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Pakistan, 50 years ago

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Pakistan, 50 years ago
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Hajrah Mumtaz, 6/20/2011

HAVING been occupied with compiling the ‘50 years ago’ section on these pages, I have recently spent hours trawling through Dawn’s 1961 editions. It is a fascinating yet ultimately, a deeply saddening experience.

The Dawn of those days was a slimmer volume, with a format different to what it is today. The first thing to strike me was the advertising. If any of you have the impression that the Forhans toothpaste advertisement hasn’t changed in years, you’re right: it hasn’t changed in decades. Much of the advertising content is pretty much what it is today: soaps, talcum powders and so on. There are some glaring differences, though.

Advertisements for dances, cabarets, acrobatic performances and balls — how alien they seem in the modern Pakistani landscape. Karachi was reasonably important on the international landscape, and references in western literature of the time reflect an exotic Orientalism that still exists in reference to, for example, Mumbai. And so, the city often hosted world-class performers and entertainers, as to a somewhat lesser extent did Lahore.

No doubt to other people in my age group, the children of Zia, these advertisements would hold more meaning than as merely curiosities reminiscent of different times.

The ad about dinner and drinks with live dance performances at the Beach Luxury, or sister acrobats Klaudia and Karla (pictured in short, frilled skirts) at the Metropole, talk not of different times but, indeed, of a different country. Such acts have not been tolerated in Pakistan for upwards of three decades — the lifespan of an entire generation.

Even before Pakistan involved itself in America’s duplicitous ‘war on terror’, which is when the situation really went into freefall, Klaudia and Karla could not have performed here. It was the Nawaz Sharif government, after all, which banned men with long hair on television. And Zia who dictated that all women appearing on television should have their heads covered at all times, so that it would appear to audiences that they went to bed and woke up in the morning wearing their modesty firmly on their heads.

Is the tragedy greater for those who knew such a Pakistan and then watched it die? Or is it greater for those, the people who are nearing middle-age now or younger, who never saw it at all and learnt to find their way through an increasingly complicated maze of fundamentalism and repression?

And what about the children who are under 15 now? The ones who know only the Pakistan of war and militancy, of the Taliban and suicide bombings, who don’t have the experience of the Khabarnama at 9pm being the single most boring thing broadcast on the one channel that Pakistan had? Perhaps, the only conclusion to reach is that in Pakistan, tragedy abounds.

In the 1960s, there was such a place as East Pakistan. We all know this, all of us having grown up with the haunting knowledge
of the country that once was. But it is different to trawl through the newspapers of that time and see the Dacca dateline, read about Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s expression of solidarity with the East Pakistanis after floods (which took place in early June, 1961), see a photograph of goods being readied to be flown to the eastern wing.

Hindsight brings clarity. It is easy, now, to read between the lines and see which way the wind would have to blow. In ’61, a decade before Bangladesh was born in blood and tears, Dawn has reports about people asking that Bengali be accorded greater status, questions of disproportionate spending and contributions to the national exchequer. Knowing what we know, it is easy to detect a certain parochialism in the debate of the time.

Going through all these newspapers, I am left with the impression of Pakistan of the early ’60s as a place with hope, its life stretching out before it fresh and untarnished — a country that was going places. Dawn’s editions from those days are full of plans: the Second Five-Year Plan was going into action, factories and industries were being set up, schemes were being formulated for the uplift and education of the rural poor in both wings of the country.

It is sobering to realise that back then, a new plan announced by the administration could not have been met with anything near the sort of cynicism with which it is received today, with people having learnt the lessons dictated by decades of failure.Fifty years ago, schemes to irrigate agricultural land in Wana and Miramshah were under way, and schools were being set up. Jute mills were being set up in East Pakistan. Women’s vocational centres were being set up seemingly all over the place. Fifty years ago, PIA had just launched its inaugural flight to New York and was one of the most successful young airlines of the time.

It’s easy to see things clearly in hindsight. Today, we can see that a number of the cancers that are tearing Pakistan apart now had already taken root, even back in 1961. The first military foray into civilian affairs had taken place, the country’s first prime minister had been assassinated and, over a decade later, no responsibility had been affixed (the irony being that the Rawalpindi park named in his honour was, just over 50 years later, to become the site where yet another prime minister was murdered, to be followed by yet another failed inquiry), a number of deeply flawed policies and mindsets had already been adopted.

But back then, could anybody have guessed the disastrous trajectory that the country was to take? From my vantage point of the present, because I am a rather fanciful person, I get the impression of the Pakistan of that time revelling in its newfound freedoms, irresponsible as a teenager — unaware of the horror its decisions would bring, dancing heedless into a future full of murder.

That was then, this is now. The past, it would appear, really is another country.

The writer is a member of staff.

hajrahmumtaz@gmail.com
 
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Pakistan can never go back to what it was , owing to the growing religious intolerance over there. Whole generations are being corrupted by fundamentalist thoughts. Once this reaches completion, there will be no way to reverse the deteriorating situation.
 
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Pakistan can never go back to what it was , owing to the growing religious intolerance over there. Whole generations are being corrupted by fundamentalist thoughts. Once this reaches completion, there will be no way to reverse the deteriorating situation.

Im not sure I agree, if a country can go from relatively liberal to religious intolerance, it can also go in the other direction. The ideological and religious leanings of societies change over time, often as events around them change their perspective on things. This is often because religion is politicized, so when it is beneficial for governments, such as Pakistan during Zia's time, to become more Islamic, they tend to be forced into this transformation.
Turkey is an example in the opposite, they left behind extremely strong Islamic routes for a more secular direction.
I do think it will be very hard and may take a while, but it is totally possible that we may see a more moderate Pakistan in the future.
 
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I am one of those old enough to remember the Pakistan of before 1980's. Barring a few sectarian violence (Shia/Sunni etc), there was peace. Newspapers could write anything against Zulfi Bhutto--even a murder case was registered against him while he was the PM.
And I have witnessed bikini-clad western women on Karachi beaches as we boys lusted after them from a distance.
I have seen my primary schooling teachers with skirts.
I had been to the Beach Luxury hotel in Karachi--which this article mentions--and seen people imbibing beer beside the pool.

While I don't think that true liberalism means Western ways like I mention above I do think a society needs to have some private freedoms, some breathing room, some choices.

Thanks to Zia, Pakistan went down. One can only weep for that time and hope someday things change.
 
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Pakistan can never go back to what it was , owing to the growing religious intolerance over there. Whole generations are being corrupted by fundamentalist thoughts. Once this reaches completion, there will be no way to reverse the deteriorating situation.

The cycle was as complete as it could be before Musharraf presided. Since then it has been in the reverse order already, leading to differences of extreme kind, and culminating into the violence we hear of everyday.

All the violence going on in Pakistan is because people there in general do not share the extremist and intolerant views of the terrorists, at least not as much as they did during the Zia and Nawaz times.

Also, do not forget that extremism was brought in by the education imparted by those Madrassas that were funded by the Saudis. The Saudis cannot afford to fund such extremism anymore, as it has begun to backfire everywhere. The influence is waning, and people are beginning to realize the cause and effect brought in by such Madrassas.

I don't think it will last any longer after the Pakistan-Afghan border is cleansed thoroughly.
 
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@President Camacho,
Some very interesting points.
Indeed, since Musharraf, there is a social reversal. Partly due to Musharraf, partly due to the massive media penetration.

Even in the tribal areas--arguably the most backward, the most conservative place in Pakistan the violence is mostly because of political and ethnic reasons. OBL death was hardly mourned even in FATA.

Thanks for a great post again.
 
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@President Camacho,
Some very interesting points.
Indeed, since Musharraf, there is a social reversal. Partly due to Musharraf, partly due to the massive media penetration.

Even in the tribal areas--arguably the most backward, the most conservative place in Pakistan the violence is mostly because of political and ethnic reasons. OBL death was hardly mourned even in FATA.

Thanks for a great post again.

Agree with social reversal part ... but is on both the way.... part of society is going towards more religious fundamentalism and part is going towards what it was in 1960s.
But again part was never shifted from 1960s life style ... they just stop showing that in public.. I know many Pakistani families which stays very conservatively in Karachi .. but once they are outside Pakistan or in side their house hosting parties they are same as you mentioned during time of 1960s...
change needs to be in people's view .... they should accept life style of fellow citizens ...
once that will happen beaches of Karachi will be again glow with .. you know what I mean to say .. (just kidding)
 
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Pakistan economy was doing soo good in the 60's but the 1965 war did aclot of damage to them people were more oppen more social my mom went to do shoping from there in the early 60's for her marriage
 
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The ingress & permeation of religious fundamentalism in Pak is comparable to the long term damage done to India by the Mandal Commission during VP Singh's time.

May be one day religious fundamentalism will end in Pakistan but there is hell no way reservation system ending in India. To a certain point it is good but what we are seeing in India is extremism in reservation policies.
 
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Gen Ayub's mission:

General Ayub's simple ambition: to make Pakistan live up to the literal meaning of its name, Land of the Pure.

Read more: Pakistan: Purification Process

Pakistan in the 60's was a developmental dream, an icon for other developing nations, then the least corrupt and most progressive nation in Asia. We had some of the best personalities as a part of our national get up. The country was liberal, tolerant and an example for other Muslim nations to follow because everything was thriving.

Unfortunately the sinister fanatics in the religious parties were lurking around in the background as well as opportunists like Bhutto who were looking for their opening. As soon as they got a chance, they jumped up and destroyed the nation. It was Bhutto who initiated our destruction and he sealed the nations fate as a haven for extremism, militancy and fanaticism with his policies.

Its so sad to see the country reduce to such a pathetic state by the same bastards who opposed it, the likes of Maududi, Bhutto and others were not a part of the people who worked for Pakistan but they are a part of those have tried to kill this nation.

Well they will get what they deserve, some already have.
 
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Thanks to Zia, Pakistan went down. One can only weep for that time and hope someday things change.

Don't forget Zia's Guru Bhutto in all this, he sowed the seeds of destruction with his policies and his reckless ways.
 
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I am one of those old enough to remember the Pakistan of before 1980's. Barring a few sectarian violence (Shia/Sunni etc), there was peace. Newspapers could write anything against Zulfi Bhutto--even a murder case was registered against him while he was the PM.
And I have witnessed bikini-clad western women on Karachi beaches as we boys lusted after them from a distance.
I have seen my primary schooling teachers with skirts.
I had been to the Beach Luxury hotel in Karachi--which this article mentions--and seen people imbibing beer beside the pool.

While I don't think that true liberalism means Western ways like I mention above I do think a society needs to have some private freedoms, some breathing room, some choices.

Thanks to Zia, Pakistan went down. One can only weep for that time and hope someday things change.

sir all that you mentioned and more is currently available in pakistan! BUT all behind closed doors! all hotels still serve alcohol! "diamond market" is still there in lahore! secret underground clubs exsist in karachi!

however, the problem is polarization! not so well of children go to MADRASSA's and the rich man's child goes to grammar school or ST.MICHEALs!

we divide our youth and there experiences from a very early age!
 
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Don't forget Zia's Guru Bhutto in all this, he sowed the seeds of destruction with his policies and his reckless ways.

Don't forget that His era was Golden era of Pakistan, Don't even forget that he is real father of Pakistani Islamic Bomb.. Also don't forget that He wanted to improve Pakistan and make it equivalent to Turkey (A muslim dominated Democracy)

Though his greed for power divided country in two (Mujibur rehman won more seat than him in national assembly).
 
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