Pakistani Tourism Posters in India

Posted on September 2, 2009
Filed Under >Soumya Saxena, Foreign Relations, Travel
36 Comments
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Soumya Saxena

I recently visited a passport agent’s office in India. This agent also ran a travel agency from the same office and had tourism posters of various countries and other states in India pasted on its walls. I was browsing through these posters when one poster took me by surprise. It showed a highly decorated public bus in bright colors and below it was written:

The land of various colours: Pakistan


The photo above shows typical decorative art done on a Pakistani truck.

For a moment I quite really didn’t understand what I saw. This is because it was something I had never seen before. My utter surprise was not to end here as I saw another poster with an image of Gautam Buddha (in Gandhara art form) and again written below the image were the words:

The land of various colours: Pakistan

Gautam Buddha and Pakistan? For a moment I was in a fix again, and then I realized that Takshashila (Taxila) is part of Pakistan.

I certainly owe to my ignorance and also to the image of Pakistan promoted across the world, especially in India that I was unaware of the phrase ‘Pakistani tourism’. Actually I have never ever seen a tourism poster of Pakistan or for that matter anything to do with Pakistan which reflects its social or cultural life because unfortunately it is mostly about Kashmir or Terrorism.

Amidst all this we often forget that Pakistan is really in fact the land of colours. I went home and googled about the Pakistani Tourism and found this official tourism site (http://www.tourism.gov.pk/). Browsing through this site was not less than a revelation for me. I had never seen such an image of Pakistan, so many places to visit, historical remains, art, culture, fair, festivals, suddenly a more soft and pleasing Pakistan was in front of my eyes.

Later on I was discussing this topic with my Pakistani friend and he told me that the government does not do much to promote Pakistani tourism either abroad or at home. The historical and archaeological sites are mostly left to decay and defacement.

Zahida Hina, a known Urdu columnist, writes a weekly column ‘Pakistan Diary’ . This column appears in a sunday magazine called Rasrang . Rasrang is part of a Hindi language newspaper Dainik Bhaskar. In one of her articles she wrote that rains often flood the historical remains at Mohenjodaro, but no heed is taken by the authorities. I really felt sad after reading this, given the fact I have been a student of history and always wanted to visit the sites of the great Indus Valley Civilization.

I realize that in India and Pakistan, historical monuments are not preserved the way they should be. This even include the monuments which are labeled as ‘World Heritage’. Often it can be seen that visitors come and carve their names and other symbols on these monuments with stone, chalk, pencils, etc.

Treatment of tourists is another concern. The recent violent incidents in Pakistan creates a certain amount of hesitation and fear in the minds of the people whether to visit or not to visit.

However, people who have visited Pakistan have a lot to tell about the hospitality of the local people, the food, the culture, the lively ambiance of the country. All in all they give talk about an experience which is completely different from what they had perceived before visiting Pakistan.

Personally from what I have read and researched about Pakistan, I feel even a year is not enough to see the whole country. It is certainly blessed with natural beauty as well as historical and cultural diversity. Tourism industry can be very lucrative in Pakistan.

I want to end my post with a message that lets give tourism a chance. It may bridge the gap between people much quicker than any official/bureaucratic attempt to do so.

Author is a lawyer by profession and works for World Wide Fund in New Delhi

Photo Credits: Kamran Channa, Omer Aslam, Zahoor Ahmed, Saima, digital deadhead, Agha Waseem

36 responses to “Pakistani Tourism Posters in India”

  1. Aah, I had forgotten about this till I was brought back to it..

    @Watan Aziz
    I presume it took you a month drafting that long post of yours..How I wish you had only reread my statements. I for one, hate the RSS clan..I see a lot of similarities in India and Pakistan..

    And that’s exactly what my statement means..There is nothing called Pakistani art..It is all South Asian art which is a mix of Hindu, Mughal and various other influences..So when Soumya writes that she saw a Pakistani art in India, it is weird because it is just a Pakistani’s art..

    Read and reread before pointing fingers..

  2. adeel says:

    @soumya
    Basically he’s saying that the gutter stinks the same irrespective of which side of the border it is.

  3. soumya says:

    what on earth does Watan Aziz’s comment mean???

  4. Watan Aziz says:

    I cannot believe this.

    That I might be defending Zia?

    Impossible!

    Zia went about in shalwar-kamiz which I see graced by many Indian ladies in radiant motifs from both north and south of India and a vast majority of whom are not Muslims. The Indian shops are stocked. Visit Oak Tree Road in New Jersey one day and defy your stars. Tour over to Amritsar. And those Sikhini jatnis’, you should see them one day! And then there is an image of young Indria Gandhi with shalwar kamiz and dupata; just like any Kashmiri girl, of any faith.

    Nothing is more South Asian as Shalwar – Kamiz (you say salwar-kameej?), an innovation and introduction of Muslims of South Asia.

    But Anand Srinivasan, the ‘parochial’ ignorance of you and your friends in RSS /BJP make it so possible to defend Zia, even if I have to hold my nose.

    And the fact that your ranks may be larger than the entire population of Pakistan send shivers down the spine of all Soumya Saxenas and Saeeda Salams of South Asia.

    Zia was bigot but not ignorant like you. Neither are better for prosperity and peace. What he did, Pakistanis know but you are determined to destabilize. He is gone.

    There, I can breath again.

    But you are here. Do speak up often. We need a reminder for all Soumya Saxenas and Saeeda Salams to be aware that your ignorance exists and the challenge remains.

    Now, for the Indian tourism industry, there is one Jaswant Singh, a former Defense Minister and former Foreign Minister who needs armed escort to visit Gujrat (Anand Srinivasan, the one in India; JS is quite safe in the one in Pakistan).

    No wonder, if JS has to praise Sardar Patel before anything about Jinnah and Soumya Saxena has to praise Guruvayoor Temple before anything about Gandara, you throw Pervez Hoodbhoy in whole new domain. You all make him look like a village idiot !

    Live long and prosper (on the other side).

    Jai Hind to you and Pakistan Zindabad to Pakistanis.

  5. soumya says:

    @aanand

    I didn’t mean that I have never seen the art before
    the statement meant i was amazed to see the poster and i have never seen a pakistani poster in india before …
    and why are you so parochial… I have looked around India a lot … so I know what is here and what is there in Pakistan…

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