Independence Day Greetings for India

Posted on August 15, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Foreign Relations
43 Comments
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Adil Najam

Today is August 15. India’s Independence Day.

ATP sends all Indians sincere and heartfelt Independence Day greetings and the very best wishes.

Each year since All Things Pakistan started, we have written a post on this day with the same headline and the same opening words (here, here, here, here). Today, for the fifth time, I write the same words dipped in the same feeling the very same intensity of emotions. Let me begin, this time, with the prayer I ended last year’s post with: May the best hopes of both Mr. Jinnah and Mr. Gandhi come true for both our nations. May all our futures be good futures.

As we wrote last year, these posts have carried a trilogy of imagery our post in 2006 sought to revisit our imagery of our past (here), in 2007 we highlighted the changing imagery of India-Pakistan relations in the present (here), and in 2008 we called upon our readers to re-imagine our visions of the future (here).

But the same imagery has also held a constancy of purpose: An investment in the hope that relations between these countries will, in fact, become better and reflect what we believe are the true aspirations of most Pakistanis as well as most Indians.

This year these hopes have been challenged on both sides. Talks restarted amidst cautious hopes, but the images coming out of them have been of tense nerves rather than real relationships. It also does not bode well that the news today is that the Pakistan government is still deliberating whether to accept an offer of aid from India to help its flood victims, or that the Indian Prime Minister is again vexing hawkish fingers towards Pakistan. Neither should really be news and one realizes that there are political compulsions on both sides that could explain these moves. But one wishes that this were not so.

The statesmanship, it seems, is coming not from the leaders on either side, but, instead, from within the people rather than the political classes. But maybe that is only to be expected since politicians seems too entrenched in their own rhetoric. I have long believed, and continue to believe that if indeed there is going to be headway it will be pushed by people-to-people processes and the best that we can expect from leaders of either side is that they will then follow the aspirations of their own people.

So today, on India’s Independence Day, we the Pakistani people send the fondest of greetings to the people of India. May all our shared futures be prosperous and peaceful. May our tomorrows be always better than our todays. May our tomorrows be marked by friendship, by peace, by prosperity, by goodwill, and by understanding.

Happy Independence Day, India.

43 responses to “Independence Day Greetings for India”

  1. Amarnath says:

    I don’t want your greetings. Actually, I don’t need them either. We are a world power and you are a basket case. You are all already dying miserable deaths. Your reward from getting away from Mother India.

  2. K.D. says:

    Thank you for the wishes! & Same to you guys too for 14/8.

    Nice post & agree that peace, if it comes in near future, will come from people to people interaction. Hope trade between our country grows and benefits all people on both side of border.

    In long term, there will be peace. There can even be ‘One Country’ again, including Ind-Pak-Ban. Thats where our power lies. Don’t know how many years it will take, but ti will happen.

    Regards,

  3. Kaasu says:

    I am disappointed to see this kind of post from pakistaniat (one of my favorite blog). This doesn’t deserve such a long post considering what we are facing today – floods – as India opened water without warning. Shame on India.

  4. Saras Lakhi says:

    Thank u so much for your kind words. We the people of South Asia have to lower the bars of ego and surge forth towards a more fruitful future. Think always of the poorest of the poor and your heart and head will answer….

  5. NB says:

    Sorry to be a spoilsport but I just came across this today:
    http://pulsemedia.org/2010/08/14/why-silence-over- kashmir-speaks-volumes/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_ medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+pulsemedia+%28P+U +L+S+E%29

    We can make all the right noises and we should but certain things are a bit too blatantly in our faces for us to avoid looking at them.

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