We are strangers now...

There have been deliberated and continued efforts to forget the 'East' Pakistan in the remaining Pakistan, probably contributed by all of us -universities, politicians, intellectuals, journalists, military and even by the ordinary people. There was extremely bloody price given for this black incident of Pakistan's history and yet we are unable to learn the lessons from this.

Read the poem by Faiz’s poem on the East Pakistan tragedy, written in 1974, and feel the pain of those who became estranged after being so close. 

The sun of United Pakistan had to set in the east in the sea of blood and tears...

Urdu Poem by Faiz can be found here: 
English translation of the poem by Agha Shahid Ali:
After those many encounters, that easy intimacy,/we are strangers now –
After how many meetings will we be that close again?

When will we again see a spring of unstained green?/After how many monsoons will the blood be washed/from the branches?

So relentless was the end of love, so heartless –
After the nights of tenderness, the dawns were pitiless,/so pitiless.

And so crushed was the heart that though it wished/it found no chance –
after the entreaties, after the despair — for us to
quarrel once again as old friends.

Faiz, what you’d gone to say, ready to offer everything,/even your life –
those healing words remained unspoken after all else had /been said.

Jinnah's Advice!!

Quaid-e-Azam M. Ali Jinnah once went to the people of a Muslim village. The people in the village complained how the British Raj had not done enough to improve issues in their village. Jinnah’s response to them was to take ownership of their problems: “to identify their issues, make plans to resolve them, and act on their plans” and not wait for the British government to come help them.

It sounds simplistic but really in many cases, it really is as simple as that. Jinnah understood the psyche of our nation well and we, as a whole, haven’t changed much since.


Source: Educational Blog NextStepForward

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