Welcome to “Understanding Pakistan” Project
Understanding Pakistan Project Team May 27th, 2007
My Dear Colleagues:
We are writing to introduce to you and invite you to experience and participate in a project to try and understand our country by going back to discover, define, and discuss the history of Pakistan. The Understanding Pakistan Project is a collaborative exercise in learning. This email list will serve as the vehicle for dissemination for content generated during the project. A blog (www.UnderstandingPakistan.com) has been set up act as a central meeting point and collaborative platform. Please visit us and participate in this fascinating rollar coaster of our country’s history.
As you read this email, our beloved country Pakistan stands at a very precarious point in its history. With the sixtieth year of the country’s independence at its end, we find ourselves, once again, in the midst of a constitutional crisis. In many ways, this struggle between personalities and institutions has been a defining feature of the country’s politics. Ironically, more often than not, and much to our collective detriment, personalities have pervailed over institutions.
On the international front as well, Pakistan is often dubbed as a failed state, at best, and a haven for international terrorism, at worst. While many passionate and patriotic Pakistanis may disagree with this harsh verdict of international public opinion, they invariably feel distressed and frustrated with the rise and fall of their country’s political and economic fortune. There is certainly something amiss in our ability to steer our country to the heights that we had expected from this ”land of great promise”.
Pakistanis–all of us–have repeatedly demonstrated a remarkable tendency to not learn from our own history. For many of us, our school texts of Pakistan studies was our first and last encounter with the events that have shaped our country–and ourselves–over the last 200 years (Indeed, how uneducative and uninspiring an experience that was!)
It is said that “the study of history is the best medicine for a sick mind; for in history you have a record of the infinite variety of human experience plainly set out for all to see; and in that record you can find yourself and your country both examples and warnings; fine things to take as models, base things rotten through and through, to avoid.” . That “a country losing touch with its own history is like an old man losing his glasses, a distressing sight, at once vulerable, unsure, and easily disoriented. “. Indeed “History is a vast early warning system” and it is only through a better understanding the various events–and the causes behind those events–in our past that we can develop a perspective and the ability to learn and improve upon the state of our affairs.
Understanding Pakistan Project
The “Understanding Pakistan” Project is designed to help us look behind to see ahead. It is a collaborative effort to enable us to learn from each other and discover our fascinating past. Each week, starting from June 4th until October 13th, a panel of distinguished writers will examine and critique a certain period of Pakistan’s history (1940-2007). These individuals, through their varying backgrounds in policy, media, political science, and public service, bring their varying perspectives and biases to this collective reading of the country’s history. It is important to appreciate that none of these viewpoints and perspectives are true or false in their entirety, but they are merely that, perspectives, and that the first step we can take towards building a more wise, just, and tolerant society is to develop the ability to listen to, and appreciate each other’s viewpoints.
Understanding Pakistan will be a central point for this collaborative thinking and collective learning. An email list will disseminate each week’s discourse to the wider audience who would then be invited to present their own ideas, thoughts, and additions on the blog. Special emphasis will be paid on developing a mechanism to promote substantive and thought provoking discussion and to encourage the collection of further evidence to develop a more comprehensive and well-rounded resource on the history of the country.
This, we sincerely hope, will elevate the dialogue to a level higher than has sometimes been the case. It will also, we hope, make us better informed citizens and provide impetus for future action.
Please join us in this collaborative effort to learn about our own country. The project is hosted on a collaborative website at: http://www.UnderstandingPakistan
Feel free to forward this email to those you know and encourage them to do the same.
Best Regards,
Dr. Athar Osama,
Sabahat Iqbal Ashraf (iFaqeer),
and Other Collaborators
Understanding Pakistan project is a welcome move. Due to judicial crisis in Pakistan every educated Pakistani is concerned for the future of his country. 12 May carnage was awsome. The intolerence in society is growing and it seems POWER has supermacy over LAW. We hope that this project will creat awareness among Pakistanis especially in edcuated segment of socety and there will a way out how the coming dangerous situation can be averted.
Thanks
Dr.Syed Mehboob
The discussion seems to have a legitimate purpose but the tone of some discussants appear to point otherwise. The fact that people still call independence of Pakistan, a partition, is sad. Pakistan, a country of 150 million, a nuclear power, and formidable entity, is not up for dissolution or disintegration. The born Pakistanis (probably 90 percent or more of the current population) will give anything and everything to safeguard it future and continuity.
I suppose the better direction for the discussion is to analyze our present to draw constructive conclusions for the future. Unless we take corrective measures now, the fate of 150 million will continue to hang in limbo. Nonetheless, I would not underestimate what respect and power Pakistan holds inthe hearts and minds of its people. When we talk about criticism and poor conditions in the country, responsibility is to be shared by all because evil doers belong to all shades of power players. Opposition, in black coats or not, is not exactly composed of angels who never did anything wrong. I would not assign the blame but would rather start a new chapter in whoich everyone of us stop talking and start acting for the betterment of common man and woman’s life. My apology to anyone disagreeing with my comments, but I am assuming its an open and fair debate. regards.