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Imran Khan will realise Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s dream of a glorious Pakistan

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Imran Khan will realise Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s dream of a glorious Pakistan

Pakistan has a leadership that has an uncompromising and an unalterable intention to serve





Published: March 26, 2019 21:00Mehr Tarar, Special to Gulf News
Video: Imran Khan helps homeless elderly woman
The biggest issue in Pakistan is the absence of a system that works to impart proportionate and due opportunities to live and work in an environment that is fair, progressive, future-focused, productive and merit-based. The inequality of the system that favours a few and oppresses the rest is an amalgamation of many factors, corruption, lack of accountability, unavailability of justice and equal rights. The complex intertwining of these factors is responsible for perpetuation of a machinery of governance and administration that on multiple levels pulverises the population of a country that has huge potential but scant motivation for optimum utilisation of its potential.

Pakistan, with its approximate 96 per cent Muslim population, has become a victim of its own machinations to create schisms for agendas of hegemony. While the number of non-Muslims has dwindled to an increasingly small number, persecution of Pakistan’s “minorities” – the word I refuse to use for my fellow Pakistanis – is in perpetuation simply on the basis of the faith they practise. Ignoring the real tenets of Islam that teaches the importance of co-existence of religious diversity, religious teachings are distorted to unleash injustice on many, thus delineating divisions that have become so tremendous and so bloody they threaten the very edifice of what Pakistan came into existence for: a country for Muslims that was for all.

Pakistan%20Prime%20Minister%20Imran%20Khan_resources1.jpg

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran KhanImage Credit: AFP
More than 70,000 Pakistanis have died in the last dozen-plus years, the nameless, faceless Pakistanis who end up as nothing more than statistics in a list of victims of terrorism – terrorism that is a direct and indirect aftermath of a series of policies that have wreaked havoc on Pakistan, and nothing seems to give. From mis-adventurism in Afghanistan to Kashmir, formation of Mujahedeen to Taliban, “strategic assets” to “strategic depth”, flaky relationships with neighbours and superpowers, harbouring, training and funding of extremists, mollycoddling of militants, double games on war on terror, and classification of militants into good and bad, Pakistan often seems to be in a process of maintaining a precarious balance on a tightrope, the result of which is the loss of the lives of many of its children, women and men.

Nothing that happens in my country is insignificant to me. Nothing that happens to my country is insignificant to me. Nothing that happens because of my country is insignificant to me. What Pakistan was and what Pakistan is and what Pakistan will be and what Pakistan can be, it all matters to me. And ergo I write.

Malaysian%20Prime%20Minister%20Mahatir%20Mohammad_resources1.jpg

Malaysian Prime Minister Mahatir Mohammad, second left, with his Pakistani counterpart Imran Khan, and Pakistani President Arif Alvi attend Pakistan National Day parade in Islamabad, on Saturday.Image Credit: AP
I write about Pakistan because it is my home, my homeland, all I am, all I have. Pakistan is a splendid entity that is deeply flawed and woefully chaotic, but that Pakistan is mine. To me its flaws are nor irreversible. Its demons are abundant, but so is the exorcism done through the inherent goodness of its people that turns its bad on its head, and things start to look optimistic.

My criticism of Pakistan is simply because of my profound sadness to watch its descent into a caricature of what it set out to be decades ago. When I scold my son, or he rolls his eyes at me, my wiser-than-her-years niece gives me the perfect advice, and my precocious nephew listens to my tirades about everything, there is an underlying acceptance of one another for what we are. There is the unconditional, unapologetic love that permeates all our disagreements and differences of mindset, opinion and attitude. That is how I feel for Pakistan. And ergo I write.

My writing is my attempt to speak up about issues that ail my country while hoping that all is not lost. I believe in the good of people, and I believe in the inherent potential of Pakistan.

Since the time I was a silly, lost, hyperactive yet a painfully introvert child I have had an opinion, and I speak up. There is no excuse for looking at things and turning the other way. I see and I react. And since I’m not a politician who has the power to do things in a tangible way to make a real change, I do what I can: I write.

In my school and college years, and in my 20s, I remember meeting politicians at family events, social dinners and friends’ houses, and I remember having long chats with them about the potential of Pakistan given the right environment, the right motivation and the right leadership.

Pakistan, other than my family, has always been my favourite subject, its idiosyncrasies, its good, its bad, its spirit like that of a family member who exasperates and angers and disappoints and surprises but always remains much loved, always valued.

And today in March 2019 reading what I wrote in 2015 and reproducing it here, I add:

Today I’m hopeful that my country under the leadership of Prime Minister Imran Khan, his team and even those members of the opposition parties for whom Pakistan is the be-all and end-all of their existence will work together to make my country the glorious entity that Mohammad Ali Jinnah envisioned it to be in 1947, and the dream and the hope of millions of Pakistanis all those years when the light was dim and the shadows of doubt and fear hung low and ominous.

This new Pakistan is not merely my dream, it is my certainty. Today what Pakistan has: leadership that has an uncompromising and an unalterable intention to serve, and to serve giving it all. And there is no way that in the next four years Pakistan will not be much better than what Pakistan was four years ago. InshaAllah.

Mehr-Tarar-new-intro,-Mehr-Tarar-shirttail-1548838417238.jpg

https://gulfnews.com/world/asia/pak...-dream-of-a-glorious-pakistan-1.1553617886148
 
.
Imran Khan will realise Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s dream of a glorious Pakistan

Pakistan has a leadership that has an uncompromising and an unalterable intention to serve





Published: March 26, 2019 21:00Mehr Tarar, Special to Gulf News
Video: Imran Khan helps homeless elderly woman
The biggest issue in Pakistan is the absence of a system that works to impart proportionate and due opportunities to live and work in an environment that is fair, progressive, future-focused, productive and merit-based. The inequality of the system that favours a few and oppresses the rest is an amalgamation of many factors, corruption, lack of accountability, unavailability of justice and equal rights. The complex intertwining of these factors is responsible for perpetuation of a machinery of governance and administration that on multiple levels pulverises the population of a country that has huge potential but scant motivation for optimum utilisation of its potential.

Pakistan, with its approximate 96 per cent Muslim population, has become a victim of its own machinations to create schisms for agendas of hegemony. While the number of non-Muslims has dwindled to an increasingly small number, persecution of Pakistan’s “minorities” – the word I refuse to use for my fellow Pakistanis – is in perpetuation simply on the basis of the faith they practise. Ignoring the real tenets of Islam that teaches the importance of co-existence of religious diversity, religious teachings are distorted to unleash injustice on many, thus delineating divisions that have become so tremendous and so bloody they threaten the very edifice of what Pakistan came into existence for: a country for Muslims that was for all.

Pakistan%20Prime%20Minister%20Imran%20Khan_resources1.jpg

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran KhanImage Credit: AFP
More than 70,000 Pakistanis have died in the last dozen-plus years, the nameless, faceless Pakistanis who end up as nothing more than statistics in a list of victims of terrorism – terrorism that is a direct and indirect aftermath of a series of policies that have wreaked havoc on Pakistan, and nothing seems to give. From mis-adventurism in Afghanistan to Kashmir, formation of Mujahedeen to Taliban, “strategic assets” to “strategic depth”, flaky relationships with neighbours and superpowers, harbouring, training and funding of extremists, mollycoddling of militants, double games on war on terror, and classification of militants into good and bad, Pakistan often seems to be in a process of maintaining a precarious balance on a tightrope, the result of which is the loss of the lives of many of its children, women and men.

Nothing that happens in my country is insignificant to me. Nothing that happens to my country is insignificant to me. Nothing that happens because of my country is insignificant to me. What Pakistan was and what Pakistan is and what Pakistan will be and what Pakistan can be, it all matters to me. And ergo I write.

Malaysian%20Prime%20Minister%20Mahatir%20Mohammad_resources1.jpg

Malaysian Prime Minister Mahatir Mohammad, second left, with his Pakistani counterpart Imran Khan, and Pakistani President Arif Alvi attend Pakistan National Day parade in Islamabad, on Saturday.Image Credit: AP
I write about Pakistan because it is my home, my homeland, all I am, all I have. Pakistan is a splendid entity that is deeply flawed and woefully chaotic, but that Pakistan is mine. To me its flaws are nor irreversible. Its demons are abundant, but so is the exorcism done through the inherent goodness of its people that turns its bad on its head, and things start to look optimistic.

My criticism of Pakistan is simply because of my profound sadness to watch its descent into a caricature of what it set out to be decades ago. When I scold my son, or he rolls his eyes at me, my wiser-than-her-years niece gives me the perfect advice, and my precocious nephew listens to my tirades about everything, there is an underlying acceptance of one another for what we are. There is the unconditional, unapologetic love that permeates all our disagreements and differences of mindset, opinion and attitude. That is how I feel for Pakistan. And ergo I write.

My writing is my attempt to speak up about issues that ail my country while hoping that all is not lost. I believe in the good of people, and I believe in the inherent potential of Pakistan.

Since the time I was a silly, lost, hyperactive yet a painfully introvert child I have had an opinion, and I speak up. There is no excuse for looking at things and turning the other way. I see and I react. And since I’m not a politician who has the power to do things in a tangible way to make a real change, I do what I can: I write.

In my school and college years, and in my 20s, I remember meeting politicians at family events, social dinners and friends’ houses, and I remember having long chats with them about the potential of Pakistan given the right environment, the right motivation and the right leadership.

Pakistan, other than my family, has always been my favourite subject, its idiosyncrasies, its good, its bad, its spirit like that of a family member who exasperates and angers and disappoints and surprises but always remains much loved, always valued.

And today in March 2019 reading what I wrote in 2015 and reproducing it here, I add:

Today I’m hopeful that my country under the leadership of Prime Minister Imran Khan, his team and even those members of the opposition parties for whom Pakistan is the be-all and end-all of their existence will work together to make my country the glorious entity that Mohammad Ali Jinnah envisioned it to be in 1947, and the dream and the hope of millions of Pakistanis all those years when the light was dim and the shadows of doubt and fear hung low and ominous.

This new Pakistan is not merely my dream, it is my certainty. Today what Pakistan has: leadership that has an uncompromising and an unalterable intention to serve, and to serve giving it all. And there is no way that in the next four years Pakistan will not be much better than what Pakistan was four years ago. InshaAllah.

Mehr-Tarar-new-intro,-Mehr-Tarar-shirttail-1548838417238.jpg

https://gulfnews.com/world/asia/pak...-dream-of-a-glorious-pakistan-1.1553617886148
Lol
 
. .
terrorism that is a direct and indirect aftermath of a series of policies that have wreaked havoc on Pakistan, and nothing seems to give. From mis-adventurism in Afghanistan to Kashmir, formation of Mujahedeen to Taliban, “strategic assets” to “strategic depth”, flaky relationships with neighbours and superpowers, harbouring, training and funding of extremists, mollycoddling of militants, double games on war on terror, and classification of militants into good and bad, Pakistan often seems to be in a process of maintaining a precarious balance on a tightrope, the result of which is the loss of the lives of many of its children, women and men.

Mehr Tarrar seems to have been very much influenced by the Indian propaganda master, Shashi Tharoor
 
. . .
Pakistanis are gullible people, without actual ground level reforms such statements are just hero worship.
I don’t see any drastic changes in Pakistan unless there is concrete reforms happening.
 
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Pakistanis are gullible people, without actual ground level reforms such statements are just hero worship.
I don’t see any drastic changes in Pakistan unless there is concrete reforms happening.
Agreed, Pakistan needs amendment to introduce capital punishment with death plenty to the corrupt.
 
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One does not have to be Jinnah to do great things or realize his vision. One just has to carry purity of attention. Imran Khan might be messed up or flawed at many levels but there won't be many who will doubt his intentions.
And its the intentions that matter. Not what you do, not how you behave, but the intention behind it.

Intentions matter, but so do principles. Not really in the mood to debate. We will be in a better position to judge in maybe 3-5 years time.

He'll surpass Jinnah by the time he hangs his boots.

I am not sure if you are serious or just being sarcastic.
 
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A nice way to get rid of Monday blues i say
 
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But how?
Jinnah had a team who were just as committed to this cause as Jinnah himself, IK has a team whose loyalties are somewhere else, this team would have been comparable had Jinnah took most of his companions from Indian Congress.
 
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But how?
Jinnah had a team who were just as committed to this cause as Jinnah himself, IK has a team whose loyalties are somewhere else, this team would have been comparable had Jinnah took most of his companions from Indian Congress.

But those in power or in IKs team are congressi Mullahs
 
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In strategic management process, Vision and mission is defined in first place. It is further broken down into objectives and goals,. A strategy is worked out and communicated with stakeholders. So first of all define very clearly what is your vision and mission. Unless Pakistan has absolute clarity in vision and mission, mess will continue to happen. There should not be any dilemma in vision. Pakistan define without any ambiguity what it want to be. Rest of the things are secondary.
 
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