When creative spirit of a nation is arrested from
within, it is as vulnerable to external insinuations as is to internal
machinations, and can never make any progress.
“Pakistan is under siege.”
We had enemies from the very
first day. With time, the list of our enemies grew longer. So much so that today
we have neighbors not friendly to us and a world all hostile to us. We are
alone in a wilderness created of our own. Isn’t it Greek mythology whose gods
and monsters we have resurrected in ourselves? Like the one-eyed monster, we
have no second eye to look inward. This on the one hand has transformed us
completely into subjects perfectly suitable for psychological pursuits. Or, for
instance, how can a judge of a higher court find fault with bare feet of a
dancer, and ban it? Or how can his ability and capacity to judge be explained?
(One of my friends says it’s a foot fetish!) Go through any book of psychology,
and see we are afflicted with almost all the disorders identified there.
On the other hand, this lack
of inner eye has deprived us of that touch of philosophical contemplation and
composition which is so integral to the continuity of peaceful human co-existence.
In every nook and cranny of our society, from a hut to GHQ, and from a patient
to the President, we have laid Procrustean beds and are on guard no one unfits
it. Those who are over-sized are cut down, and those who are under-sized are
pulled up to match the bed’s length. In a sense, we watered and environmentaled
all the seeds to grow into the same and, lo, we have Bonsais all around us. Rather,
we have shrubs unheard of in the botanical history which are eating out one
another, and stretching their tentacles to far off lands to gulp others; it is as
if we are working on an agenda of self-annihilation.
At the same time, we have
started ‘exporting’ our principles of experimentation with human beings to
other regions also. We are packaging our Procrustean beds for other people, and
use all means fair or unfair to ‘market-impose’ them, and are thus causing
other people to revive their own Procrustean beds and bring them again into practice.
This may turn the whole world into a big Procrustean bed!
Alas, our ideological
adventurers are no better than Procrustes. In a sense, they are worse!
Procrustes used to hack off or stretch his victims to fit his bed, we kill all
who unfit our beds, and in some cases, we kill all no matter they fit or unfit
our beds. We have left Procrustes far behind in sizing human beings.
How’s that that we have
turned into such monsters? Are we different from other people genetically? Some
people believe that is so; but that is an expression of distrust and anger. All
of us belong to the same progenitor. It is mainly our mental, intellectual, psychological
and philosophical make-up and thus our behavior that differentiates us from
each other. Otherwise we are the same biological entity.
As it is, like others we are
a product of two things, first, what we are endowed with by birth, and second,
what we learn and acquire on our own. We are all born with almost the same
capacity to learn unless it is some disability that retards us; so naturally
there is complete freedom available to everyone to learn and acquire what he
wants to learn and acquire. In a sense, it’s the ultimate freedom that if
realized can enable us to be master of our destiny. That is, we are free to be
what we want to be.
However, some of us happen to
make a discovery of an immeasurable magnitude. Somehow, they come to believe
that they are free to be what they want to be, and in addition to that, they
are free to force others to be what those people do or do not want to be. Such
people in fact try to be master of others’ destiny, and deprive them of their
freedom. Not only do they use every opportunity and manner to further their Procrustean
agenda, they manipulate what is available and manufacture what is needed to achieve
their Procrustean objectives. They have no regard for what exists outside of
them.
It is rather an edgy difference
that distinguishes such people who live to control and mould other people’s
lives according to their ideas from those who teach and preach other people to
live in accordance with their philosophies. It’s no matter of persuasion or
submission, i.e. getting someone converted to your ideas on the one hand by
using rhetoric or reason or reward, and on the other, by using fear or force or
fraud. This difference is informed among other things by the eternal issue of
means and ends, i.e. ends do not justify means. Hence, if one wants to persuade
or coerce others into submitting to his ideas there is an inherent danger of
curtailing or snatching other people’s freedom. That way others lose their
freedom. The issue of corporal punishment to learners is a derivative of the
same debate.
But to make this debate
possible and also to have it to continue, a theory of conduct is desperately
needed in Pakistan .
This actually is a sine qua non for all existence let alone for the human
existence. That, everyone is free to have his ideas, change them, abandon them,
and dispose of them in whatever manner he deems fit, and at the same time he is
all free to live according to his own ideas. That no one with whatsoever
mandate, personal or otherwise, has any authority to impose himself upon others
and to take back others’ freedom on any pretext personal or otherwise. All
knowledge presupposes this freedom.
It may be objected that it is
practically socially impossible to allow so many individuals to live like that
save at the expense of social harmony and peace. That may be so! However, first
there is morality and then there is law that takes care of the difference, discord,
disharmony, and conflict and clash among individuals of a community.
Morality needs no enforcement;
it is sort of self-discipline and a pragmatic way of life though for those who
know the value of moral principles and their centrality to human co-existence.
Law requires to be enforced by an authority. In this it is as lame as morality.
Both are intrinsically orphan waiting to be adopted by some foster parents: moral
principles are open to be adopted by, rather obligatory for, every individual
be he an ordinary or an extraordinary person, whereas law must be enforced by
an authority, which is nothing more than a collection of persons, duly vested
with its enforcement. It is of the nature of law that its ignorance by anyone is
never construed as an excuse to seek alibi, instead it is binding to all and
all are equal before law.
This does not mean that both morality
and law lie entirely within their own independent realms. How can we elevate a
person to a law office who is morally corrupt? The issue of the present chief
justice’s daughter’s enhanced marks is a case in point. Also, how can an outlaw
be declared morally upright? The case of Mr. Asif Ali Zardari is not entirely
irrelevant provided he should have been cleared by an independent court of all
the accusations and allegations brought against him by anyone. Morality
preconditions, contextualizes and encompasses law.
Against this backdrop,
present circumstances of the Pakistani state are extremely hopeless. It needs
no painstaking to bring out the rampant moral-lessness, value-lessness, and
law-lessness at every level of our society. We are all witness to it. Rather,
part of it. But isn’t it the same cliché everyone is wont of using? Yeah,
apparently it seems so. But the argument this article is going to make is different.
To blame all or to accuse all
is jut meaningless. Likewise, to characterize a society by anything is just
like crying over spilt milk. To say that Pakistani society has no morals, no
values, no norms, and no principles to follow or that it is a lawless society
is just empty talk. Also, it does not mean, as is usually implied, that there are
good moral principled or law-abiding people in every society, and we have our
share of such goody-goodies.
As argued earlier, the nature
of morals is different from laws; no prescribed punishment is attached with
them and everyone is free to follow or defy them, so no responsibility can be
fixed for transgressing morals or values, norms or principles. In that they are
a private thing. Some private organizations and institutions use them as laws,
i.e. they punish their members or employees in case of violations of their
adopted norms. They are private because no one owns and implement them, i.e. no
collective authority possesses them and their enforcement. Hence, the
meaningless and emptiness of the statement that our society is devoid of all
morals, values, norms and principles! Hence, the lack of fixing any
responsibility whatsoever for any violation by anyone!
That’s completely different
in the realm of laws. All the laws are absolutely meaningful and full of
content. We may decry them, analyze them, and expose their content and intent.
All the laws are written with clearly defined terms of punishment in case of
their violation. We may criticize and declare these as inhuman or savage. This
enables the fixing of responsibility beyond any doubt at least within a demarcated
domain of adjudication. That is why all the statements made on the bases of law
always amount to clearly defined meanings and fixed responsibility.
Thus, when this article talks
of Pakistan
as a lawless society, and as a society without any morals or values or norms,
it definitely means something different from just what the above-mentioned
cliché hints at. What this article means is clearly in terms of fixing responsibility,
and of course not just the lamentable state of our society. It talks of a definite
relationship between morality and law as it manifests in our society. In other
words, it purports to formulate a thesis that throughout the six decades of
Pakistan the absence of rule of law has negatively impacted on all of our moral
and social values, and the efficacy of norms and principles for a virtuous life,
and thus the responsibility both for turning Pakistan into a lawless society
and utter degradation of the values is but on the shoulders of those who were
lawfully and constitutionally vested with establishing rule of law, dispensing
justice, and protecting life and property, and rights and freedoms of all the
citizens of Pakistan without any discrimination, and also those who were
lawfully designated to aid in the fulfillment of these basic duties of the
state but instead of following their lawful functions they violated them with pronounced
disregard, and it were they who played the major and active role in destroying
the value system in Pakistan. No damage is greater than that.
Thus, it is the utter
disregard for law and its deliberate trashing verily by those who were trusted
with its sanctity and custody that hacked at the root of all morality. As in
spite of many a religious teaching and its doctrine
of reward and punishment, and as it is evident from people’s outward behavior
and practically from their actions also, that they have already learned that
that is all what is here in this world. Likewise, centuries’ experience of
lawless and immoral governments and rulers made people learn how to live
without any value system or in the midst of a value system that is based on the
efficacy of force. This experience may be generalized thus: it is the absence
of rule of law that nourishes and strengthens not only law-lessness but
moral-lessness and value-lessness also. Because, in a sense, in such a society
sticking to morals, values and principles does not pay. In our case, it is more
than that since instead of paying it makes one lose what he already possesses. Hence,
in a perfect vacuum of law majority of people abandon
all morality.
In point of fact, if we do
not let laws rule, reign of lawlessness will prevail. If we do not establish
rule of law, rule of criminals will emerge. If the rule of criminals
establishes itself, all the traces of morality will disappear. What else have we
got in Pakistan
other than that? Actually the absence of rule of law was not accidental in Pakistan . It
was not done in ignorance. It is a cold-blooded crime. What greater evidence is
required to prove that point but the way the rule of law movement has been
thwarted first by the military elite and then by the Pakistan Peoples Party
government in unison with their masters. This has pushed the crisis to its peak
point where endures no law and no morality in Pakistan .
There are three main culprits
lawfully and constitutionally responsible for bringing Pakistan on the
brink of the precipice. First, it is the military elite which represent force;
second, it is the judicial elite which represent law; and then, it is the
political elite which represent democratic mandate. Far from fulfilling their
lawful and constitutional duties all these elites constantly acted in violation
of those duties. Instead of honoring their constitutional mandates, all these elites
stepped out of their constitutional domains and made a travesty of everything
from law and constitution of the land to morality. Last but not least, they all
in collusion seized the state of Pakistan and set to further their
elitist agenda to the best of their interests.
Briefly dwelling on their
destructive role, it is sufficient to mention that: how the military elite
staged coups, suspended and disfigured the constitution, ruled the country by
force, and exercised its influence from behind while it was not present on the
scene. How the judicial elite validated these coups starkly against the
dictates of the constitution, allowed the transgressors to rule and to amend
the constitution. How the political elite perennially betrayed their democratic
mandate and the cause of the fundamental rights of the people who put them into
power, how it played in the hands of the military elite and how in complicity
with it it never let those institutions, such as independent judiciary, rule of
law, come into existence and strengthen which could safeguard the rights and
freedoms of the people, and how it validated the dictators-forced amendments in
the constitution.
The worst form of lawlessness
which we are witnessing today in most of the areas of Pakistan such as
those on the border of Afghanistan
and the biggest city of Karachi
is the ultimate result of all these criminalities of these elites. Their
grabbing and transforming of Pakistan
into an elitist state was the greatest tragedy that could happen to a country. These
elites deprived the state of Pakistan
from playing its due role, i.e. the role of an arbitrator, mediator, moderator,
and a referee, the task of which is to arbitrate, mediate, moderate, and
referee between the two or more disputant parties and settle and resolve the
conflict to the satisfaction of both or all irrespective of the nature of those
conflicts which may belong to the realm of civil, political, economic rights,
or relating to the fundamental rights and freedoms of the citizens. In other words,
they stripped the state of its protective function, i.e. protection of its
citizens’ life, property and rights and freedom.
At the worst, these elites
made the state of Pakistan
itself one of the disputant parties. Not only politically, and economically, did the state stand by one party but
spiritually and religiously also it took sides, and emerged as a contestant
itself. This divided the society deeply negatively, and turned Pakistan
permanently into an arena where countless tugs of wars were and are being
fought to gain the control over the state. The resultant internal strife
consumed the energies of both the state and the society of Pakistan . It’s
the same fire that is burning us today.
It is in this context that the
nature and intent of the Objectives Resolution may best be explained though it
contained cursory mention to people’s fundamental rights too. Also, this helps
understand the acute constitutional crisis that afflicted Pakistan in its
formative years till the constitution of 1973 was agreed upon and enforced. In
retrospective, it is easier to analyze how this constitution was made possible
in 1973.
Actually, the period till
1973 is all fraught with a neck and neck fight between the two major elites,
military and political to take control of the state. The making and unmaking of
various governments and constitutions during this period is sufficient to prove
the point. The judicial elite being too week to take sides on its own, permanently
relaxed in the lap of the powerful one; while the political elite when
apparently in power always, as it is doing today, tried to subdue it to its dictates
but failed repeatedly.
However, it was in the early
1970s that in the wake of the first general elections and the subsequent cut-throat
power struggle between two major victor parties, i.e. Awami League and Pakistan
Peoples Party, in which military elite put its weight on the side of the
political elite of the Western wing of Pakistan, and as a result of which
Bangladesh came into being, that the military elite was at its weakest. The war
that Pakistan army lost in the Eastern wing found about a hundred thousand of its
army men as prisoners of war in India and it had left that elite too frail and unprepared
to assert itself and its supremacy. That is how the constitution of 1973 sailed
through. As it is, the hands that resuscitated the fainted patient were hacked
off just after four years in 1977 and once again the military elite established
its rule.
Thus, the state of Pakistan
gradually reached a point where today it has lost all moral and constitutional
legitimacy. By taking on a role of a party and completely abandoning its protective
role and the role of a mediator and referee, it let the Pandora’s political box
open. From the very beginning ensued a fierce struggle between the various
sections of the society, in addition to the two bigger elites the military and
the politicians, to gain the control of the state which with the passage of
time intensified. All the power politics, and its offshoots such as the
military takeovers, constitutional breakdowns, political, economic, cultural
and religious persecutions are the major milestones on this way down.
It was during the last days
of the People’s Government of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto that the Pandora’s religious
box’s lid was slid a bit (the Pandora’s economic box had already been smashed into
pieces in his government’s earlier years), but it was wide-open during the 3rd
military coup when General Zia-ul-Haq’s Martial Law disfigured everything
civil, moral, lawful and constitutional in Pakistan. Since then, we have witnessed
the creation of a number of (and strengthening of the previously existing) armed
and un-armed political and non-political, religious and non-religious mafia
like groups vying for the control of the state to enforce their agendas. The
armed groups found the Zia-ul-Haqqian environment especially conducive for
their growth.
The same phenomenon of the
absence of a genuinely neutralized and legitimized state let loose countless autonomous
entities, from individual persons to well-knit groups, which monopolized the
use of force to promote their interests and ideologies. They started making use
of every thing and every means no matter moral or immoral, legal or illegal,
constitutional or un-constitutional, peaceful or forceful, to compel the
individual citizens to believe and behave but in accordance with their
prescribed ideological manuals. This gave rise, in addition to political and
economic, to moral and cultural policing in every street and at every road throughout Pakistan .
In sum, that was the final touch to the siege from within.
That siege from within arrested
the creative and enterprising spirit of the nation and left it in a completely
dried, wrung and barren state. No sphere of life, learning, earning and
recreation could escape that mischievous moral policing. Woman was particularly
the target of that devilry. She was no more an individual; rather debased to
the status of a soul-less object. The tentacles of moral policing trespassed
every encirclement of human civilization from one’s privacy to the premises of
someone’s home. No one remained safe even within one’s house. The lot of the
ordinary people was made miserable; they were turned into helpless prisoners in
their own homes.
Socially and politically, it begot
the worst type of parasites. As the siege retarded the real spontaneous growth,
a parasitic economy emerged. From a pariah to a president, no one was happy to earn
fairly and honestly. Everyone who got the opportunity whether he was a laborer
or an industrialist tried to take advantage of it to amass wealth by grabbing other
people’s money i.e. tax money in whatever manner he could do that. All politics
became the art of living and living lavishly at the expense of others. Outside
government, goons and mafia live like that.
Such are the times and
circumstances we are living in. That’s the Pakistan we are having today. This
article has only generalized what is happening around. No examples have been
given since they abound. No mentions have been made, save a few, since there
are innumerable staring us in the face. The first thing we need to know is that
we are not under siege from outside, but from within. That’s the hard truth! That
is what this article has attempted to show. Also, it has tried to show how that
siege was laid to.
However, what this article
has avoided to venture at is why we were besieged from within? That such a
question pertains to the realm of psychology which may not provide us with a
satisfactory answer is what the writer has no
quarrel with. In his view, even if we find the answer to that question why an
oppressor behaves like an oppressor, it will not help a bit to stop him from
behaving like that.
Also, it is the weaker, the
oppressed one who is the real culprit; it is he who lets the oppressor oppress
him whereas it is characteristic of the human spirit that it is absolutely
free, i.e. we have an absolutely free soul. When one makes him believe that he
has been besieged, he is not free. He is free only when he fights to break the
siege. It is admitted that harder is to fight against the siege from within
than from without because our enemy is inside us. But fight we have to go for.
Thus the second thing we need
to know is that we are free and we can make that siege disappear. What is
possible and is practicable is that we the ordinary people, we the oppressed
ones, we the besieged ones, do not let the oppressor oppress us, the besieger besiege
us. We need to be self-assured that we are not victims, that we are free
people. It is as simple as that. It is our natural and inalienable right not to
be besieged by anyone, not to be oppressed by anyone. But by just law alone! In
case, we have been oppressed, laid siege to, be it from within or without, it
is morally incumbent on us to assert and stand for our rights and freedoms, and
struggle for that siege to be lifted. That’s the simple way ahead to the resolution
of our complex problems! That’s what we are required to follow in Pakistan for
the siege from within to be lifted once and for all to regain the lost paradise
of our rights and freedoms!
[This article was completed on January 4, 2009. ]
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Societies grow and then perish. Many societies, about whom we don't know, may have never grown yet must have perished.
ReplyDeleteI can see that we, as a society never grew. Yet we are perishing. I think, we should be aware of this reality that the pains we are going through are only the last pains a patient gets before death. But even our awareness is reptilian, or perhaps even below the order or species.
For men who aspire philosophical thinking, I would advise to discover some methodology to get an early and good riddence for themselves and us all.