The BBC's Shahzeb Jillani: "The scale of the disaster is beginning to unfold"
It’s a Humanity Crisis that consumes us!
I am a Civil Right Activist. I take not-so-much pride in writing few words here & there about the atrocities my people are bearing in these gruesome times. I cannot take pride because, I am a Humanist at heart, and I am disappointed that the reason of my existing identity as a Social Activist is not a pleasant one. Rather it is an anti thesis of my very being! But I am happy that I find myself overload with work. There is just so much to do all the time. The situation in the country gives me enough fire to kindle my passions. If not for all these blasts and massacres and injustices, wouldn’t I be out of commission from this self-appointed designation?
Just the other day, there was a case of a 5-year-old girl that got raped in Lahore. I wrote up volumes and shared no less than few dozen pictures regarding this abominable act. Like media, I went berserk at the sheer barbarity of the act and the nonchalance of the clergy to deal with it even handedly.
Earlier, I had sleepless nights over the unjust acquittal of the offender in the Shahzaib murder case. My friends in Karachi were so horrified of the hegemony of the elitist feudal culture. It was my duty to stand by them against this disastrous blow to our judicial system. I even raised questions for other similar issues in Karachi like that of Hamza murder case. I offered my condolences and prayed with them in their grief.
I also stood with the people in Islamabad when that clown of Sikandar and his wife had held the whole city hostage. I believe in the sovereignty of the state and therefore his modus operandi was equivalent to mutiny against the nation in my limited worldview!
And I cannot forget the murder of Salman Taseer, who stood for the rights of minorities. Since I am a humanist first and foremost I was horrified of the abundance of blasphemy charges levied in retaliation of personal grudges. I reflected my views on the blasphemy laws from around the globe like from Saudi Arabia and Bangladesh and so on. I wished to address my brothers in faith to put an ear to logic and reason. After all, it is an issue that will pester our generations to come and we need to decide the fate of our future!
The Peshawar blast targeting the Christians was another blow to my beliefs of equality and equity of human rights. It was a slap on the Jinnah ideology of Pakistan that I adhere to. I was moved to the core by this gross misrepresentation of my religion. I quoted verses out of Quran regarding the rights of Zimmis in an Islamic country. I even called out for review of the peace treaties conducted by our beloved Holy Prophet (PBUH) with the Christian Monastery.
I championed the cause of the Shia’a Genocide, the Quetta vigil observed for Hazara community and the persecution of Hindus. I even raised my voice for the blasts at the Quaid’s Residency in Ziarat. I participated in the fund and resource mobilization campaigns held country wide for the affectees of the floods that submerged our two major provinces Punjab and Sindh.
Basically, I stand for Pakistan. Its solidarity and I wish to have lasting peace in the country. I am a nationalist you know. Also, I do it for my conscience so that I have some patriotic stories to tell me grand children. I do not want to be apologetic to them for leaving in my legacy a crippled, divided, insecure and disintegrated society and social system.
But, today I see my children in Awaran and Kech lying cold and hungry in the rumbles of the relics of their homes. I am watching the orphaned dreams of the innocents helping themselves around site of the disaster. I am deeply moved at the catastrophe that has snatched away from them the luxury of a carefree childhood and matured them in seconds to the turmoil of reality. And I am still waiting for the mainstream media to catch up to their adversity and to speak up for those who have lost their voices.
After all the principle of reciprocity requires that all those speak up for me now for whom I have been fighting with my meager energies and resources. Or am I not “Pakistani” enough for them?
I am an unfortunate being who had to become a Social Activist, believe me it was not a career choice for me. And the last thing I wasn’t is for my children to be the same.
My broken, wretched, ruined Children.
Their anguish is going unnoticed, their agony disregarded and their wails are unmourned!
Will my children also become part time activists?
Or will they wither away into oblivion as the disowned children of the soil!?
--Scarlett