What Gives You Hope For Pakistan’s Future?

Posted on March 23, 2009
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Society
68 Comments
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Adil Najam, Owais Mughal, Darwaish, Asma Mirza

In this, the final post in our series on Pakistan Day 2009, we want to look towards the future. Not on what the source of our concerns are, but on the source of our hopes.

The spirit of this post, as you will see, is best expressed in the great song by Mehdi Hasan – Yeh Watan tumhara Hai. We have written about this song before, but as Khan Sahib struggles for his life in a Karachi hospital today, this March 23rd is a good day to remember his song and remember him in all our prayers.

Each of the four editors of this blog asked ourselves the same question that we ask you: “On this Pakistan Day, what gives you hope for Pakistan’s future?”

Here are our answers. Do please share with us what your answers might be. (Those who want to talk about threats and concerns can do so in the last post; but, please, do respect the question that this post focuses on).

DARWAISH: The Lawyers Movement, emergence of a vibrant civil society and the awareness created in masses by media has given me new hope for a better future. I know we are not there yet and it’s just the beginning of a long road ahead but independent judiciary is the first step in right direction.

The ruling elite and others sitting in the corridors of power can no longer do whatever they want and get away with it. They will be exposed and that’s a very positive change. A transparent and fair public accountability process, which has been long absent from Pakistani society, can now hopefully be achieved through a combination of independent judiciary and media.

I also hope that now we will see extensive judicial reforms which are desperately needed, especially in the lower courts which deal with more than 90% of public issues.

ASMA MIRZA: When I compare general attitude of an average youth now with that of ten years ago, I totally get amazed at the change we went through. Ten years back the life of an average youth probably revolved around gaming and trying to figure out whether bingo for cash app legit, a bit of gossiping on media (read: films) and studies. That’s it.

Today things have taken a total turn. When I talk around with young people, the spirit they have for Pakistan – the hatred they have against evils that are killing us as a nation – makes me revive my thoughts of hope and respect in Pakistan’s future. It may be the media that is spreading the awareness but the willingness to ponder about things – about Pakistan’s future – is gratifying. This, more than anything else, gives me hope in Pakistan’s future.

Long live Pakistan ~ The land of beautiful people. Young saplings give me hope for Pakistan. This blood has got the potential and I feel happy that this blood knows their rights too. It is through this generation that I see Pakistan a better and progressive land in coming decades, Inshah Allah.

OWAIS MUGHAL: What gives me hope on this March 23rd are the women cricketers of Pakistan. Pakistan recenlty ended up at 6th position in the Womens’ Cricket World Cup but the ladies from Pakistan conquered much more than sixth position. They conquered the taboo of following their dreams, they conquered the no-no of coming from extreme rural background and competing against the best in the World.

I took special note of the places where these ladies came from. Some of these places have never been able to send a male player to Pakistan’s national team but these ladies have shown there is no limit to what one can achieve by aiming high and with dedication. One player of Pakistani women team came from Nankana Sahib in Punjab, one from a place as remote as Chaghi, Balochistan, 1 from Quetta, 3 from Abbotabad, 1 from Hyderabad, Sindh and 3 from Multan. Rest of the team came from Karachi and Lahore.

This was a truly a Pakistani team comprising of players from remote cities as well as mega cosmopolitans. My congratulations to Pakistani women cricket team on this birthday of Pakistan Resolution. You give us hope!

ADIL NAJAM: My response to this question is not much different from my colleagues, in that it is the people of Pakistan that give me hope as well as sustenance. There are many many manifestations of the hope they stir, here are just five examplars (representative, but not comprehensive):

So, this is what we think… your turn now.

68 responses to “What Gives You Hope For Pakistan’s Future?”

  1. a woman says:

    @ Bloody Civilian

    Great rebuttal !

  2. Bloody Civilian says:

    Readinglord,

    1. I believe an equitable sharing out of the ‘cake’ is far more important than ‘increasing its size’. It is to belittle, indeed insult, a human being and human society to suggest that the only incentive it can, and does, respond to is, and ever can be, money…. to the exclusion of all else.

    2. Therefore I emphasised the fact that the poor are victims of a heinously criminal injustice where their work (‘kaam’) gets no where remotely near its deserved worth. And ‘the lack of opportunity’, is actually a deliberate shutting, and keeping under lock, of all doors. This is exploitation by man, nothing to do with luck or destiny as a feudel would see it as the lot and rightful place of a ‘kammi’.

    3. Yet your misreading a minor detail or two of what I wrote is a non-issue. What is really preposterous (to say the least) are your repeated attempts to suggest that any alleged behaviour on the part of the victim of rape have any bearing at all on the gravity of the crime perpetrated against them or their innocence as a victim. For you to go to a thread all the way back from 2006, http://pakistaniat.com/2006/11/15/mukhtaran-mushar raf-books/#comments, to repeat the suggestion that Ms Mukhtaran Mai’s subsequent behaviour in any way justifies or lessens the rape, at any level, or in any dimension, sadly, says more about you than it does about Ms Mai. Actually, it exemplifies how she and many women, if not all, are victims at so many different levels and in so many different ways.

  3. readinglord says:

    @Bloody Civilian

    Well done dear! Keep it up except that please do not treat the poor as a class like the feudal system treat them as ‘Kammi’. We are poor relative to the advanced world. What is needed is the development and alleviation of general poverty, what the economists say ‘To increase the size of the cake’.

  4. Fawad says:

    The editors of this blog have already mentioned most of what gives me hope but I would also say that I couldn’t agree more with the sources of “Bloody Civilian’s” hopes for Pakistan. If we can nurture the budding civil society, continue strengthening constitutional democratic institutions and manage to fight off the brutal and ignorant extremists threatening to annihilate the country as we know it, Pakistan can and will thrive over the long run.

  5. bonobashi says:

    The emerging middle classes, the professional people who have found their voice, flexed their muscles and sensed their power.

    I hope and fervently pray that the movement to re-instate the Chief Justice will lead to other similar movements with a more constitutional tone and trend, and that you will gradually be able to merge extra-constitutional methods into the methods recognised by the constitution. I hope to see the day when civil society will lead the governance of a democratic Pakistan, living in self-confident peace and amity with all.

    As an alien well-wisher, I salute you on this forum and the forum itself as one of the important voices of this emerging source of legitimate power.

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