The Shoania Phenomenon: Why is There So Much Fuss Over the Shoaib and Sania?

Posted on April 30, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Media Matters, People, Society, Sports
33 Comments
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Adil Najam

The question mark in the headline is a real question mark. I am not suggesting that there should have been no fuss about Pakistani cricket star Shoaib Malik marrying India tennis star Sania Mirza. I am wondering why there has been as much fuss as there has.

I ask this because I really would like to know why you think it has been so.

Over the last many many days we have received over twenty different emails asking us to do a post about the so-called Shoania” phenomenon. To be fair, it has been amusing to see the hysteria grow; and even more amusing to see it being fueled by a flabbergasted media that seemed even more out-of-control than the hysteria itself.

We did not do a post till now because we really did not know what we would say beyond echoing the hysteria or simply wishing the young couple well in their betrothal. Although we do wish the couple well and our fondest prayers go with them and their future, we are not particularly keen in doing the first (even though we may well be doing it now!)

We write now because it seems that things have finally begun to settle down. The “dancing on the streets” have ended. The hysteria is subsiding. And our dear friends in the media have somewhat come to their senses and realized that the world remains as complex a place as ever and Pakistan is no less messed up today than it was when this bout of Shoania first broke.

Maybe now is the time to ask the more interesting question: Why was there so much fuss made about Shoania?

I can understand the celebrity and glitterati have rhythms of their own which us mere mortals cannot understand. But I cannot remember any celebrity wedding in Pakistan that has ever generated the type of hype that Shoania did. The closest we have come before this is the wedding of Imran Khan to Jemima. And even that was not in the same league as this.

The question is, why?

Was it because these are two great sporting stars? (Except that, at least in Pakistan, few knew or cared much about Sania or about tennis before this, and other cricketers as popular as Shoaib never received such a reaction). Was it because it was a Pakistani citizen marrying an Indian citizen? (Even though that happens quite routinely). Was it because the glitter of celebrity was mixed with the spice of scandal even as the news broke? Was it because our public is so fed up with “serious” stuff that such a distraction was not just good entertainment but highly welcomed? Was it the extremist politicians across the border who actually made this news? Was it the media that created a big story because they more than anyone else benefit from a big story? Was it all of the above? A combination of the above? Or none of the above?

One last thought before I ask you to respond. Maybe, it does not matter at all that this fuss was made. But the fact is that the fuss was made. And made at proportions never seen before. I suspect that in figuring out why we will not find anything new or even interesting about either Shoaib Malik or about Sania Mirza, but we may find some interesting clues about ourselves as a society. Ultimately, that is what I am looking for here.

33 responses to “The Shoania Phenomenon: Why is There So Much Fuss Over the Shoaib and Sania?”

  1. Gen Xer says:

    The reason you don’t “get it”, is because you are from a previous generation. You simply do not look at Shoaib Malik the same way as you did Miandad or Imran Khan. Would not be a big deal if Imran Khan got married while he was still playing for Pakistan?

  2. Neena says:

    I think something to do a successful Muslim Indian powerful woman image since in our society people mostly love to see them as subordinate. India won this event by showing Pakistanis that Indian women can be anything if they want to be. They provided a safe ground where a minority woman become a thriving tennis star and no one harassed her. While we still deciding our girls deserve to go to school or not while those same men sell their daughters and sisters in the name of marriage. I wonder where is their manhood is when girls/women work as buggers or do menial jobs for pennies?

    Sorry about the rant but this hypocrisy is killing me especially on labor day.

  3. zubair says:

    Women are considered trophies there, and “snatching” a world class “trophy” (sania) from “enemy’s” hand indeed was a big event, a once in a life time event, that generated media fuss rivaling the euphoria of the cricket world cup 92 :)

  4. imran says:

    I had seen Sania play tennis in a world class match in California on TV a few years ago and was very impressed with her quality of strokes. She lost because she had played too many tournaments in a row. I was floored by the fact that an Indian muslim can rise to such a level in India. You have to realize that living in the US all I have moslty seen down trodden Indian muslims. She also has spunk in her eyes. My take is that there are so many bad stories coming out of Pk these days that a good one like this is something people and media would latch on to.

  5. Tahir says:

    I cannot remember any wedding in Pakistan that has ever attracted this much attention. Not even Imran’s. Maybe Diana’s.

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