At the end of the three days of the Islamabad Literature Festival (ILF) I cannot begin to guess how many out of the originally scheduled 58 sessions took place, and how many out of the 164 expected participants were actually present at the event. Ameena Saiyid inaugurated the festival with a speech about how the festival was returning to Islamabad; now the fourth time in the capital, she said, “you can never visit the same place twice, each time it’s a different story — by the very act of coming back you wipe out what came before.”
Unfortunately enough the fourth ILF was a case of mismanagement, with a poorly selected venue, mediocre arrangements, and lack of coordination managing successfully to wipe out memories of what came before.
Held at the Lok Virsa Complex, a sprawling expanse with small, limited halls, the Islamabad weather was unkind too. Oscillating between glaring sunlight and an occasional drizzle, the trek between halls — incidentally poorly marked — added to the general sense of aggrieved inconvenience the participants were left with.
The festival this year included special tributes to the many incredible literary figures who passed away in the interim between the last ILF and this one. Honouring Fatima Surayya Bajia, Jamiluddin Aali, Intizar Husain and Nasreen Anjum Bhatti through sessions and Ismat Chughtai and Qurratulain Hyder through performances, turned the most literary of ILF sessions into cenotaphs.
Literature festivals should focus on celebrating the written and spoken word, and should bring together those with a love of literature in a common space
Barring the tributes, the majority of the sessions were largely political in nature: ‘Jihad and Descent into Chaos’, ‘Qualified Equality: Minorities in the Constitution of Pakistan’, ‘Regional Connectivity and Stability’, ‘August 1947: The Parting of Ways’, ‘Softening the Hard Country’, ‘Pen on the Pulse of the Taliban’, ‘Cultural Policy and Dynamics in South Asia’, ‘Media: More Independent, Less Responsible’, and ‘The Pakistan Paradox: Instability and Resilience’ had scarce little to do with literature, seeming to and belong more in the auditorium of a college than a literature festival.
Other sessions bridged the gap between literature and politics by discussing books written on international relations, such as Neither a Hawk nor a Dove: An Insider’s Account of Pakistan’s Foreign Relations by Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri, Rethinking Identities in Contemporary Pakistani Fiction: Beyond 9/11 by Aroosa Kanwal and Education Policies in Pakistan: Politics, Projections, and Practices by Shahid Siddiqui. One would have imagined that finding a decent number of literary figures (both Pakistani and foreign) to feature at a literature festival would not be a herculean task.
Finding expertise, however, is another area wherein ILF 2016 disappointed its audience. The Art Now sessions held in a hall devoted to sessions on art — critique, discourse and conversation — were also disorganised. The speakers’ availability was not checked beforehand and formal invitations were issued fairly late. The Rashid Rana and Quddus Mirza session was shifted to the first day without prior warning while a later panel on ‘The Business of Art’ included representatives of some galleries that are not run as businesses. Relatively young artists and curators participated in discussions that they were not yet equipped to handle, turning the sessions into training ground for more informed appearances in the future.
A few years ago at an earlier, better ILF, Indu Mitha had expressed her aversion to the phrase dance is poetry in motion because the two are distinct art forms and to describe the one in terms of another is to denigrate it. Similarly, to hold a literature festival and devote the greatest part of it to political discussion, art and performances does a disservice to literature.
Literature festivals are, however, much more than a form of defiance (as said by Ameena Saiyid) and much more than a space to self-analyse wrongs and rights (as said Hina Rabbani Khar). They are at least conceptually a space to celebrate the written and spoken word, a space to discuss the new and old literary masterpieces of the time ...
The keynote speeches at the opening and closing ceremonies by Hina Rabbani Khar and Christophe Jaffrelot, respectively, discussed international relations with the token reference to literature festivals as being important as they reflect hope and freedom of expression.