What's new

Moving on: Dancing back to Swat

Status
Not open for further replies.

Dance

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 20, 2010
Messages
4,850
Reaction score
0
MINGORA: Taliban have left and the music has started playing. Swat’s fair-skinned dancing girls are home again.

On a chilly February evening, my friend and I knock on doors in localities in eastern part of Mingora, searching for Swat’s age-long culture, but there is no answer from any house. There is no electricity in the area and the narrow alleys are dark.

Occasional visitors brush past using their mobile phones as torches. Finally, there is a response as a young boy peeps out from a door. After an exchange of whispers we are led to a cramped room of a two- storey house. The room is bare and a tattered sofa lies in a corner. A gas burner dimly lights up the room.

The houses here are famous for their fair skinned dancing girls. Now the women, once targeted by the Taliban, are back in business and music reverberates till late at night.

After a few minutes, the young boy who had opened the door ushers two young girls into the room. Attired in black and red dresses, they say they are cousins and introduce themselves as Rani and Muskan.
In late 2008 at the peak of militancy, Muskan and Rani left their homes for Karachi to escape persecution from the Taliban.

Barely a month after their departure on January 2, 2009, Taliban knocked on a door opposite to their house and dragged out dancer Shabana to Green Chowk. Green Chowk remained true to its other name, Khooni Chowk, and Shabana was shot at the square famous for executions.

Shabana’s death created a ripple effect and almost all girls left their homes for safer places.

“We heard the news of Shabana’s death in Karachi. I was sad and scared. We too, could have met the same fate if we had not left our homes,” Muskan told The Express Tribune.

In March 2009, authorities agreed with Sufi Mohammad to effectively remove the girls from Swat, following the short-lived peace deal brokered by Sufi.

The situation has improved now and we no longer fear anyone. Swat is our home and we cannot live somewhere else, said Muskan, who is also a model and appears in Pashto song videos.

Rani added that their business has improved and now musical events are arranged with no restriction from the police or maulvis.
We learnt dance from our cousin Laila. After her wedding, we started performing to feed our 18 member family, Rani said. “There are at least 20 houses associated with this business at Bunrh and now there is no fear of the Taliban,” her brother Ashfaq said.

But there is fear. The first door my friends and I had knocked at was slain Shabana’s, and no member of her family came to open the door. They do not want to talk about that incident, my friend said.

Pervesh Shaheen, a local historian told The Express Tribune that under the Wali of Swat, there was official patronage to the dancers and they were paid a fixed amount after a function. No one was allowed to throw money while they danced, Shaheen said, adding that the girls were not involved in prostitution.

The discussion with Ashfaq comes to end as two customers are waiting upstairs. “Hopefully with time, Swat will move on, leaving behind ghosts from the violent past.”
Published in The Express Tribune, February 16th, 2011.

Moving on: Dancing back to Swat – The Express Tribune
 
Huh ...
So now dancers and singers will be hailed !

Shameful day .. and just goes on to show what turned Talibs to do what they did !

The discussion with Ashfaq comes to end as two customers are waiting upstairs. “Hopefully with time, Swat will move on, leaving behind ghosts from the violent past.”

Move on to what ? this shameless behavior ?

Laanat !
 
^ Their presence shows that people have the choice to do what they want to do and aren't forced to live their life as being dictated by TTP. It's got nothing to do with hailing them. TTP forces other people to live the way TTP want them to live, that's the problem.
 
Huh ...
So now dancers and singers will be hailed !

Shameful day .. and just goes on to show what turned Talibs to do what they did !



Move on to what ? this shameless behavior ?

Laanat !

Sir you have very extreme views. 'Dancing back to Swat' should be considered as sign of freedom and peace returning back to Swat. Not every dance is related 'shameless behavior'.... :coffee:
 
Sir you have very extreme views. 'Dancing back to Swat' should be considered as sign of freedom and joy peace back to Swat. Not every dance is related 'shameless behavior'....

He has an avatar of Zia ul Haq. What do you expect from Taliban sympathizers?
 
SMC is half Canada and half Karachi ....
So here is the question

How many "functions" are you aware of, whereby professional dancers are hired for entertainment ?

do you honestly believe that it was just dancing and no prostitution ?
 
SMC is half Canada and half Karachi ....
So here is the question

How many "functions" are you aware of, whereby professional dancers are hired for entertainment ?

do you honestly believe that it was just dancing and no prostitution ?

Your mind is deluded my friend not much more can be said unless you are able to enlighten me with some knowledge which you know of. :coffee:
 
Huh ...
So now dancers and singers will be hailed !

Shameful day .. and just goes on to show what turned Talibs to do what they did !



Move on to what ? this shameless behavior ?

Laanat !

I think this article is mostly to do with the removal of the taliban, arent you happy to see the taliban removed?
 
I think this article is mostly to do with the removal of the taliban, arent you happy to see the taliban removed?

Ahmed, good point.
I am glad that the Taliban tactics are gone.
BUT
I am also sad that these "dancers" are back.

I am very sad, that when taliban do an extreme act there is hue and cry ...
but when such acts of shameless magnitude happen, nothing happens ...

Just makes me question were the taliban right in doing what they were doing (leave alone the tactics)?
 
Ahmed, good point.
I am glad that the Taliban tactics are gone.
BUT
I am also sad that these "dancers" are back.

I am very sad, that when taliban do an extreme act there is hue and cry ...
but when such acts of shameless magnitude happen, nothing happens ...

Just makes me question were the taliban right in doing what they were doing (leave alone the tactics)?

No bro, the taliban were/are/will be wrong. No matter what ,they are wrong people with wrong i deas. i am sure many of us wont approve off these dancers, but we surely dont go and kill them. if anybody dislike the actions of these girls, they can start peaceful comaign to try to change these girls lives without intimidating them, but if they want to carry on with that profession, then we must be nobody to dictate them. leave them whatever pleases them, if they are wrong or right, non of the others' buiissiness.
 
Ahmed, good point.
I am glad that the Taliban tactics are gone.
BUT
I am also sad that these "dancers" are back.

I am very sad, that when taliban do an extreme act there is hue and cry ...
but when such acts of shameless magnitude happen, nothing happens ...

Just makes me question were the taliban right in doing what they were doing (leave alone the tactics)?

Unlawful entities and individuals imposing moral policing is against the law .

Let the law decides what is allowed and what is not.
 
This is a sign of an age old culture, as long as prostitution is not going on - it is fine.
 
Unlawful entities and individuals imposing moral policing is against the law .

Let the law decides what is allowed and what is not.

Totally agree Jana, if it is wrong then let the law of the land decide, individuals carrying out vigilante action is condemnable.
 
i am in Swat and near Bunr Let me note the names :lol:
 
No bro, the taliban were/are/will be wrong. No matter what ,they are wrong people with wrong i deas. i am sure many of us wont approve off these dancers, but we surely dont go and kill them. if anybody dislike the actions of these girls, they can start peaceful comaign to try to change these girls lives without intimidating them, but if they want to carry on with that profession, then we must be nobody to dictate them. leave them whatever pleases them, if they are wrong or right, non of the others' buiissiness.

This is the point I am trying to make.

Dancing / prostitution is prohibited.
Such acts shall be taken into account by the law enforcing authorities.
Such cases shall be taken into courts and visible prosecution shall be done.

Unfortunately this is not the case, since these dancers and prostitutes work with political and influential cover.

Because of this injustice, there will always be movement like the Taliban who will try to enforce in a forceful extreme way.

When any one blames the Taliban ONLY, I feel it is injustice.
First blame the political and civilian causes, before you blame them.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom