Oh I oppose this along with Sindhi, Balochi & Punjabi being made the Official Languages of any Province !
I'd much rather if Urdu were to stay the Official Language of all of our Provinces with one Regional Language of Choice being introduced at the Provincial Level to be made mandatory for all those who wish to learn it ! If a class has the available numbers than they have the right to be taught Sindhi in Lahore & likewise Barahui in Sargodha ! One regional language of choice to be made mandatory. Those who want to learn Pashto whilst sitting in Mianwali should have that choice likewise those who wish to learn Potwahri whilst living in Jhelum should have that choice; assuming that the number of students are enough.
Punjab is not the land of the Punjabis nor is Khyber-Pukhtoonkhwa the land of the Pukthoons they are lands of Punjab & Khyber-Pukhtoonkhwa domicile holders who may or may not be ethnic Punjabis or ethnic Pukhtoons !
Thankfully such BS won't sell in Punjab !
@
Hyperion @
Marshmallow @
Talon @
HAMMAD REHMAN KHAN @
haviZsultan
See I will tell you of the problem. I lived abroad most of my life and do not know proper urdu (writing mainly but saqeel urdu as well is a problem)... so first we see that urdu is being replaced by English due to globalization. However what about the other languages. When we know Pakistan as a state is promoting urdu the rest of the languages have no way of being preserved. Pashto I already showed has limited supporters and few people who know the language are losing it. For example Pashtuns are rumoured to be around 40 Million in Pakistan but are counted as 30 million because 10 million don't know Pashto and the census asks tongue spoken.
When I said our approach as Nationalists was wrong I did not mean Pakistani Nationalist ideology failed as King Mamba thought (I say this despite all I have suffered for only having the word Pakistan Zindabad on my lips even in my own land)... I believe that our attempts to impose a supra-urdu culture failed. Its easy to say knowing only urdu that it should be the only official language.
If in Pakistan we just talk of the primacy of Urdu we also talk about the urdu-speakers position at the top. The problem may be dealt with creation of more provinces. Also each district should be ceded the responsibilities of which medium is to be used in schools. Let them learn in their own languages.
Thanks for proving both me and @
haviZsultan correct. It is the likes of YOU who create divisions by assuming superiority. Let me quote you:
"we are all glad that bengladesh is not a part of pakistan" How can you defend saying something like that?
Its easy. Shift the blame and declare inocense. 21 Feb 1952 was the day when foundation for Bangladesh was laid when Bengali students were killed. They were protesting for thier langugage, Bengali, be given rights equal to Urdu (not Punjabi). Our Bengali brothers were also upset about the attitude displayed by high level beauraucrats, overwhelming majority of whom comprised of Urdu-speakers.
The above are facts that can not be overlooked. Next time you try to shift blame, think about facts first. We are not blind. Bangladesh was OUR mistake. Not specifically Punjabi or Pakhtun or Sindhi. We are all to blame. If you wan to debate otherwise, then start a new thread and challenge me to make a case. I would certainly oblige.
You may want to answer my post and I would be glad if you use the language like you did before. That would help me prove my point. Thanks.
Darkinsky is a major part of the problem and his blithe attitude towards the sacrifices and suffering of others is testimony of the fact that racism pervades urdu speakers like a black plague. Its in all of us, all our relatives particularly but not limited to those who support the MQM.
In my paper on ethnic tensions in Pakistan which I haven't completed still being an idiot I recognized at least 3 common traits/features/tools the person who is part of this syndrome uses (some things are copy-pasted):
1) Victim syndrome: Ie we are the victims no matter what-we had no role in any injustice meeted out to anyone else.
2) Self-gratification: We had a disproportionate role in the formation of Pakistan. We did everything for Pakistan
*Self gratification mixed with a high level of self-victimization can later lead to seperatism which is covered extensively on page () of this report. Only a spark is needed for this.
3) Deflection of responsibility/Shifting blame: The us vs them syndrome is fixed in the minds of the racist. No matter how hard a person tries it is hard to make a person stop thinking along such lines. Therefore for every issue there has to be a scapegoat which is depending on the stage.
It is very hard to pull @
darkinsky away from racism and hatred. Most of all its harder to make him look with and take part in some serious self-criticism. I (we nationalists too) are beyond the race issue. No matter how much I tell him urdu speakers have a higher gdp per capita than anyone else in the country (13,000 ruppees more than Punjabis who are second according to H&H), that he should go to interior sindh and see the crippling penury of the people... he will not believe me. Its because the identity is firmly entrenched in his head like the entangled roots of an aging tree (as is the concept itself) and he cannot question it.
Ethnic identity has to be broken down and we can play a role in it if we try, first step is being nonchalant about it and criticizing the role of our people in issues. I apologize to the Bengalis for what urdu speakers did and consider Bengalis a part of Pakistan.
But I will not let the same happen to anyone else. Also @
darkinsky I can say Pashtuns were responsible too (Niazi, Tikka Khan)... but then will it stop you from shifting the blame and deflecting everything against muhajirs and their attrocities to the poorer folk? For example the proverty prevalence in rural Pakistan is 36% for Pakistan. 8000 schools in (mostly rural) Sindh are ghost schools. While muhajirs sit in shiny cities and have nara's like gaon tumhara, sheher hamara for them (for muhajir soobha tehreek) this is what they go through.
Notice I do not use we Pashtuns despite the fact I identify as such after Pakistani because people just call me confused. @
Talon thinks I am chutia as well as others.
Also then I use we for ansaris too.
But then when you parents moved late, you lived with Indian relatives half your life in Dubai its amazing I even call myself Pakistan forget that I want to live under the shadow of the crescent and star for life and love my nation beyond anything else. We were bound to be confused and part of the confusion is due to the muhajirs failure to merge in the national fabric as Sindhis in Sindh.