Playing the role of a prisoner on death row is an act of solidarity: Sarmad Khoosat
Actor Sarmad Khoosat will be playing Prisoner Z, a death row inmate who is about to be executed, in No Time to Sleep, a 24-hour digitally live performance streamed directly on Dawn.com on October 10 — the World Day Against the Death Penalty. Khoosat told the following to Rimmel Mohydin:
I was a quiet child. Narrow, docile, harmless. I was an easy target. When I was seven years old, a boy from my class began picking on me.
It started with a poke. Then a little more than that. When I got up to run away, he ran after me.
As a child, there can be nothing more terrifying than feeling like you are about to get caught — and probably hurt.
I raced towards my classroom, hoping to put a wall between us. He was inches away. I jumped in and slammed the double doors behind me.
The scream that followed was not my own.
His hand had got caught in the door. He lost a fingernail.
I had no intention of hurting him. I didn’t have those instincts. I think I cried more than him, at the sight of his bleeding finger.
For causing this injury, I was slapped across the face by a teacher who believed that this was all my fault. I had bullied him, so I deserved to be chastised for it.
Punishment, as a concept, then eluded my understanding. I had neither provoked him, nor had I fought him.
Whatever retaliation there had been on my end had been in self-defence.
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It was an accident but all the teacher saw was his injured finger. She made no assumptions of my innocence and suddenly, I was the bad guy.
How was this fair?
My father played a police inspector for almost three years on a television show and growing up, I always believed that that was his actual profession.
I could not separate baba from the funny cop he was on TV (I never really understood how he could exist both inside the box and outside it).
So to me, the idea of punishment became even more grey — almost fictionalised. But I learned early on, that it could never be objective if human beings were charged with carrying it out.
Knowing Zulfiqar
So when Zulfiqar’s story reached me, I wondered if the punishment that he had been given was deserved.
I read his letters in 2015 for a dramatic reading at a festival. There were three. In one, his words were clear-headed, rooted in his terrible reality but ended on a note of hope. As if he wanted to reach out to his reader to be a comfort to him.
The second was one filled with pride. He wrote about his diplomas, his love of learning, and particularly the joy of teaching hundreds of inmates.
The third was for his daughter.
This was the only letter that betrayed his fear. That his daughters would not be taken care of. That they won’t find homes because of the shame of having an incarcerated father on death row. That they won’t fend for themselves because they wouldn’t be able to afford a quality education.