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PAKISTAN/INDIA: Women Beat
Unorthodox Paths to Peace
January 24, 2009 (IPS) As high-profile delegations from Pakistan
visit India after the launch of a month-long cross-border signature
campaign to press for resumption of dialogue between the two countries
and call for peace, IPS interviewed three Pakistani women who are
pushing this agenda in their own unorthodox ways.
Taranum Ilahi, a yoga teacher and Reiki master
is asking Reiki colleagues and students to "send Reiki to help
heal Pakistan and bring about peace with India," as she puts
it. "I ask them to visualise people happy and smiling, with
green fields around them, stretching out to shake hands across the
border with Indians".
Reiki, a spiritual healing practice developed in
Japan, 1922, is based on the idea that an unseen "life force
energy" flowing through people causes us to be alive. Although
Reiki is most often administered using the palms to transfer healing
energy, it can also be sent ‘long distance,’ says Ilahi.
She estimates that there are thousands of Reiki masters in Pakistan.
Although Reiki is most often used as complementary and alternative
medicine for all kinds of physical and mental ailments, "it
can also be used to send positive energy to the world at large".
"Every night I send Reiki to Pakistanis, to
Indians, and to the planet in general," she told IPS. "It’s
great that the peace delegation is visiting India. We must all do
what we can".
Relations between India and Pakistan, both nuclear-armed,
have been tense since the November 26-29 terror attack in Mumbai
which left 180 people dead.
India has blamed the attack on the banned Pakistan-based
militant group Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and demanded that its leaders
be brought to Indian justice.
The Indian demand and Pakistan’s refusal
to comply have been grist for the media in both countries to hype
up hostility to a point where there has been talk of ‘surgical
strikes’ on LeT camps by India and warnings of retaliation
by Pakistan.
Many people cautioned Sheema Kermani, the well-known
dancer and activist who runs the Tehrik-e-Niswan (Women’s
Movement) theatre group against going to India to participate in
the National School of Drama (NSD) festival, the Bharat Rang Mahotsav,
earlier this month.
"At times like these it is all the more important
to make the effort and go there, to show that artists and people
like us bring goodwill and have the courage to fight these bad feelings,"
said Kermani.
She took a 17-member group to the festival, making
the arduous 18-hour train journey to Lahore in near freezing night-time
temperatures, crossing the Wagah border on foot and then taking
a bus to New Delhi. Still, "it was a wonderful experience,
we got a standing ovation, and so many people thanked us for coming".
Tehrik-e-Niswan performed the powerful ‘Jinnay
Lahore Nahin Vekhiya’ (One who has Not Seen Lahore) on Jan.
11 in New Delhi. Written by the Indian playwright Asghar Wajahat,
the play was made famous by iconic Indian theatre director Habib
Tanvir when he first directed it in 1989.
The play is based in an old house in Lahore allotted
to Muslim migrants from India after Independence and Partition in
1947. After the actual house-owner, an old Hindu woman, emerges
and refuses to leave, the initially antagonistic family develops
a relationship with her. Tension mounts when local goons try to
whip up sentiment against the woman on the basis of her religion.
Tehrik first staged the play in November 2007 in
Pakistan where audiences appreciated its relevance in terms of how
certain sections of society continue to misuse religion for political
purposes, giving rise to an increasing culture of intolerance.
The NSD had invited noted theatre director and
actor Salman Shahid from Lahore with two plays, but his group was
unable to make the trip "due to logistical and organisational
problems rather than Indo-Pak tensions," NSD director Anuradha
Kapoor told journalists.
Another woman-headed group from Lahore, Ajoka Theatre,
run by the feisty Madeeha Gauhar, filled the gap with "Hotel
Mohenjodaro", based on a prescient 1967 short story by the
gifted Pakistani short story writer, the late Ghulam Abbas.
Abbas’ futuristic four-decade old story (written
before the U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first man on
the moon) opens with a celebration at the fictional Hotel Mohenjodaro
as Pakistan becomes the first country to send a man to the moon.
Mullahs (Muslim priests) condemn the astronaut as a heretic and
whip up a frenzy that topples the government.
They take over power and ban music, art, English,
and modern inventions, destroy universities, schools and libraries
and impose gender segregation. When their infighting leads to anarchy,
a neighboring country invades. Years later, a tour guide points
to the spot in a desert "where, before the enemy struck, stood
the hotel Mohenjodaro with its 71 storeys."
Pakistani audiences who saw Ajoka’s adaptation
of the story last year were struck by its relevance to the current
situation, first with the Taliban in Afghanistan and now with such
elements overrunning Pakistan’s northern areas and mirroring
what the fictional mullahs of Abbas’ short story did in terms
of brutalising society.
Reactionary elements here regularly accuse Kermani
and Gauhar along with other theatre activists, of being ‘anti-national’
and ‘anti-religion’. In India too, their groups performed
under threat from extremist elements there.
Kapoor told journalists that the NSD had received
threats for including the Pakistani plays in its repertoire. Both
groups decided to take the risk, performing under tight security
"reminiscent of a visit by a head of state", as one journalist
put it. "...Yet not a complaint could be heard" (‘Harmonies
of dissonance at Bharat Rang Mahotsav’, Anjana Rajan, The
Hindu, Jan. 16).
"I told her (Kapoor) that we receive many
threats here in Pakistan too. We face them, and we are ready to
face such threats in India. We cannot be deterred by them,"
said Gauhar.
"Not going would amount to giving in to the
pressure by extremists on both sides," Kermani told IPS. "When
there is a fight in the family, you stop talking to each other but
then you come back and talk."
"India’s cricket tour of Pakistan may
be off, but the presence of the two groups affirms that cultural
dialogue has survived despite the current diplomatic freeze,"
wrote another reporter (‘Across the Border, Dipanita Nath,
The Indian Express, Jan. 11').
However, the city government in Lucknow, where
the Tehrik play was to be performed as part of the festival repertoire,
said it could not guarantee security to the group. "Local elections
are coming up, and they were jittery," shrugged Kermani, taking
the cancellation in her stride. "But the Delhi experience was
so wonderful that it’s okay we could not go to Lucknow."
In Lahore, another committed woman peace-maker
is attempting to do her bit to counter hostilities between the South
Asian neighbours.
Two days after the Mumbai attacks, Syeda Diep,
who heads the Institute for Peace and Secular studies (www.peaceandsecularstudies.org)
was among the 25-30 people who gathered in front of the Lahore Press
Club to express solidarity with Mumbai.
"We held another slightly larger protest a
few days later," says Diep, "and then a third which was
better attended with maybe a hundred people."
The group held a meeting on Jan. 2, attended by
a cross-section of society - teachers, journalists, activists, students
and others - aimed at launching "a bigger front along the lines
of the big anti-war groups elsewhere," said Diep. "Yes,
they weren’t able to stop war, but they did raise a voice
and make an impact on society, and today Obama is President."
The resulting Aman Tehreek (Peace Movement) describes
itself as a broad-based citizens' alliance working for the restoration
of peace and security in our troubled region. Their first event
will be a peace rally on Jan. 31 in Lahore, Diep told IPS over the
phone as she headed for an organisational meeting for the rally.
Already an Aman Karwan (Peace Caravan), consisting
of leading politicians, civil rights activists and journalists from
Pakistan, is in India shoring up ties between the two countries.
Meeting over Thursday and Friday members of the
20-member delegation emphasised that Pakistan was as much a victim
of terrorism as India. ‘’We are seeing the Taliban demolishing
schools and preventing our girls from going to school. Who do we
turn to?’’ said Haji Muhammed Adeel, a leader of the
Awami National Party.
Asma Jahangir, chairperson of the independent Human
Rights Commission of Pakistan, spoke of the difficulties faced by
people trying to build peace. ‘’I have been slapped
by an army officer and abused for trying to bring about peace between
the two nations,’’ she told Ranjit Devraj, IPS correspondent
in New Delhi.
Organised by South Asians for Human Rights (SAHR)
and the South Asian Free Media Association (SAFMA), members of the
Peace Caravan hope to soothe relations between the neighbours, strained
by the Mumbai attacks through increased civil society engagement.
"The peace delegations to India are very positive
steps," Diep said. "But we want people from India to come
to Pakistan too, and join us to condemn the media for its very negative
role in fanning hostilities,’’ she said.
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=45533
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