

But, today, I have no words of analysis. What words can make sense of the patently senseless? I do not know who did this. Nor can I imagine any cause that would justify this. But this I know: No matter who did this, no matter why, the terror that has been wrought in Mumbai is vile and inhuman and unjustifiable. And, for the sake of our own humanness, we must speak out against it.

And, so, to any Mumbaikar who might be listening, I say: “I stand with you today. In prayer and in solidarity.”

240 responses to “I am a Mumbaikar: In Prayer and in Solidarity”

  1. Proud Hindu says:

    This is the same line we have heard again and again. To be defensive and make excuses for terrorists. Everything any Pakistani writes about terror in India they justify it by mentioning Kashmir etc. Show me one, just one, statement from a Pakistani that condemns all terrorism and violence anywhere, without any reservations or justifications. Just one! Pakistanis are just not capable of doing that!

  2. Babar says:

    @ Nik: I for one accept that Pakistan did bread terrorists and has been paying for it for last 10 years or more. So we had had our payback time.
    But its not at all pay back time for Pakistan “now”. You know the world was different in 2002. At this moment the west is just too keen to get out of this terrorism business as soon as possible. And india will be just too amazed to find that it has not much cheering, or interest for that matter, for any of its war plans by western world. And we know very well that india can not actually attack. All they can do is try to build up on the border to try to cripple Pakistani economy. But at this stage it will hurt indian economy more as there is already almost zero foreign investment in Pakistan.

  3. Javed Ali Khan says:

    The govt finger pointing has really become terrible and things are getting out of control. I think those people who want the two countries to fight shoudl be happy now!

  4. Wadood says:

    Unfortunately, the governments on both sides have given in to their right-wing hawks. India, by falling under the pressure of the coming elections and the BJP and trying to act tough by blaming Pakistan and the Pakistan government falling under the pressure of its own right-wing opposition to retract the offer to send the ISI chief to India. Both of these developments are really for domestic reasons but are having very negative international consequences. I fear for how much worse things will get because I think the forces of hatred on both sides are beginning to take over the discourse.

  5. S Usmani says:

    @nik,

    lolwut? u need a reminder of when indians planned and executed a terror attack? how’s about “sahmjota express” for starters mate? Its going to be a back and fro, its a futile argument so i m not going to engage in it.

    @saeeduzzaman,

    frankly you’re doing a good job of being the mandela-esque elder statesman here, my gripe is only this:

    Yes we have elements on both sides that hate each other, agreed.

    But goodness gracious, i did’nt see a media trial of India on Pak press or elec media when the ISL marriott got bombed? for that matter many more.

    We have concrete, absolutely convicting evidence of Indian involvement in Baluchistan, yet we have kept the rhetoric fairly mild at our end. Again, my point is that there is a visible difference we’re seeing in the coverage of the Bombai attacks. Just turn the Indian channels up for a second to get an idea of how they have gone out on a limb to pin Pakistan.

    At least this sort of bashing has’nt been reciprocated in Pakistan. I rest my case.

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