Recently, high court judges, ministers of culture and Pemra have been on a banning spree, always maintaining that whatever they ban isn’t according to Pakistani culture. And yet, none of them can explain Pakistan’s culture in a convincing manner or in a manner in which the more conservative segments of society haven’t already.
This question about Pakistani culture first emerged with force during the declining years of the Ayub Khan regime in the late 1960s. Before that, it wasn’t much of an issue, as such. It could not have been because Pakistan was still a very young country. However, nationalist historian I.H. Qureshi authored a book in 1956 titled The Pakistani Way of Life.
Even though the book celebrates the fact that Pakistan was a Muslim-majority country whose ancestors in the region and founders resisted being assimilated by Hinduism, it does not see the presence of both historical and contemporary non-Muslim elements in Pakistani society as something opposed to Pakistani culture.
In the late 1960s, when Ayub Khan’s ‘modernist’ Muslim nationalist narrative began to crumble, Abul Ala Maududi, the prolific Islamic scholar and founder of the Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) took this opportunity to plug his idea of Pakistani culture. He stated that Pakistan’s culture was “Islamic”. Professor of Sociology Saadia Toor, in her 2005 book State of Pakistan, writes that Maududi lamented that leftist, secular and Western ideas had entered Pakistan’s Islamic culture “through a Trojan horse” and were altering the country’s “Islamic character.”
Progressive Urdu poet Faiz Ahmad Faiz was quick to respond. In a series of lectures that he delivered to the Commission of Arts and Culture in 1967 (and which were later published as a report), Faiz explained Pakistani culture as a historical combination of varied and diverse religious and political, traditional and modern influences, of which Islam was one important aspect but not its entire body.
In her 2011 paper for the University of Alberta, S. Hemani writes that, in 1973, the Z.A. Bhutto regime organised a conference of intellectuals, historians and scholars. Two views emerged at the conference. One was that Pakistan’s nationalism should promote multiculturalism, as Faiz had suggested. But the other view insisted that (in light of East Pakistan’s separation in 1971) a more rigorous nationalism should be constructed and the country’s culture be defined as a single politico-religious entity.
This was an idea born from a sense of territorial insecurities and was thus bound to remain narrow and myopic.
Today, most high court judges, ministers and Pemra who imposed bans on certain events simply stated that “it (the banned event) was not according to Pakistani culture and Islam.” Such statements have become a favourite of the conservative segments of the state and society ever since the late 1970s, despite the fact that they are almost entirely rhetorical in nature and fail to explain that, if an event is against Pakistani culture, then exactly what is this culture?
Saying Pakistani culture is “Islamic” doesn’t say much because there are various manifestations of Islam in practice in Pakistan, in addition to the fact that there are non-Muslim Pakistanis in our midst as well and laws that are entirely secular. This is also why it has been easier for the state to define Pakistan as a Muslim-majority country but almost impossible to construct a monolithic definition of the expression “Islamic Republic.”
That’s why explaining something as being opposed to Pakistani culture has increasingly started to sound hollow. This is also because the state of Pakistan too is now comfortable (to a certain extent) in seeing Pakistan as a diverse society. Denying this reality would put the denier on the wrong side of history.
And this is exactly where some members of the government and judiciary are still stuck.
Published in Dawn, EOS, January 27th, 2019