Rejecting Hyper-nationalist Hijackers
The News November 10th, 2009Rejecting Hyper-nationalist Hijackers
http://www.mosharrafzaidi.com/2009/11/10/rejecting-hyper-nationalist-hijackers/
http://thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=207697
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
by Mosharraf Zaidi
The voice of Pakistan’s emerging middle class will not always be amplified in ways that serve Pakistanis’ collective interests. The overwhelming majority of the Pakistani middle class takes great pains to conduct and promote an honest and open debate about the issues. Part of taking those pains includes introspection. There is an increasingly important deviant strain of hyper-nationalism mixing itself in with the voice of the Pakistani middle class. Pakistanis need to tackle it with the same integrity and purposefulness that has enabled the establishment of this middle class voice in the first place.
While it remains true that the majority of critique of the Pakistani media is malicious and motivated by attempts to delegitimise the country’s fragile middle class voice, it is also true that the low quality of research, fact-checking and integrity among Pakistani hyper-nationalists makes their work dangerously counter-productive, and hardly strengthens the case of Pakistan. Hyper-nationalist pundits always find America and India as the root of all evil. Hyper-nationalist newspapers seem to have all the news scoops about the evil designs of the enemies, without any evidence. Their abuse of the freedoms that technology and economic growth have afforded to Pakistan is a threat to the growth and influence of the organic middle class — of whom they represent no part.
It was not so long ago, that Pakistan was forever stained by the blood of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. The safety of foreign correspondents should be of paramount interest to anybody who loves Pakistan, and is interested in protecting its reputation, and its potential as a place where foreigners can be safe. Even the most egregiously intellectual light-weights among Pakistanis would want to ensure that foreign journalists would never again have to endure that kind of threat again. It is therefore particularly mind-boggling that in their irrational, unsubstantiated and blind rage, Pakistani hyper-nationalists thought nothing of making a target of Matthew Rosenberg, yet another Wall Street Journal reporter, causing him to be evacuated out of the country, and sending ripples of fear and trepidation among the corps of Pakistan’s foreign correspondents. Accusing someone of spying for Israel, in a permissive environment (for a reporter working for the Wall Street Journal, no less) would only be funny if it was fictional. It’s not. It is deathly serious. Already, other correspondents (like Marie-France Calle of Le Figaro) are asking questions about their own safety.
When I recently adopted Twitter, and began tweeting a few weeks ago, I engaged several western reporters and analysts who seemed to be overly flippant about painting Pakistan as an unsafe place for ordinary westerners. Not true I argued, informed in part by my own Pakistani sensibilities, and in part by a very strong history of hospitality, and a reasonable set of indicators that suggests that Pakistanis have no record of lynching westerners. Being white and western in Pakistan has always tended to be an asset, not a liability, I argued. In retrospect, and in the context of growing shrillness that seems to want to paint every negative aspect of Pakistani life on other countries, other religions and other ideas, perhaps I was wrong. If the middle class in this country continues to tolerate accusations without any evidence about the wild and demonic obsession of ‘the other’ with tearing apart Pakistan, then Pakistan will very much resemble the caricature of this country that so many of us have sought to fight.
That would be a tragic irony. Fighting a caricature of Pakistan that paints it as a wild outback for medieval values and resourceful terrorists has been one of the primary preoccupations of the Pakistani urban middle class. The media has been central to this fight. Over time, this has helped in developing the capacity to debate and discuss issues, and to hold powerful people to account for their actions in a way that previous generations of Pakistanis could have only dreamed of doing.
We defeated the arrogance and contempt for civilian institutions of Gen Musharraf’s military with not one, but two peaceful long marches. We laid petals on the streets of Lahore and Karachi to welcome leaders who had failed us before, for the sake of a national culture of due process and democracy. We resisted terrorists as they stole the religion of most of us, and the culture and innocence of all of us. We repulsed the Flintstones of Swat, and their misogynistic world view, and deified and embraced the very same military that had treated our will with such contempt for so long.
The media has been instrumental in these struggles, both as an articulator of middle class values and as an amplifier of middle class politics. Indeed, the recent efforts of the media to moderate the graphic nature of terrorism coverage suggest that the institution is capable of a measure of course correction too. But as the bombs become more frequent, the challenges more urgent, Pakistan’s urban middle class, its civil society and its media need to take moment to consider the consequences and integrity of mitigating confusion, fear and pessimism, with a hyper-nationalism rooted in conspiracy theories.
No one doubts that Pakistan has enemies. No one has legitimately made an argument that any country is particularly interested in Pakistan for noble or selfless reasons. And no one that can be taken seriously can defend politicians and their enablers as they slavishly tout talking points that have no basis in the South Asian Muslim narrative around which mainstream Pakistan’s values and ethos are constructed.
The hyper-nationalist discourse that seeks to locate Pakistan’s problems in Zionism, Indian spies, or American development assistance, however, is not nationalist at all. How can anybody, who really cares for Pakistan, be so wickedly unaware of the potential dangers of targeting foreign correspondents? How can anybody that cares for Pakistan continually attempt to inject Pakistanis with the heroin of blaming ‘the other’? How can anybody that cares for Pakistan so consistently defy and deny any attempt to inspect and assess the damage that Pakistan does to itself? How can anybody that cares about Pakistan surgically delegitimise questions about the accountability of mercenaries hired to protect diplomats?
When Pakistanis that love their country read the hyper-nationalist press in Pakistan, or watch pundits spew irrational and unsubstantiated allegations on television, they need to resist embracing the warm comfort of blaming ‘the other’. The overwhelmingly vast majority of Pakistan’s problems are a direct consequence of decisions made by Pakistani individuals, groups and organisations. The dangers of allowing conspiracy theories to go unchallenged are not just intellectual. Daniel Pearl lost his life because of a delusional, conspiratorial and escapist culture among extremists. Pakistanis, Muslims and non-Muslims alike, should have nothing but contempt for this culture. It certainly must not be allowed to expand its influence. And being rational about the threats Pakistan faces does not mean you are being unpatriotic. Quite the opposite.
Resistance to hyper-nationalism must begin with rejecting it, and end with registering that rejection in writing. Write a letter to every newspaper and television channel and raise your voice. The depth and seriousness of Pakistan’s fragile middle class voice rests on it. We cannot allow this voice to be hijacked by the hyper-nationalists that concoct malicious and dangerous lies to appeal to our patriotism.
November 10th, 2009 at 6:26 am
IMHO, it is too late for Pakistanis (middle class as you call them) to rid themselves from conspiracy theories. It is actually the whole of Pakistan (majority) and conspiracy theories are all there is that they have to consume on daily basis. Look at it this way, until the broken Pakistan(i) is fixed, the conspiracy theories will remain the balm that soothes the wounds.
November 10th, 2009 at 10:29 am
[...] This cup of tea was served by: Mosharraf Zaidi [...]
November 10th, 2009 at 11:02 am
Your article is most impressive. I think ‘conspiracy theories without any proof, only sells ‘a politicians/ or a strategists’ agenda of fanning wild hyper-nationalism in times national insecurity against ’something/someone’ or to justify something or distract or confuse people.
It’s an engineered process and has its own agenda.
Middle class people hopefully are bit more sensible, educated and aware to question such things, but the masses are not. Until the time that the middle class show more strength than the masses, this is going to continue. And ofcourse this phenomenon(Hyper-nationalism) exists everywhere, but hopefully people begin to realize that ‘being so steeped in hate for others due any percieved threat’ actually takes up a lot of energy that could be put to good use by doing something which is of real benefit to one’s country.
November 10th, 2009 at 2:24 pm
Hi Mosharraf, Just wanted to say I read your article and thought it was great. I’ve been sitting on the fence for a while on this issue and would like your opinion on a few things.
While you clearly (and rightly) lambast hyper-nationalism do you think there’s a middle ground where we, as Pakistanis, need to be? Is there such a thing as constructive and positive nationalism? While not rooted in zealotry should it not have elements of zeal? I would personally think so. And maybe we, as a people, need to cultivate that.
With the vast majority clearly disillusioned with the prospect of a stable Pakistan maybe this taste of nationalism is something we need to make good decisions (in the interest of the country).
And while I normally laugh in the face conspiracy theories I still try and evaluate all sides of the story. And more often than not there are loose threads and question marks which don’t add up (call it my Pakistani bias if you like). And when you come across a string of these in a row you begin to question your own sensibilities.
The Mumbai attack evidence dossier was one such thing. Not sure if you saw it but if I ever saw anything that begged to be questioned it was that. And why is every incident of violence in India attributed to Pakistan/ISI - and then sensationalized in the media immediately putting us on trial?
We, on the other hand, seem to end up accepting these accusations with a guilty look on our face. It seems we’re the naughtier of the two brothers who gets blamed for every act of mischief. To the point that we start believing it ourselves.
And what of our own internal violence? Is it not fair to say that if Pakistan is a suspect in some of India’s violence then maybe India does have a hand in one or two incidents?
I’m not ready to blindly play the blame game but at the same time I don’t want be put on trial every time some one spits on the sidewalk.
Lord knows we’ve fucked up big time as a nation and that doesn’t absolve us of our responsibilities. But let’s be a little indignant and defiant in the face of a steady stream of (mostly pointless) accusations.
Do I make any sense?
November 10th, 2009 at 4:49 pm
good piece,but in my opinion these are media talebans,they are tools of security state,they spread rumours,lies.urdu media is their home and one english newspaper as well.on november 07 jeay sindh quami mahaz and other nationalist held peace march,it was not reported by our so called national media,,because it was about peace and freedom.and above all media ia under control of media talebans.you may call them also hypernationalist
November 10th, 2009 at 5:40 pm
Google translation of the Le Figaro piece is here:
http://translate.google.com/translate?prev=hp&hl=en&js=y&u=http%3A%2F%2Fblog.lefigaro.fr%2Finde%2F2009%2F11%2Fespionite-pakistanaise-les-jou.html&sl=fr&tl=en&history_state0=
Shame on the Nation.
November 11th, 2009 at 12:59 am
While I agree with your piece on the hypernationalists, do you realise that your articles appear in the very newspaper that is the most rabid of this tribe? With writers like Ansar Abbasi and most surprisingly Shaheen Sehbai occupying pride of place in this paper,anybody also contributing to these pages is also seen as as an agent of the “establishment” that is actively conspiring with these charlatans in trying to bring the fragile civilian edifice down. You must therefore disassociate yourself from this group and write either for The Dawn or Daily Times, so as to be associated with the saner element rather than with these despicable creatures.
They now have another newspaper, The Nation, in their control after that pitiful creature was made it’s editor. Instead of asking just us, your readers to raise our voices, it is opinion makers like you, who have to combine with others, who write in the two papers mentioned above and start projecting more assertively on all types of media and start communicating to the people the voice of sanity and reason. Do not allow these crazies to take over and dictate whatever the average Joe is allowed to read and see.
November 11th, 2009 at 9:08 am
@one of ‘the others’ Thanks for your comment. You’re right.
@Tabarak Razvi Its not wrong to question the conventional lines about everything, but when the questioning takes the form of accusations that put individual lives at risk, it certainly is wrong. I don’t have any problem with larger point you make. It is a legitimate one, and one that can benefit the public discourse, if it framed in a reasoned manner, and seeks evidence to substantiate its theses.
@ali jan tunio Why does everything that is not synched with our own opinions become the “x” (in this case, media) “talibans”? This kind of gratuitous name-calling is what I am arguing against, not for.
@Azizuddin Is irrational name-calling the best antidote to irrational name-calling? This is exactly the moral equivalent of the hyper-nationalists’ game. I find it disappointing that we can’t formulate criticism without getting personal, and even more disappointing that our criticism is so visceral.
Finally, the newspapers you mention have their strong points, I am sure, but I write for The News, because it has been a very good paper to write for, it has the country’s highest English-language circulation and its op-ed pages have been Pakistan’s most diverse and interesting in recent memory.
November 19th, 2009 at 9:21 pm
Conspiracy theories do not just materialize out of thin air. Pakistan is not unique in the sense that it has people believing these theories. All such theories are put forth by groups who make use of the uber-nationalism that prevails in times of national insecurity. these conspiracy theories are created and widely circulated in order to distract, confuse and direct people to look in a certain way, while making sure they don’t look the other way.
This is a deliberate and manipulative process that has a specific agenda.
Having said all that, Pakistan as a country and it’s population as a nation is not alone nor unique to act this way. At least serious Pakistani press is somewhat more responsible than the Indian hyper-nationalist media. So much so that sometimes the Indian media acts with abandon and froths at the mouth to blame it’s neighbors for everything from helping the Khalistan movement to Maoist Naxalites to the Gujrat riots. I still remember how there were conspiracy theories making the rounds in Indian middle class living rooms back in 1999 that the Pakistani ISI funded and provided strategic support to BJP. This sounds so very ridiculous, however as recently as earlier this year the Indian congress has demanded a probe to find out if RSS (BJP’s militant wing) received training and money from the Pakistani ISI. This is a classic, almost like Red Riding Hood conspired with the big bad wolf to whack her grandma.
So, my dear friends, conspiracy theories, are not an exclusive domain of Pakistanis. In uncertain times, you don’t have to look farther than your own nose to find out a conspiracy theory lurking.
November 24th, 2009 at 2:56 am
Mussafir,
The difference between the degree & level of conspiracy theories in India & Pakistan is this:
You mentioned about 2 conspiracy theories in India (the BJP being sponsored by Pakistan & the RSS being sponsored by Pakistan). I, as an Indian living in India, who travels all across India every quarter have never heard of these conspiracy theories that you have mentioned & once I read them I laughed. I can guarantee you that at least 99% (if not more) of all Indians have either never heard of them or if they have heard, will react the way I did. On, the contrary look at Pakistan & the currency that the ‘Axis of evil: US-India-Israel’ conspiracy theory enjoys in Pakistan. In a recent survey conducted by independent sources, a vast majority of Pakistanis (over 70%) believe in this theory.