Another Pakistan


We're in Pakistan at mid-summer 2011 - "the country that could kill the world," in a native line that lingers. Or maybe the new normal. Think of Pakistan, we're told by Pakistanis, as a model or perhaps a warning of the rising, rough, tough inequalities in the world, even in our embattled United States…

Early on we planned to see this nightmare aslant - less with oft-quoted strategists, more with the imaginative class, so to speak: with the typically grim but mettlesome singers, story-tellers and artists of Sind and the Punjab. They are wonderfully available, individual, candid women and men who have their own dark, truth-telling traditions. They each tell different stories, of course - and almost all of them different from the standard line of an "Af-Pak" crucible of global terrorism. Many of them point rather to "Indo-Pak" roots of the modern turmoil, in the Partition that carved two wounded and unequal sibling rivals out of the British Raj in 1947.

I am deeply interested in the anxiety that has escalated in 2011, in the assassination of Salman Taseer and the official murder of the Sy Hersh of Pakistan, Saleem Shahzad, which has rattled our best friends in journalism. In general, though, I'm drawn to Pakistanis who can think about the long story, as far back as birth by partition, and who can think of Pakistan's trajectory ahead for a generation. It's part of the lure for me that Pakistan has a booming literary culture that is more and more linked and noticed in the West; also that it has a talented modern pop music culture that is heard all over the Indian airwaves, and all over Asia.

"Another Pakistan" is a co-production of the Watson Institute and the Asia Society; Zarminae Ansari helped produce the series in Pakistan. Beena Sarwar and Aman ki Asha provided essential insight and support.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011




Thanking our Mohenjodaro guide Barkat Sheikh - a most knowledgeable tour guide.  Photos: Beena Sarwar From: AMANKIASHA group On Behalf Of rahulm
Sent: Monday, December 20, 2010
To: barkat sheikh
Subject: Thank you
Dear Barkat saab,
After a wonderfu .....more


A reality revealed Aman ki Asha IT Committee member Rahul Mohod bonds with Mohammad Ilyas of the Archaelogy Department.  Photo: Beena Sarwar Rahul Mohod
It was a trip I that I was looking forward too without really knowing what to expect. Karachi airport, though old, had a neat, clean, pleasant and .....more


The business road to peace Nandita Mohan Gujjar of Infosys: cooperation is the way forward By Jehan Ara
The day started rather badly. As I arrived at Islamabad airport to catch my flight to Karachi to receive the Aman ki Asha IT delegation arriving fr .....more


Paving the way for a better future Members of Aman ki Asha IT Committee at the Badshahi Masjid in Lahore, with India’s Deputy High Commissioner Rahul Kulshresth The IT sector could demonstrate the real value that collaboration brings, paving the way for a more lasting peace between two neighbours in one of most explosive parts .....more


'Why are we here?' Humayun Bashir, Salman Akhtar, and Jehan Ara listen as Amin Hashwani sets the tone at the introductory meeting in Karachi. Amin Hashwani, businessman and president, Pakistan India CEO's Business Forum, who moderated the meetings of the Asha IT Committee from India and Pakistan over the past w .....more


Indian IT delegates overwhelmed by Pakistani hospitality Visiting Indian delegates and other guests chatting at a dinner-The News photo By Abid Hussain
For Nandita Gurjar, Senior Vice President, Infosys Technologies, her first trip to Pakistan has been quite a memorable experience but with one .....more

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