PROFILE: THE MANCUNION CANDIDATE
Iqbal Shafiq had dreams, as young men and women stepping out into the big world do, to build a future for themselves. As vague as the future may be, and as quiet as those dreams may be. But futures have a way of making themselves, irrespective of what their dreamers can imagine. The quiet young man who began a small independent college newspaper in the 1960s, partly as a way to mitigate his boredom, could hardly have predicted that more than 50 years later, he would be celebrated as the founder of the largest college newspaper in all of Great Britain.
Shafiq’s parents had great ambition to see their children highly qualified in academics as they themselves did not have the same opportunities in Karachi. First to Abbottabad’s Burn Hall went Shafiq and, then, with the assistance of his father, to the land of sophisticated scholarship and history: Great Britain.
Wanting to pursue a degree in economics, Shafiq applied to what he considered the top three schools there: Oxford, LSE and University of Manchester. He packed his bags to go to the first among the three schools that accepted him and that turned out to be the University of Manchester. The letter of acceptance from Oxford came only a couple weeks after he had accepted Manchester’s offer. “Being impatient of nature, I did not want to take the chance of not getting admission anywhere,” he says.
Five decades ago, a young Pakistani student in Manchester launched what has now become Britain’s largest student newspaper
Whereas the textile centre of Manchester is one of the places where the earlier Pakistani immigrants had gone to seek work — the life Shafiq was consumed in was, naturally, worlds apart from a migrant labourer’s. It was a dull place, overcast with clouds and dreary weather, he recalls. Loneliness beset him. But college life offered him opportunities that soon lifted the clouds of ennui and isolation for the young man living away from family and friends.
He heard of the Students’ Union which served as a social space for students. It was akin to a members’ club where students could have a meal and a bath. “In 1957, the Victoria University of Manchester moved into a brand new building which housed a large debating hall, a coffee bar, a common room and a mixed bar called the Serpent Bar,” states the Union’s website. In 1963, The Main Debating Hall started to hold concerts, too. In 1964, The Kinks’ Ray Davies performed there and since then, it saw The Who, Jimi Hendrix and The Rolling Stones take the stage as well.
Various student societies were active there, such as the medical, debating and literary societies, for which the Union provided assembly rooms and catering for meetings. There was also a small Pakistani society when Shafiq was a student and a large Indian society.
It helped, he says, that “In those days, Pakistanis were more accepted. The British used to become friends towards people who were quiet and gentle types.” Moreover, he says: “In my case the only friends I have are those who I made at university.”
“I started the newspaper mainly because I was lonely. Loneliness took me to the university union which was very well-organised and you made friends easily.”
Shafiq’s desire to find company resulted in launching a productive legacy for Manchester. “Fortunately or unfortunately, you make friends in England who are the sophisticated types, literary types — I got in the company of a doctor, an aristocrat from Argentina of British descent and there were four of us, no girls,” explains Shafiq. This was the bunch of blokes who thought of starting a student newspaper because not only would it keep them busy in their spare time, “[We thought] we will also maybe make a name, make a success. Which we did. I’m still in touch with [my friends], via email especially.”
So they launched the Mancunion — named after the Manchester Union. At the time the university had no student paper. In fact, the university had banned student publications for the previous four years and his teachers were not enamoured of the initiative. Shafiq was actually warned by the head of his department, he says, who told him ‘You shouldn’t have done that because you could have got a good degree.’
“I replied I hope I still will get my degree,” recalls Shafiq.
When Shafiq visited his alma mater recently to find out about the newspaper, by chance he bumped into the vice chancellor on the stairs. She recognised him and asked if he was the person who had started the Mancunion 53 years ago, and got a degree as well. It was amusing to Shafiq “because there was no correlation between the two things” but it echoed what he’d been told by his professor. “She told me to go and find out, that the paper is doing quite well. So I went and discovered that it is now the biggest student newspaper in Britain!”