DEVELOPMENT: MUSIC IN THE MOUNTAINS
Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) may not be a priority region in terms of governance and social development, but a group of socially-conscious and culture-sensitive people have experimented with the integration of folk music in the school curriculum for the first time in the region. The Pakistan Mountain Folk Music School Integration Project was launched in Hunza in May and is an initiative of Idara Baraye Taleem-o-Taraqi (IBT), a Swat-based organisation. Implemented in three districts of GB, it’s special focus is on reviving and popularising musical instruments on the verge of dying out.
“Music plays an important role in overall personality development,” says Aziz Ali Dad, a Gilgit-based social scientist, writer and columnist.
Highlighting the importance of music in harmonising different dimensions of human personality, along with its soothing effects on emotions, Ali Dad quotes the German philosopher Nietzsche, “Life without music is a mistake.” He explains, “A well-rounded personality incorporates the appreciation and understanding of music and art. While other initiatives for the region are still in the planning phase, the integration of music in academics should help students develop their cognitive faculties and reduce cultural alienation among the youth.”
To conserve the indigenous music of Gilgit-Baltistan, a project has been launched to integrate music in school curriculum
In order to harmonise diversity within the holistic framework and social contract, it is indispensible to invest in liberal arts, Ali Dad suggests. Unfortunately because of skewed policies of the government, misplaced priorities and misperception of society, education in liberal arts is lacking in the system. He hopes that the initiative is an attempt to fill in that lacuna.
“Gilgit-Baltistan is a cradle of rich, indigenous cultural and linguistic diversity and home to a kaleidoscope of about half-a-dozen endangered languages such as Shina, Burushaski, Wakhi, Balti, Khowar and Domaaki. It also presents a beautiful tapestry of folk music, indigenous knowledge and biodiversity,” says Zubair Torwali, a Swat-based researcher, columnist and language activist.