culture. Rulers behave in a certain fashion and the masses respond not with anger or rebellion, as might be expected in a slightly different climate, but with a profound sense of fatalism – what will be will be. What has happened was bound to happen, written in the stars. The will of God: that explains everything.
This mood or rather this attitude is best captured by our mystic poets. When Shah Hussain sings, “Maye nee mein kenoon akhaan dard wichoray da haal neen”…he is crying not only about the pain of separation or the loss of the beloved – this would be too narrow an interpretation of this immortal verse. He is crying of the pain and affliction of the down and out, the wayfarer and the straggler left behind by the march of time. Of a general, historical, timeless condition he is speaking. And if the voice is Hamid Ali Bela’s or Pathanay Khan’s – no, Hamid Ali Bela in this particular song comes closest to transcribing its pain – then no rural audience in Sindh and Punjab can remain unmoved, for the audience identifies with the words.
Why do rulers even bother about their fake flood routines? It would be far better to just play Shah Hussain in Bela’s voice on Radio Pakistan.
With Russian help Egypt under Gamal Abdel Nasser tamed the waters of the River Nile. Without the Nile Egypt would be a dead country. Without the Indus and the two rivers that remain to us, the Jhelum and the Chenab, what would become of our land? Field Marshal Ayub Khan did not sell off the Ravi and the Sutlej. Under the prevailing circumstances – circumstances that remain valid even today – the Indus Basin Waters Treaty was the best arrangement for sharing the waters of the five rivers. And despite so much else happening between India and Pakistan this treaty has held over the years.
The Pakistani mind should wake up to some basic facts. India is not stealing our waters. India is not trying to destroy us, or wreck our agriculture, through manipulating the Jhelum and the Chenab. It is only managing its share of the waters far better than us. Why aren’t we building the dams that India is building on these rivers?
Under the terms of the Indus treaty we could have pre-empted much of what India is doing, or has already done. But we were into other things, like liberating Kashmir by force and establishing influence in Afghanistan. On the question of the waters India stole a march on us…and the situation now, with the building of more dams on the other side, is working to our disadvantage.
More than Indian conspiracy, our neglect is responsible for this state of affairs. Will anyone accept this, assume responsibility and plan for the future? Perish the thought. The flavour of the season is Chinese investment or Chinese loans for private coal-fired plants…plants that China itself is offloading, or reducing dependence on, because pollution now is a serious thing over there. We don’t know the details, and the government will never fully inform us because governments consider it best to operate in the dark.
How can we get the bigger picture right when small things are seemingly beyond our capacity? Take the plastic shopping bag, now a bigger danger to our future wellbeing than Islamic radicalism. Go to any village, any water channel, any municipal dump and pride of place will be taken by this pestilence. Nothing that RAW can do to Pakistan equals the havoc being wrought by this idea of the devil. But we remain unmoved or sublimely indifferent. How do we plan for things slightly bigger like the annual inundation caused by our overflowing rivers?
Every economist who inflicts his views on a country largely ignorant of economics is at pains to emphasise the necessity of export-led growth. We should ask these worthies what precisely we should be exporting. Textiles once were our staple export. In that field even Bangladesh has beaten us, producing better quality finished textile goods than our Chinioti Sheikhs and Faisalabad geniuses put together.
Jihad for some time had become our leading export, far outstripping textiles. But the market for that has shrunk. Or it has been overtaken by other entrepreneurs, such as the leaders of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
What dragon’s teeth have not our American friends sown? Their invasion of Iraq, likely to rank as one of the great blunders of recent history, is directly responsible for the mess we now see in the region. And now they are agonising over the fires they themselves helped ignite. American malevolence is easily understood and guarded against. American good intentions constitute the shortest road to hell.
But I digress. We don’t seem to have a sense of direction. Beyond clichés and platitudes, what do we want to do this with this country? How do we set our priorities? On what goals should the limited sum of our resources and energies be concentrated? A national consensus on this does not exist. Nor is there a leadership that can rise to the challenge.
No wonder, people go to the tombs of long-dead saints and figures of mythology to ease their pain and seek comfort and solace. It seems a good idea too. Far better to choose the dead, who even if they do no good can do no harm, over humbugs who can only add salt to your wounds or insult what remains of your intelligence.
Email: winlust@yahoo.com
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