We live in unpredictable times. Unpredictable and
at the same time, volatile, because everything seems
to carry with it, big, looming question marks. Economically,
socially, politically, and emotionally, we are bullet-ridden
with doubt, suspicion, angst, hunger and hatred.
Strangely, even with a preponderance of TV channels,
radio stations, newspapers, magazines, and e-zines
at our disposal to choose from, a majority of us still
suffer from a lack of information, and therefore a
lack of good, sound judgment. Instead of truly sinking
our teeth into a subject matter and understanding
every angle of it, we rely on scraps of information
that come via word of mouth, and/or a brief skim-over
of the daily headlines.
Therefore this lack of information immediately culminates
into a never-ending blame game, one which further
fuels and breeds intolerance and deep-rooted prejudice.
The horrifying siege which lasted three days in Mumbai
(in November this year) was incredibly nerve-wracking,
one could well imagine what the city of Mumbai, across
the border was going through. But we watched on, powerless,
at CNN and BBC’s live transmission.
You see, Pakistan and its people too, have of late,
witnessed carnage and destruction up close and personal
where thousands of our men, women and children have
perished. I do not state this to undermine what happened
in Mumbai, I state this to remind you that we’re
all in this together. Please always remember that.
This endless ‘War on Terror’ (albeit punctured
with loop-holes), this endless fight for justice,
for safety, for security, this endless hope for harmony,
love and freedom from fear and bigotry – we
all stand through the lashes of change as one. No
matter how painful, and no matter how trying, the
world now needs a greater dose of compassion.
Treat a man, woman or child as a terrorist, and they
will become terrorists. Subject the populace to continuous
price-hikes (which will leave their children hungry)
and watch them come for your jugular with cold rage
in their eyes. Subject the masses to a lack of education
and watch them get swayed into an ocean of lies and
promises of going straight to heaven if they blow
themselves up at a particular location. The general
public will be unstoppable if you rob them of their
basic necessities. And perhaps this is one of the
most glaring and foremost reasons of the birth of
crime and terrorism.
The media continuously dishes out facts, figures
and dates – churning it all out, like one big,
well-oiled machine of propaganda without getting to
the root of the cause. And the root of the cause is
just this: where, how, when and why are these terrorist
groups operating? How did they come into being? What
can be done to make them stop? Who’s funding
them? Bombing them to high heavens sure isn’t
helping, because the terrorist attacks seem to be
ongoing occurrences the world over.
“Everybody’s worried about stopping terrorism”,
Naom Chomsky had once stated, “Well, there’s
a really easy way; stop participating in it”.
Most apt, wouldn’t you agree?
In addition to the information overload and the lack
of inseminating and dissecting it properly, it has
become a rather tedious trend for people to over-intellectualize
the basics by peppering it with conspiracy theories
and utter speculation.
The portrayal by the media of the vast Muslim peninsula
as barbaric hooligans makes only one thing evident:
that the media has, is, and always will be an instrumental
player in the game of international politics –
via raising counter-terrorist, agenda-based issues.
Encourage fear, and you gain further control over
the minds of people. Encourage abhorrence and intolerance,
and watch the citizens of a country belonging to different
faiths rip each other’s throats out.
With the onset of the Mumbai siege, and within barely
a few hours, the Indian media kicked itself up in
a flap and began finger-pointing towards Pakistan
and its involvement in the attacks almost immediately.
But do you think we ought to hang our heads in shame?
In humiliation? In a false sense of guilt? Should
we now, allow our lives to be governed by anti-Muslim
and anti-Pakistan sentiments that seem to echo from
each and every direction of the wind? Should we now
allow the India-Pakistan rift to once again increase
and deepen into aching crevices of misjudgment, pain
and antagonism, when it took decades to reach some
sort of camaraderie?
I think not. Because the world’s war, is very
much our war too. Perhaps the artillery needs to be
put down, once and for all, to channel peaceful dialogue
in the hope to reach common ground.
But then again, maybe that approach would be far too
simplistic, because after all there are much bigger
elements at play in this real-life chess board of
international politics.
Yes, perhaps, there is far too much greed for power
and dominance for comfort. But those of us - the pawns
– caught entrenched within this endless façade
of ‘war’, we can make it easier by being
better informed and learning to be more empathetic
again.
Sonya Rehman is a journalist working in Lahore, Pakistan.
She has been writing for six years and is an aspiring
novelist.