Khiyal Rakhna: ATP Turns Five Today! It is Time to Move On. Thank You For Your Companionship.

Posted on June 11, 2011
Filed Under >Adil Najam, About ATP
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Adil Najam

Today – June 11, 2011 – All Things Pakistan turns five years old!

Today, sitting in Lahore, Pakistan, I write in the realization that it is now time to move on.

This is not a ‘Good Bye’ post – it is, in fact, a ‘Thank You’ post. Nor do I want this to be a ‘looking back’ post – I would much rather that it be a ‘looking forward’ post.

For me personally, it is time to move back to Pakistan. For ATP, the blog, it is time to turn off the lights.

Five years ago we set out with the mild ambition to have a conversation with a few friends on all things Pakistan – from the profound to the trivial. What followed was a more intense, more engaged, more elaborate, and more fulfilling conversation than we could have ever imagined. Well above 10 million visits later, it is now time to move on.

But we promise that we have no intention to tune out. We know that this conversation will continue. This was never our conversation, it was yours. We intend to keep listening in. We hope you will let us do so in all the myriad forms and formats that have now become available for this exploration of our Pakistaniat – our Pakistaniness – to thrive. We have chronicled our own story and evolution in our posts (the ATP Credo, the Tangay Walla post, 1st anniversary post, 2nd anniversary post, 3rd anniversary post, who reads Pakistaniat post, 4th anniversary post) and now is not the time to repeat those arguments or even to look back.

I can say with some pride and great joy that we have had some small part in the construction of an important conversation. It has not always been an easy conversation. Our national predicaments have made it an often sad and occasionally angry conversation. But it remains a vibrant – and vital – conversation. We hope that in these five years ATP has contributed some to this conversation, and has contributed to it positively.

So, today, I write in gratitude. Thank you for your companionship. Thank you for your patience. Thank your for dropping by. Thank you for making this your own. Today, we are happy in the knowledge that the conversations we had wanted to seed are thriving. Technology has provided an array of new formats – from facebook to twitter and beyond. There is a mushrooming of blogs and formats, and we hope that in some small way we have contributed to them. We know we have thrived and found sustenance (and ideas) in this new and bold world of Pakistan’s Blogistan. We thank our blogging colleagues, our many many writers, and our even more many readers for the excitement they have added to our lives.

I realize that the timing of this will lead many of conclude that it has something to do with my own move. While the two are not unrelated, they are actually less related than you might think. It was, in fact, back in November 2010, that Owais Mughal and I had decided that we would do this on this date and in this manner. Owais had already moved to Singapore and my own professional commitments had begun to mount. We did not wish to end with a whimper nor just fade out abruptly. Five years seemed like a good innings to both of us. Let me take this moment to thank Owais for his support and companionship. More than anyone else he has made ATP possible and allowed it to last this long. Without him, it would have faded long ago. And without him it would have been not just a lonelier but also a much less interesting journey. Thank you, Owais, my friend. Thank you for everything! (As an aside, I should add that Owais and I had never met until fairly recently and for years ran this together without even having met – such is the magic in Blogistan).

Do I have regrets – yes, but too few too mention. I wish we had written fewer obituaries. I wish we had not had to talk about national angst and tragedies as much as we had to. I wish we more time to write all the posts that remain unwritten in our personal lists – more pleasant things than those that were floating in the daily headlines. Yes, I do also wish that some of our readers had been a little more kind to us and to each other in their comments – but, I also realize that we live in unkind times and the viciousness of our environs can sometimes seep into our own language and thoughts. More than anything else, I wish the unkindness of our times will become less, allowing us to be a little more considerate to each other than we sometimes seem to be.

Good byes, they say, should never be long. But this is not a good bye. So, until we meet again, dear friends, take care; khiyal rakhna.

2,981 responses to “Khiyal Rakhna: ATP Turns Five Today! It is Time to Move On. Thank You For Your Companionship.”

  1. ahmed says:

    I don’t agree with you guys at all, i dont think you are so busy that you cant write a blog once a week, if not then once in two weeks or a month, while keeping an eye and giving young bloggers a chance. But still , the intellect you bring( Adil ) , is rare to find, if not imposssible.
    Better keep the blog up and running, just slow down on posts, and give young bloggers chance to use your forum.
    Anyway, i must say, i enjoyed 5 years of reading :)

    Cheers:)

    Ahmed

  2. Imran Khan says:

    All good things must come to an end. I will miss Adil and his exuberance in and around Boston. I think Adil has a great opportunity to play an important role in the grooming the future leaders in Pakistan. I wish Adil and Owais my best wishes in their future endeavours.

  3. Sameena says:

    Adil Najam is Mr. Pakistan.
    Thank you for the dignity and grace with which you have run and now close this blog.

  4. Junaid says:

    I think the last thing to do would be to give this blog to someone else. People have their own blogs and I really do not think that there is anyone who will maintain the breadth and intellectual rigor and honesty that AT has had. They would just take it in the direction of their own biases. And that they can do on their own. So, NO, do NOT give this to anyone. New voices have already come up an more will come up, but they should make their own mark rather than just co-opt this space.

    However, I agree fully that the domain should be maintained and the archive kept.

  5. Shez says:

    @Sohail

    Start a Facebook petition. As I said in my earlier comment, it is just stupid to shut down ATP. Adil and Owais should bow out and hand over the ownership to other, competent, guys. Blogs like ATP don’t die.

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