Would Reason Triumph?
By Akhtar Mahmud Faruqui
An article in Dawn, Pakistan’s leading newspaper, is food for thought
for both Pakistanis and Indians. Entitled ‘A Vote for Peace at the Stadium,’
the article makes several insightful observations. The crowd behavior during
the one-day international cricket match between Pakistan and India, according
to M.J. Akbar, Editor-in-Chief, Asian Age, New Delhi, was deserving of a big
compliment: The players produced a game on Saturday choreographed in dreams.
But there was something much bigger in the air. The true revelation was the
city of Karachi. The spectators in the stadium gave a phenomenal vote for peace,
for goodwill, for normality, for a future without hate and bitterness and war.
It was not just the standing ovation at the end. It was the eloquent behavior
through the match.
Another edifying observation: India and Pakistan are at last beginning to
see that their worst enemies are not each other but rather the poverty and terrorism
that threaten the stability and destiny of both neighbors. Their resources make
some foreign industrial-military complex rich, their wars leave their people
poor. For half a century, India and Pakistan have placed passion above compromise.
We are only seeing the first glimpse of what can be achieved through a spirit
of understanding. At one corner of this jumble is a cricket game. At some other
corner is a bus route through the deserts of Rajasthan and Sindh, or the mountains
of the two Kashmirs.
President Musharraf’s address to the India Today Conclave 2004 via satellite
the other day was made in the same vein. He talked of peace, spelling out the
spin-offs of the changing mood in the subcontinent. He listed the multifarious
benefits that could accrue if the two countries successfully resolved the issues
that plague their relations, including the core issue of Kashmir. The market
size could expand to 1.2 billion (equal to that of China) opening vistas of
trade opportunities in the region. Besides, the direct foreign investment, presently
stagnating at $ 3 billion, could rise manifold. A cut in defense expenditure
would mean a greater allocation for education, health, and poverty alleviation.
Surely, the common man stands to gain a great deal if the peace initiatives
on both sides of the border succeed and generate tangible results.
Would the SAARC Summit peace drive sustain its momentum? Would it have a chain
reaction effect? Would reason triumph, and for a wholesome change on the political
front, irrationality be a casualty? There is room for optimism, and indisputably,
justification for a reiteration of the argument that has been spelled out in
these columns earlier.
The emergence of India and Pakistan as two sovereign states in 1947 had a
singular purpose: to strike a new political equation between Hindus and Muslims.
Partition was to serve as a new experiment in peaceful co-existence - not an
ideal solution to the myriad of problems plaguing the subcontinent but a well-meaning
scheme that sought to put an end to the seething animosity between extremists
on both sides of the religious divide. Partition thus had the potential and
promise of ushering a wholesome change on the political front.
Ungrudgingly, the prime objective of the scheme was to ensure the rights of
the people inhabiting the two countries, including the sizable Hindu and Muslim
minorities in Pakistan and India respectively.
For well over fifty-six years sincere and sustained strivings were made for
peace in the Indo-Pak subcontinent and for well over fifty-six years well-meaning
peace initiatives were scuttled. Hapless commentators on both sides of the divide
were not hesitant in calling a spade a spade to vindicate the incontrovertible
truth. Kuldip Nayyer, a senior Indian journalist, for instance, conceded in
one of his articles: “Whatever the objective reality, the international
community wants India to sit across the table with Pakistan to sort out all
our problems, including Kashmir. Already some signs of exasperation with New
Delhi are beginning to appear in the American and British press. What Vajpayee
can offer to Musharraf is difficult to quantify … There have to be talks….”
This piece was written before the SAARC Summit in January 2004.. Mr. Vajpayee
appears to think differently today. But one could be skeptical about the change
in the mood given the nature of India-Pakistan relations.
This is but natural. One is reminded of India’s consistently belligerent
posture in the past. Even in India, there has been principled dissent to Delhi’s
highhanded acts. Commented C. Rammanohar Reddy in The Hindu: “The illusion
that a country can beat the drums of war and yet assume that normal life will
go on was at last shattered last week. The cost of a war finally begun to hurt
most the very groups which have been the most enthusiastic supporters of an
open conflict with Pakistan - the urban upper middle and wealth class. A common
belief among those who support an open war is that if (the) US can wage war
on Afghanistan and Israel on Palestine, there is no reason why India should
not likewise attack Pakistan. Setting aside the absence of a moral compass that
underlies this argument, it should be obvious that as far as the economy is
concerned India is not the US or for that matter even Israel. Globalization
imposes its own decrees and a distaste for war between two developing countries
is one of them…”
A Times of India report too made a realistic appraisal: Standing committee
members were told that given the ground realities, a short surgical strike,
either against terrorist camps in Pak-occupied Kashmir or against strategic
targets in Pakistan, was not possible. The war was bound to be a prolonged one
unless interrupted by a nuclear strike or heavy international pressure, representatives
of the Army, Navy and Air Force reportedly said…
These reports are not of a recent origin yet they do seem to furnish the rationale
for the changing political climate in the subcontinent today. Are we on the
threshold of a new era in India-Pakistan relations? There are several indications
that inspire one to shed pessimism.
The thrill, according to the Economist, was palpable after the unexpected
announcement on May 2nd (2003) by Atal Behari Vajpayee, India’s prime
minister, that he wanted to start a “decisive and conclusive dialogue”
aimed at ending the decades of hostility between his country and Pakistan. Mr.
Zafarullah Jamali, Pakistan’s prime minister, smartly responded with a
ten-minute telephone call to Mr. Vajpayee, and a letter which talked about curbing
terrorism and proposed a summit in Islamabad.
In much the same spirit, a Pakistani parliamentary delegation embarked on
a visit to India and was warmly received. According to MNA Ishaq Khan Khakwani,
Indians from different walks of life showered utmost affection on members of
the delegation the moment they crossed the border. Former diplomats and intellectuals
like Naresh Chandra, S.K.Singh, G. Parthasarthy, Ashok Bhan, Vijay Grover et
al. showed them utmost respect. A good omen.
Another significant development was reported by the BBC: Indian director Mahesh
Bhatt intends to make the first ever Indian film shot entirely in Pakistan -
a project he described as a “South Asian Schindler’s List”.
Bhatt’s film will spotlight the true story of a Muslim who saved the lives
of 200 Sikhs during the riots that took place in 1947. “So I sourced my
inspiration from that brave, anonymous policeman, and I felt that in a country
where we have demonized the Pakistanis in our movies, it’s time to look
at them affectionately.”
“It’s time we paid a tribute to them - and learned something from
them.” Bhatt hopes to highlight Pakistani bravery towards Indians even
at the height of tensions during partition in 1947. A noble enterprise, indeed.
One sincerely hopes such peace initiatives would bear fruit. Hindus and Muslims
were not born to nurse eternal hate for one another. Nor are hate and intolerance
central to the teachings of their faith. What is more, Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad
Ali Jinnah and Mahatama Gandhi did not envision the two sovereign nations to
perennially remain at loggerheads when the partition plan was drawn up. Neither
the Two-Nation Theory nor a peaceful resolution of the Kashmir dispute, is a
contradiction of Hinduism.
[taken from http://www.pakistanlink.com/Editorial/03262004.html]
Date/Time Last Modified: 4/1/2004 7:55:06 AM
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