It is not every day that you see something from Pakistan’s entertainment industry that leaves you in awe but also touches a nerve, forcing you to think why it just happened. This is exactly what Lyari Underground has done with their new release on Patari.
Tabeer, a music album being launched by music start-up Patari has taken the country by storm overnight. After the huge success of ‘Sibbi Rap’ and ‘Chitta Chola’ highlighting unique talents by Patari, Lyari Underground’s Balochi rap song ‘Players of Lyari’ dropped jaws by using music to highlight the plight of a football-mad community at the heart of Karachi’s Lyari Town.
Arguably it is the first time in Pakistan that music has been chosen as a medium to highlight issues facing local football and footballers. ‘Players of Lyari’ is perhaps the only instance after the famous Khalid Abbas Dar takedown of Pakistan’s hockey failures at the 1985 PTV Awards, in highlighting a sporting disaster.
A new song about Lyari football tugs at the heartstrings of those really into the game
Sport in Pakistan usually means cricket and occasionally hockey nowadays. Our TV shows and political terminology is all infested with cricket and often ignorant of other sports existing in Pakistan.
But Lyari is different: the two most popular sports here are football and boxing. Both sports — passions of working classes worldwide — enjoyed past success but have now fallen on hard times. Lyari produced some of Pakistan’s greatest footballers such as Abdul Ghafoor Majna, Musa Ghazi, Turab Ali, Captain Umar, Hussain Killer, etc and boxers including Hussain Shah — one of the two individual Olympic medallists for Pakistan. Gang wars, drugs and politics have damaged Lyari’s sporting production line.
The rappers highlight grievances on the decline of football and the challenges associated with it, ripping apart all stakeholders responsible for Lyari’s troubles on and off the pitch. They highlight the lives lost due to political machinations and drugs. Football, once an outlet out of poverty and an opportunity to represent Pakistan internationally, has all but gone due to troubles within the game.
The poverty-stricken Lyarian sportsmen
Either their lives are being wasted or they’re killed behind the political parties
However it’s not the strangers to blame, since it’s our own lack of knowledge on who we can trust
How many days can a player endure?
The coaches are viewed as doing nothing for the players yet act like big shots. They mention biased selections costing many careers, especially if players cannot pay their way into certain teams.
There is no limit to talent, but the coaches are blind to it
They don’t have any fear of God
They don’t have an ounce of affection for us
They’ve just filled their pockets with money
They prefer favouritism over talent
The players have been exhausted
The coaches have destroyed their talent
The song also points out ethnic discrimination, accusing national-level coaches of viewing Baloch players negatively compared to other ethnicities — a damning indictment of perceived attitudes towards the Baloch in Pakistan. Once again, Punjab gets the blame, given Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) calls Lahore home.
But if you’re a Baloch, then the football coach views you negatively