Adil Najam
There is much – way too much – that is going terribly wrong in Pakistan. But not all is lost. Not just yet.
One must never deny that which is going wrong. Indeed, to accept and acknowledge it is itself the first step towards finding ways to reverse the wrong. But nor should one forget that which may be going right. So, what do you think are things that are going right in Pakistan? (Please, keep your cynicism to yourself – it is neither funny nor useful).
Let me give you a very preliminary and a very arbitrary list of five. These are not in order of priority, nor indeed are they the most important five. They are just five things that came quickly to mind. Trivial as they may sound to some, what is important is that each is a sign of societal strength, not of the state’s weakness. Each, therefore, is a sign of hope.
#1. Music. No, I am not joking. Pakistani music is going through an age of amazing innovation and a passionate embrace of all that is socially meaningful. But that, in fact, is not why I list it here. To me the richness of Pakistan’s music scene – here, here, here, here, here, here and everywhere – signifies that innovation is alive and kicking, in fact, thriving. The innovative spirit embedded in today’s music is what is going so very right in Pakistan, and so very worth celebrating.
#2. Media. We at ATP have bashed the media when it over-steps, over-does and over-reaches as anyone else. We believe that is deserved because there is much to be rightly bashed. But there is much more that deserves to be celebrated. Overall, and despite all that needs to be improved, media independence in Pakistan has been a force for the good. It has also often been a force of courage. The media has not just found its voice, it has given voice to society – the good as well as the bad, but a voice that neither relents nor can be silenced any more.
#3. Youth. That Pakistan is a youthful country is a legitimate demographic concern but also the most powerful potential for societal change in Pakistan. But that is a game of numbers and speculation. What is going right with the youth in Pakistan is not that there are so many of them. It is that so many of them are so very active and engaged in the redefinition of all sorts of social contracts. This is not an unconcerned and unconnected youth. This is a youth that is alive with passion and activism. That passion and activism may sometimes come in flavors we do not like, but this is not an indifferent youth. This is a youth that will make a difference.
#4. Resilience. It is sad that the resilience of this people has been tested as often and in as many ways as it has. At one level, the people of this country have no option but to be resilient. But beyond the resilience for survival is the resilience from an indigenous entrepreneurship. Earthquakes. IDPs. Floods. Pakistanis have lived through these not only with a spirit of philanthropy, but with a spirit of entrepreneurship. It is resilience as an expression of the entrepreneurship of survival that is going right. If only we could find a way to convert entrepreneurship for survival into entrepreneurship for growth.
#5. Responsibility. This is the one I will probably get flak for. But if I am right on this then this may be the most important. The fact that we now hear and read so much about not taking enough responsibility for our own actions instead of forever seeking ‘outside’ hands and conspiracies is itself a sign that times have changed. When the pathology of denial was at its peak, no one would dare talk about that pathology. We have not yet fully turned the corner and there are too many who are too eager to divert, deflect and deny. But the tenor of the national conversation today is not a conversation of denial, but one of taking responsibility. It is an uncomfortable conversation for exactly that reason. And for the very same reason, it is also a much more relevant and important conversation for all of our futures. It is a conversation that is, indeed, going right.
My list is longer. My faith in this society and this people is stronger. Even as there is so much around us that is cause for despair, there is also that which must be a cause for hope. Now, you tell us, please, what you think is going right in Pakistan?




















































There is a lot going right in Pakistan, such as my effort to dig 100 wells for the needy people in Balochistan.
it was really good to go through your thoughts. I am sure that with our potential and resilience we,as a nation, deserve much better than where we stand today. No doubt we are victims of international games, no doubt we are being played internally and externally but we just need to be united and stand against all odds and we THE YOUTH have to become practical depiction of Iqbal’s UQAAB for whom “YEH TO CHALTI HAI TUJHAY OONCHA URANAY K LIAY”. In the end i will like to request every pakistani, who reads this, to start thinking like a pakistani in our daily lives. before condemning filth spread everywhere just think when did u carry waste in your car to throw it in a bin or where do you or your servant throw the daily waste of your home?.instead of cribbing against the government lets think whom did i, my family,my friends voted for?. instead of talking of unabiding citizens lets analyse how many times i jumped across the long queue of people, went to some body known in the bank and got the required thing deposited……..so do think atleast once….Good night..God Bless us and our homeland.
There is no plan, no system, no policy of the government to control any problem.
It’s an amazing amazing post. We as a collective and as individuals need to believe in ourselves.
I believe in myself, so do my fellow volunteers at Rabtt.
A fellow graduate from LUMS, Imran and I, came up with this idea of giving a select public education victims in Lahore a chance at holistic education through a two-week summer camp which imparted an innovative yet rigorous educational experience in Verbal Skills, Mathematics, Critical Thinking (a combination of Philosophy and World History), Computer Skills complemented with Public Speaking coaching, Drama, Art & Drawing, Sports and trips to the planetarium and the Lahore Museum.
The cornerstone of the whole experience was providing ‘mentors’ in place of school-masters and these came from the best educational institutions in Pakistan and abroad; Harvard, Mount Holyoke, LUMS, GCU, FAST, LSE, FC College University, LGS and SICAS.
If any of you would like to contribute or support, please get in touch. And there’s http://www.rabtt.org for more information.
We all share the warmth of optimism and its in its self a call for everybody for doing good