Pakistani Urdu literature possesses some very distinctive features. These features not only lend unique colours to Urdu literature written in Pakistan after independence, but also set it apart from the Urdu literature written in India during the last 70 years.
As described earlier in this series, Pakistani Urdu literature was influenced by the political, social and literary stimuli peculiar to this country. Pakistani writers and poets reflected on the society they were living in and wrote about its problems, aspirations, geographical features, distinct social milieu, societal peculiarities, society’s cultural characteristics, ethnic strife and linguistic environment, sometimes quite lovingly and in an ecstatic manner — though sometimes they were visibly shocked over the state of affairs and their words showed their dejection.
Many Pakistani Urdu writings reflect our cities, villages, valleys, mountains, plains, streets and bazaars, capturing their essence and the distinct aura that cannot be found anywhere else in the world, hence making them a purely Pakistani affair. Muhammad Khalid Akhtar, for example, vividly describes the business-mindedness and industrial culture of Karachi, a city he loved and where he lived most of his life, though he originally belonged to Bahawalpur. Chacha Abdul Baqi, a collection of Akhtar’s humorous short stories, portrays Karachi as an industrial and economic hub where fraudsters prowl to con simpletons such as Abdul Baqi. His novel Chakiwara Mein Visaal depicts, with much love and a bit of satire, a poor locality in Karachi’s Lyari area, portraying with much accuracy some Makrani and Baloch characters. Akhtar recalls the Karachi of the 1950s and ’60s when trams used to run on the city roads and an industrial culture was emerging. In his novel Khuda ki Basti, Shaukat Siddiqui also portrays an industrial Karachi with its own social and economic problems.
Concluding the series exploring Pakistani Urdu writing over the past 70 years
Asad Muhammad Khan is another Pakistani Urdu fiction writer who painted Karachi with its peculiar Baloch, Sindhi and Makrani citizens, writing their particular parlance and dialect of a local, non-conforming Urdu. Since Khan spent a long time in the areas in and around Karachi’s older parts, especially near the port, his depiction of local indigenous culture is accurate.
Mushtaq Ahmad Yousufi in his laughter-evoking memoirs Zarguzasht (though he himself called it an “autobiography of the childhood”) tells of a Karachi that was emerging in Pakistan’s early days, when I.I. Chundrigar Road was known as McLeod Road and Zaibunnisa Street was Elphinstone Street, that Karachiites affectionately called ‘Elphi.’ Interestingly, Karachi has appealed to many humorists and satirists and they have talked of it in a tongue-in-cheek style, though they could not hide their fascination with this Pakistani melting pot of different cultures and languages.
Aside from Majeed Lahori, who wrote about Karachi in his humorous prose and poetry in Pakistan’s early days, some humorists have cast a delectable glance over the city. Karachi’s buses, with the city’s ever-present transportation problems in the background, caught the fancy of humorists such as Syed Muhammad Jafri, Syed Zameer Jafri and Dilawar Figar who, in their poetry, wittily highlighted the plight of Karachi’s buses and commuters. The city’s ethnic problems were also narrated and Intizar Husain specifically described in his novella Aagay Samandar Hai Karachi’s ethnic unrest, borrowing the expression from Gen Ayub Khan who, in the wake of the Mohajir-Pathan riots of the 1960s, was quoted as saying, “Mohajiron ke liye aagay samandar hai” [for Mohajirs, only the sea lies ahead], implying that they could not go back to India from where they had migrated.
Coming to other parts of the country, Ahmed Nadeem Qasmi is among the writers who portrayed Punjab’s towns and villages. As Punjab’s villages changed with time, so too did Qasmi’s short stories, and portraying the new trends in rural areas — such as Pakistanis from the villages going to the Gulf states to earn a living and the consequent social problems — became the theme of some of Qasmi’s short stories. It is a pity that most Urdu literature depicts urban life and the middle-class; there has always been a dearth of the rural scene in Urdu literature. The reason, perhaps, is that most writers of Urdu belonged to urban backgrounds and came from middle-class families. Though depictions of the rural areas were not a rarity, they were somehow overshadowed by city culture. The writers who captured the essence of rural Pakistan in their writings include Jamila Hashmi, Abdullah Hussain and Ghulam-us-Saqlain Naqvi. Majeed Amjad’s poetry is a vast canvas where one can see, hear and feel the sights and sounds of rural Punjab, especially cultural and rural scenes from Jhang and Sahiwal, come alive.