Posts tagged Pakistan
Posts tagged Pakistan
[I] didn’t realise my main job was to kill people.
Well. Shit.
Kangna - Fareed Ayaz and Abu Muhammad for Coke Studio
One of the best qawwalis from Pakistan. When I met Rohail Hyatt of Coke Studio, I thanked him for bringing Fareed Ayaz sahab and Abu Muhammad sahab onscreen. Magic happened. Kangna (Urdu) means bracelet in English. This is one very, very intense qawwali. Amazing climax.
I get the goosebumps every time.

Thank you, Glenn Greenwald. This pro-war, misinformed two-bit dolt needed to be called out. She’s the one calling Muslim children “terror spawn” and she’s the same person in favor of drones for all “susceptible militant regions.” It’s disgusting how her views on foreign policy and “counter-terrorism” are considered important.
Pakistani model at Pakistan Fashion Week. Image taken by Nefer Sehgal.
That is the imperial mind at work. Its premises are often embraced implicitly rather than knowingly: American lives are inherently more valuable; foreign lives are expendable in pursuit of American interests; the U.S. has the inalienable right to take action in other countries that nobody is allowed to take in the U.S. (just imagine: “An Iranian drone fired two missiles at a bakery in the northwest U.S. Saturday and killed four suspected militants, Iranian officials said, as Iran pushed on with its drone campaign despite American demands to stop. This was the third such strike in the country in less than a week” or “Thirty five women and children were killed by a Yemeni cruise missile armed with cluster bombs which struck an alleged Marine training camp in Texas”).
These self-venerating imperial prerogatives are the premises driving the vast bulk of American foreign policy and military discourse. It is certainly what’s driving the spectacle of so many people pretending that the punishment of Dr. Afridi is some sort of aberrational act which the U.S. and other Decent, Civilized Countries would never do.
Glenn Greenwald: The Imperial Mind
Glad to see someone point out the hypocricy of the outrage over Dr. Afridi’s sentencing. If you start a fake vaccination camp, thereby exposing hundreds of children to Hep B while they’re under the impression they’re protected (all while essentially committing treason) I’m not sure why you’d expect to be let off without a prison sentence. Unless you’re siding with the US, of course, in which case… just read the article.
(via rcabbasi)
Yep. Hypocrisy always wins when it comes to American foreign policy.
(via rcabbasi)
The Afghan jihad was the largest covert operation in the history of the CIA. In fiscal year 1987 alone, according to one estimate, clandestine U.S. military aid to the mujahideen amounted to 660 million dollars—”more than the total of American aid to the contras in Nicaragua” (Ahmad and Barnet 1988,44). Apart from direct U.S. funding, the CIA financed the war through the drug trade, just as in Nicaragua. The impact on Afghanistan and Pakistan was devastating. Prior to the Afghan jihad, there was no local production of heroin in Pakistan and Afghanistan; the production of opium (a very different drug than heroin) was directed to small regional markets. Michel Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics at University of Ottawa, estimates that within only two years of the CIA’s entry into the Afghan jihad, “the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderlands became the world’s top heroin producer, supplying 60 percent of U.S. demand,” (2001:4). The lever for expanding the drug trade was simple: As the jihad spread inside Afghanistan, the mujahideen required peasants to pay an opium tax, Instead of waging a war on drugs, the CIA turned the drug trade into a way of financing the Cold War. By the end of the anti-Soviet jihad, the Central Asian region produced 75 percent of the world’s opium, worth billions of dollars in revenue (McCoy 1997).
Mahmood Mamdani, Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: A Political Perspective on Culture and Terrorism
(via maozedongisnotcool)
Never forget. I humbly recommend that you folks read this; the link redirects you to the downloadable PDF. One of the most important things I’ve read in my life.
If you haven’t heard Tu Mera Dil, Tu Meri Jaan by the globally famous Pakistani legend Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan then you’re missing out on some unparalleled melody. One of my favorite songs in Punjabi. It’s one of those songs that don’t need translation to appreciate its beauty. Give it a try. :)
Dil majboor, mera ki kasoor? My heart’s helpless, it isn’t my fault.
GPOY. Me in Badshahi mosque. It was a beautiful morning. :)
My mother is obviously in love with this song by Coke Studio because of the dialect of Punjabi being used. It’s from her hometown. Beautiful lyrics. On love: “Iss ishq ich, yaaro, kuj kehya vi nai jaanda. Raula paya vi nai jaanda. Raula paya vi nai jaanda. Chup reya vi nai jaanda.”
In this love, my friends, you can’t even say anything. You can’t even shout, you can’t even shout. Nor can you stay quiet.
I went to two mosques in the morning - Wazir Khan and Badshahi both in Lahore. Here’s the first photo I took of Badshahi masjid.
Left: Entrance of Wazir Khan Masjid in Lahore. Right: One of the ceilings of Shah Jahan Masjid in Thatta.
(Source: flickr.com)
Geometrical constructions in the corners of the central arch in Wazir Khan Masjid, Lahore. There are individual mini-niches, each containing a different floral design, giving the corners a honeycomb like appearance.

And in case you forgot. Reagan and Zia’s bromance was famous back then. Too bad US history doesn’t own up to it now.
Women organisations were at the forefront of the many movements that took place against the brutal Ziaul Haq dictatorship. This 1980 photograph is from a violent protest held by female college students (in Lahore) against the Zia regime’s ‘masochistic attitude’ towards women.
Badass Pakistani women against Zia’s dictatorship and oppression. Chuk ke rakho, khawateeno. Note that it is a female protester against a female police officer.
Young girls enjoy their evening tea on top of a wall outside their squatter colony in F-6
The Islamabad You Don’t See - Express Tribune
Pakistan. :)
(via manalimtiaz)