Published: October 4, 2011
Pel refused to travel to Chaman as six of their players belong to the Hazara region.
KARACHI: The massacre of 13 men belonging to the Hazara community in Quetta led to the cancellation of the Pakistan Premier Football League match in Chaman as Pel decided to skip their fixture against Muslim FC.
Pel refused to travel to Chaman as six of their players belong to the Hazara region. However, match commissioner Mohammad Samad insisted that the security situation in Chaman was fine. “The security situation is under control in Chaman although the teams are still wary of coming here,” Samad told The Express Tribune. “As an official, I can confidently say that Chaman is safe and the last match went smoothly.” The development meant that Muslim FC got a walk-over against Pel. They now lie sixth in the league with 20 points, while Pel languish at the bottom of the table with only six points.
Meanwhile, NBP defeated PIA 2-0 while PMC Athletico and PAF were involved in a goal-less draw.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 5th, 2011.
Azaranica is a non-biased news aggregator on Hazaras. The main aim is to promote understanding and respect for cultural identities by highlighting the realities they face on daily basis...Hazaras have been the victim of active persecution and discrimination and one of the reasons among many has been the lack of information, awareness, and disinformation.
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
’کوئٹہ واقعہ میں کالعدم تنظیمیں ملوث ہیں‘
ہزارہ برادری پر حملوں میں جھنگ کی کالعدم تنظیموں کا تعلق ہے: رحمان ملک
وزیر داخلہ سینیٹر رحمان ملک کا کہنا ہے کہ کوئٹہ میں اہل تشیع سے تعلق رکھنے والی ہزارہ برادری پر حملوں میں جھنگ کی کالعدم تنظیموں کا تعلق ہے جن کے خلاف کارروائی کے لیے حکومت پنجاب کو خط لکھا گیا ہے۔
کوئٹہ میں گزشتہ کچھ عرصے سے ہزارہ برادری پر یکے بعد دیگرے حملوں کے بارے میں رحمان ملک کا کہنا ہے کہ پہلے ملک میں بعض شدت پسند تنظیموں نے فرقہ ورارنہ تشدد کے ذریعے دیوبندی کو شیعہ سے لڑانے کی کوشش کی تھی۔
’کوئٹہ میں یہ کئی برسوں سے شروع ہے۔ سیف کرد جو لشکر جھنگوی اور سپاہ صحابہ سے تعلق رکھنے والا ہے وہ چار پانچ سال پہلے جیل توڑ کر فرار ہوا تھا۔ اس نے شیعہ برادری کے خلاف کارروائیاں شروع کی ہوئی ہیں۔‘
بی بی سی اردو کے ہارون رشید کے مطابق، رحمان ملک کا کہنا تھا کہ ان افراد کے خلاف حکومت کارروائی کر رہی ہے۔ تاہم ان کا کہنا تھا کہ اس کا گڑھ صوبۂ پنجاب کا علاقہ جھنگ کا ہے۔ ’اس بابت وفاقی حکومت نے صوبائی حکومت کو خط بھی لکھا ہے۔‘
عثمان سیف اللہ کرد اور ان کے ساتھی شفیق الرحمان رند کو سکیورٹی اداروں نے دو ہزار تین اور چار میں گرفتار کر لیا تھا لیکن دونوں ستمبر دو ہزار آٹھ میں فرار ہونے میں کامیاب ہوئے تھے۔ شفیق الرحمان تو بعد میں دوبارہ گرفتار ہوئے لیکن عثمان سیف اللہ ابھی تک روپوش ہیں۔ حکومت کو شک ہے کہ وہ کوئٹہ میں شعیہ برادری کے خلاف حملے کر رہے ہیں۔
صوبائی حکومت کو لکھے گئے خط کے مندرجات کے بارے میں وزیر داخلہ کا کہنا تھا کہ صوبائی حکومت کو جھنگ سے تعلق رکھنے والی تنظیموں کے خلاف کارروائی کا حکم دیا ہے۔ ’ان تنظیموں کا ہیڈکواٹر جھنگ میں ہے ان کالعدم تنظیموں کے لوگ کھلی تقاریر کر رہے ہیں۔ انہیں اس سے روکا جائے۔ انسداد دہشت گردی قانون کی شق چار کے تحت ان کی نقل و حرکت اور سرگرمیاں محدود کی جائیں۔‘
ایک سوال کہ آیا کوئٹہ حملوں کی جھنگ سے منصوبہ بندی کی جا رہی ہے، ان کا کہنا تھا اس میں ملوث زیادہ تر لوگوں کا تعلق جھنگ سے ہے۔
BBC URDU
وزیر داخلہ سینیٹر رحمان ملک کا کہنا ہے کہ کوئٹہ میں اہل تشیع سے تعلق رکھنے والی ہزارہ برادری پر حملوں میں جھنگ کی کالعدم تنظیموں کا تعلق ہے جن کے خلاف کارروائی کے لیے حکومت پنجاب کو خط لکھا گیا ہے۔
کوئٹہ میں گزشتہ کچھ عرصے سے ہزارہ برادری پر یکے بعد دیگرے حملوں کے بارے میں رحمان ملک کا کہنا ہے کہ پہلے ملک میں بعض شدت پسند تنظیموں نے فرقہ ورارنہ تشدد کے ذریعے دیوبندی کو شیعہ سے لڑانے کی کوشش کی تھی۔
’کوئٹہ میں یہ کئی برسوں سے شروع ہے۔ سیف کرد جو لشکر جھنگوی اور سپاہ صحابہ سے تعلق رکھنے والا ہے وہ چار پانچ سال پہلے جیل توڑ کر فرار ہوا تھا۔ اس نے شیعہ برادری کے خلاف کارروائیاں شروع کی ہوئی ہیں۔‘
بی بی سی اردو کے ہارون رشید کے مطابق، رحمان ملک کا کہنا تھا کہ ان افراد کے خلاف حکومت کارروائی کر رہی ہے۔ تاہم ان کا کہنا تھا کہ اس کا گڑھ صوبۂ پنجاب کا علاقہ جھنگ کا ہے۔ ’اس بابت وفاقی حکومت نے صوبائی حکومت کو خط بھی لکھا ہے۔‘
عثمان سیف اللہ کرد اور ان کے ساتھی شفیق الرحمان رند کو سکیورٹی اداروں نے دو ہزار تین اور چار میں گرفتار کر لیا تھا لیکن دونوں ستمبر دو ہزار آٹھ میں فرار ہونے میں کامیاب ہوئے تھے۔ شفیق الرحمان تو بعد میں دوبارہ گرفتار ہوئے لیکن عثمان سیف اللہ ابھی تک روپوش ہیں۔ حکومت کو شک ہے کہ وہ کوئٹہ میں شعیہ برادری کے خلاف حملے کر رہے ہیں۔
صوبائی حکومت کو لکھے گئے خط کے مندرجات کے بارے میں وزیر داخلہ کا کہنا تھا کہ صوبائی حکومت کو جھنگ سے تعلق رکھنے والی تنظیموں کے خلاف کارروائی کا حکم دیا ہے۔ ’ان تنظیموں کا ہیڈکواٹر جھنگ میں ہے ان کالعدم تنظیموں کے لوگ کھلی تقاریر کر رہے ہیں۔ انہیں اس سے روکا جائے۔ انسداد دہشت گردی قانون کی شق چار کے تحت ان کی نقل و حرکت اور سرگرمیاں محدود کی جائیں۔‘
ایک سوال کہ آیا کوئٹہ حملوں کی جھنگ سے منصوبہ بندی کی جا رہی ہے، ان کا کہنا تھا اس میں ملوث زیادہ تر لوگوں کا تعلق جھنگ سے ہے۔
BBC URDU
A Victim of Being Hazara and Shia in Pakistan
After 9/11, international forces led by American forces attacked on Taliban in Afghanistan and it took a month to oust Taliban along with Al-Qaida and other Islamic militant groups from Kabul who had been ruling Afghanistan since September 1996. It was Pakistani intelligence agencies, which played pivotal role in the making of Mojahidin (holy warriors) and other Islamic militant groups to use them in Afghanistan against Soviet troops, who invaded Afghanistan in 1979.
Soviet presence in Afghanistan helped the intelligence agencies to establish numerous religious schools (Madrasa) along with training centres throughout Pakistan so as to use Mojahidin against Soviet invasion. Knowing the significance of Mujahidin and the strategic area, General Ziaulhaq the then president of Pakistan, in the pretext of Afghanistan war used the religion and religious militants in Kashmir to pressurize India to come to the negotiating table to resolve the Kashmir issue.
Later on, General Zia also promoted extreme religious thinking and religious militant groups within the country especially in Balochistan, Sindh and Khaber Pakhtoonkhow provinces to counter the nationalist political parties.
General Zia, having known the weakness of the west over strategic position of Afghanistan, used the nuclear issue and extreme religious militancy cards for his own political vision. West despite knowing Zia's political motives couldn't take any strict action against him, as they were obsessed with Soviet presence in Afghanistan and wanted Zai to get the Soviet out of Afghanistan by all means.
Getting Soviet out of Afghanistan by force the intelligence agencies got enormous confidence and encouragement to rely on the performance of the religious militants for their local and regional political ends. The success story of Afghan war brought religious militant groups closer to the intelligence agencies.
Over the time period it became impossible for the intelligence agencies in Pakistan to detach themselves from the religious militant groups, as they help them in accomplishing regional political purposes.
The intelligence agencies know well that if the Kashmir and Afghanistan issues are resolved peacefully along with the nationalist issues within the country, then the covert activities of the agencies will remain a question mark in the political affairs of Pakistan.
That's why they never wish the civil Pakistani government to get close to the Indian government to resolve the political issues and trying their best to exploit natural resources of the small provinces with its military might and engage civilian into political and sectarian violence in order to prolong its rule over the country.
Quetta city is situated in the South-West of Pakistan and is the capital city of Balochistan, which is around 125 km away from the border of Afghanistan and nearly 220 km away from Kandahar city. In November 2001, when Taliban were defeated by the international forces, they entered into Pakistan as most Taliban were and are believed to be Pakistani nationals, who received their religious education in the religious schools of the country.
It is worth mentioning that Hazara constitutes 19% of Afghanistan population and remained subjected to the stark suppression of Taliban and Al-Qaida during the reign of Taliban. Around 10,000 Hazaras were reported to have been killed by Taliban just because of being Shai and Hazara in Afghanistan.
Even the two famous giant Bhudhas, built in 1st and 2nd A.D in the heart of Bamiyan city, where Hazaras live in, were also destroyed by the ruthless Taliban. During the attack on Taliban in October 2001, Hazaras fully supported the international force to get Taliban out of Afghanistan. When Taliban couldn't fight international force in Afghanistan, they moved back to Pakistan where they belonged.
It's to be mentioned that around 700 thousand Hazaras live in Quetta city, most of them migrated from Afghanistan in 1890, when the then king Mir Abdul Rehman attacked on Hazaras, which resulted in repression and occupation of Hazaras lands.
To cut in short, due to suppression and cruelty of the king Mir Abdul Rehman, Hazaras left their homeland and started migrating to different countries around Afghanistan. Hazaras, who lived in the north of Afghanistan, moved to the Central Asia, those who lived in the west moved to Iran and those lived in the south of Afghanistan moved to the present Pakistan, the then Indian subcontinent during British Raj.
It's now been nearly ten years; the Hazara community dwelling in Quetta City, Pakistan has been under heinous ethnic cleaning by extremist religious groups such as Taliban and Lashkar-i-Jangvi link with Al-Qaida. Over 500 Hazaras are reported to have been killed and 2500 injured, just for being a Shai and Hazara.
Nearly every day, Taliban and Lashkar-i-Jangvi militants groups kill Hazaras, wherever they come across in Quetta city. High officials in the present government seem reluctant to take bold action against the terrorists and talk openly. The Governor of Balochistan, Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi, quoted his Inspector General of Police (IGP) saying, "whenever police arrested any criminal, he received calls from high ups for his release" [1].
Meanwhile, Home Minister Mir Zafarullah Zehri, on a point of order, informed the assembly that "he had clues about those involved in the target killings but he was helpless. He said if the elected representatives were given responsibilities, the situation might improve" [2] are enough to prove the bitter reality about the reach of the terrorist organizations into the highest ranks of Pakistani Government. Both the governor and the home minister publically announce that the government is helpless and doesn't have authority to get control on the terrorists and to put an end of the terrorist activities going against the Hazara Community.
Now the questions arise that if the present Government doesn't have authority then who does? Who is ruling behind the scene in Pakistan? Whose hands are involved in ethnic cleansing of Hazaras in Quetta city? The two high profile terrorists "Usman Saifullah Kurd and Shafeeq Rind belonging to anti-Shia Lashkar-i-Jhangvi organization mysteriously escaped from a very well-organized jail of Anti-Terrorist Force in Quetta Cantonment where no one can enter without a pass, implying that their escape was facilitated by the security agencies" [3].
Hazara community in Quetta are of the opinion that the law enforcement agencies in general the government in particular are not taking sectarian killings and crimes against the community seriously. No effort has ever been made by the government to conduct an impartial inquiry into matter.
Despite being heavy presence of the police and Frontier corps check posts in and around the Quetta city, the terrorist walk freely in the city and kill any Hazara, wherever they find in the city even in most cases just 50 meters away from the security check posts.
The Hazaras believe that the government is directly or indirectly involved in the killing of Hazaras [4] as to provide enough training to Taliban militants and get them ready to go back to Afghanistan after 2014 when the international force would come out of Afghanistan. In Quetta city, Hazaras are easy to target because of their Mongoloid features and physical attributes.
The rule of democracy in Pakistan like country means a number game, in order to make the headlines the number needs to be well otherwise; it is difficult to get heard in the national press of the country. As regard Hazaras, they live in Quetta city, a small minority, thousands miles away from Islamabad and above all they are not political or financial strength of the country, otherwise, the cry of the Hazaras could have been heard by the higher ups of the state or the chief justice of the supreme court, who ordered sue motto action against the violence of Karachi.
"Hazara killings do not make headlines because Balochistan is sandwiched between the big story of Baloch nationalism and the alleged Taliban presence in Balochistan", says a Baloch journalist Malik Siraj Akbar [5]. Nobody seems ready in Pakistan to listen to the hue and cry of the innocent Hazaras, who have been left alone on the mercy of the cruel underground Talian and Lashkar-i-Janghvi outfits who have been ruthlessly killing the doctors, engineers, police officers, government officers, politicians, women and children of Hazaras to get their training complete and higher up happy.
Today, Quetta city presents the scene of an old cowboy movies, where the blood of Hazaras does not make the authorities realize of Hazara being a human. On August 31st 2011, the whole Muslims were celebrating Eid while Hazaras were collecting their dead bodies and removing their injured to the hospital. Taliban's 50kg powerful suicidal explosion killed 13 innocent Hazaras on Gulistan Road, who were coming out of the Eidgah after Eid prayer.
None of the political and military leaders of the country condemned the gruesome killings of Hazara. No sue motto action was announced by the Supreme Court to stop the killing of Hazaras in Quetta city. Even print media in Pakistan has turned its eye blind to highlight the target killings of Hazaras. Few days back on September 13th 2011, Hazara Democratic Party staged a protest against the target killings of Hazaras in Islamabad in front of the parliament [6], which was intentionally overlooked by the electronic and print media of Pakistan.
Few days before, on 20th of September 2011, 26 Hazara Shi'a pilgrims on their way to Iran were lined up in front of their bus and shot dead in Mastung, around 30 kilometre away from Quetta City. Another three people were killed as they tried to bring victims of this attack to a hospital in Quetta, the provincial capital.
Lashkar-e Jhangvi, an anti-Shi'a extremist group, claimed responsibility for the killings. The killing of 29 Shi'a Muslims in Pakistan's Balochistan province highlights the failure of Pakistani authorities to address sectarian violence across the country [7]. Today, the Hazaras are left alone to die as they are not the political or economic strength of Pakistan.
The writer is an ESOL Teacher at Goodwin Community College in Hull and can be contacted at toyounasat@yahoo.co.uk
OUTLOOK AFGHANISTAN
Karzai travels to India amid regional tension
By Reuters
Published: October 4, 2011
A combination of file photos shows Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh (L) during a visit to the presidential palace in Kabul on May 12, 2011, and Afghan President Hamid Karzai (R) at the Presidential palace in Kabul on September 22, 2011. PHOTO: AFP
NEW DELHI: Afghan President Hamid Karzai begins a two-day visit to India on Tuesday that could boost the two countries’ economic ties and lead to an agreement for India to train police in a visit likely to irk Pakistan as tension grows in the region.
(Read: When Karzai comes to Delhi)
India is one of Afghanistan’s biggest bilateral donors, having pledged about $2 billion since the 2001 US led-invasion, for projects from the construction of highways to the building of the Afghan parliament.
India wants to ensure a withdrawal of US troops by 2014 does not lead to a kind of 1990s civil war that spreads militancy across borders. But it also knows its traditional foe Pakistan has far greater influence in Afghanistan.
Karzai’s visit, in which he will meet Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, has been scheduled for months.
But it comes as Afghanistan appears increasingly frustrated with Pakistan, with many senior officials accusing its intelligence agency of masterminding the assassination last month of Burhanuddin Rabbani, Kabul’s chief peace negotiator with the Taliban.
Karzai himself has said there is a Pakistani link to the killing, and investigators he appointed believe the assassin was Pakistani and the suicide bombing was plotted in the Pakistani city of Quetta.
“At this juncture, the visit will cause great heartburn in Islamabad,” said Saeed Naqvi, a fellow at the Observer Research Foundation think-tank in New Delhi.
“That is unfortunate from the Indian perspective because anything achieved in the visit will be seen by Pakistan as an insult.”
Wary of Pakistan, Indian officials have always said they want to focus on what they like to call “soft power” – economic aid and trade. But India could offer more security training to Afghanistan, something almost certain to annoy Pakistan.
India has already trained a small number of officers from the Afghan National Army at defence institutions in India.
Economic focus
But India treads carefully. It suspects Pakistan involvement in several major attacks, including two bombings of its embassy in Kabul in 2008 and 2009, seen as warnings from Islamabad to stay away from its traditional “backyard”.
Without a land border with Afghanistan and dependent on Pakistan for any overland trade, India knows it influence is limited.
“India will want to play its part in keeping Afghanistan stable, but it is focusing mainly on economic ties,” said C. Raja Mohan, senior fellow at New Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research. “It does not does not see itself as a counterbalance to Pakistan. It knows that Pakistan is setting the terms there.”
Karzai may also be wary of upsetting Pakistan, a country crucial for forging any peace deal with the Taliban.
“Karzai wants to sign a strategic deal with India during his trip but it may hurt his recent call on peace talks with Pakistan,” said Ahmad Saidi, a Kabul-based political analyst.
“If Afghanistan want to move forward with a peace process, it should attract Pakistan’s attention.”
India does have historical ties to former Northern Alliance leaders who battled the Taliban in the 1990s.
Some believe that India could increase its influence with these leaders if Afghanistan moves back toward civil war.
But for the moment, trade appears to be what matters.
A consortium led by state-run Steel Authority of India (SAIL) could invest up to $6 billion in mines, railroads and a steel plant in a race with China to lock in raw materials for two of the world’s fastest-growing economies.
The contract for the Hajigak iron ore mines in Bamiyan province is potentially the single biggest foreign investment project in Afghanistan.
THE EXPRESS TRIBUNE
One student’s journey from small-town Balochistan to Harvard University
By Maria Waqar
Published: September 8, 2011
Karrar Hussain Jaffar (left) at his commencement at Harvard University. PHOTO KARRAR HUSSAIN
KARACHI:
Located on the outskirts of Quetta, is the barren valley of Mariabad where the Hazara lead slow-paced lives. These tribal people, living in narrow brick huts speckled along the rugged hillside, typically sell loose cloth, sweaters or tea for their livelihood.
Like most poor people, their aspirations rarely go beyond sustaining themselves in this underdeveloped nook of Balochistan. Many of them live and die in Mariabad — unaware of the complex concerns and tremendous pace of life in urban centres like Karachi and Lahore.
But one student — the son of a trader who sold Quaid-e-Azam style caps in Mariabad for a living — dared to tread a radically different path. Karrar Hussain Jaffar transcended the confines of an obscure town in Balochistan, where people rarely educate themselves beyond matriculation, to study at the prestigious Harvard University. His story — a narrative about the wondrous possibilities of equal educational opportunities — is truly inspirational.
“My childhood friends, with whom I spent my youth playing cricket, drive suzukis and rickshaws in Quetta for a living, while I am a PhD student in the US,” says Karrar in a humble tone. “I often wonder why God chose me, out of all the people in my community, to get ahead in life?”
Karrar attributes his educational achievement to his father’s passion for his children’s higher education. He vividly remembers the chilly morning when his father showed him the ad for Lahore University of Management Sciences’ national outreach programme (NOP), which aimed to sponsor education and living expenses for capable students who could not have afford to pay.
“I was doing my FSc at Cadet college and didn’t even know a single thing about LUMS at that point in time,” he fondly recollects. “I didn’t take the ad seriously because LUMS did not offer engineering, the field I was interested in.”
When he returned back to college from his winter break, he attended a presentation by a LUMS’ faculty member, who introduced students to the national outreach programme.
“At the end of the presentation we all took a pre-screening exam,” he explains. “A few weeks later, I got a letter from LUMS inviting me to attend sponsored classes for SAT preparation.”
During the four weeks he spent rigorously studying for the SATs, he fell in love with LUMS. To him the institution seemed otherworldly; its grand building, spacious classrooms and impressive teachers fascinated him.
“I never knew things could be so orderly and perfect; it was like I was in a foreign country,” he remarks. “I felt very motivated to study hard and join the institution.”
But his herculean struggle with English often left him frustrated.
“I had always dismissed English as a colonial remnant in our country so I really struggled while preparing for the test.”
Yet with utmost dedication, Karrar managed to clear the screening exam at the end of the four-week training and was selected to take the SAT exams, sponsored by the university. After obtaining an impressive score in his SATs, Karrar got admitted in LUMS and was offered a full scholarship and a monthly stipend.
“I came to LUMS in very high spirits,” reminisces the bright student.
But Karrar, who had attended the NOP training program at LUMS during the quiet summer break, had never seen the institution in full semestral bloom. When he saw throngs of students, clad in western wear and fluent in English, emerging from every nook and cranny, his excitement gave way to culture shock.
“I was used to wearing shalwar kamiz, but at LUMS most people were wearing jeans. I would greet people by saying salaam, while the other students would ask ‘what’s up?’” he recollects in an amused tone.
Often feeling like a misfit during his first year at university, Karrar mostly spent his days with other NOP students. “But after a year I managed to befriend other students from Lyceum and Karachi Grammar school.”
He sheepishly adds, “After a year I figured out that ‘what’s up?’ is equivalent to saying salaam.”
Karrar graduated on the Dean’s honour list, with a cumulative grade point average of 3.7 and 3.68 in his majors, Maths and Economics, respectively.
“I got job offers in the banking industry after graduating but I turned them down because I wanted to tread an academic path,” he explains in a categorical tone.
A year after graduating, Karrar got a Fulbright scholarship to study in the US.
“I simply told the interview panel that I want to come back to Balochistan after completing my studies. That’s where my home is; that’s where I belong,” he explains passionately.
But perhaps the most memorable moment in his life — an incident he recalls quite animatedly — was when he found out that he made it to Harvard University.
“I had no internet at home in Mariabad so I walked 15 minutes or so to a nearby internet cafe to check my email for Harvard’s decision,” he explains. “When I saw the acceptance email, I just thought it was too good to be true.”
Yet after he raced back home to reveal the news to his parents, his moment of rapture soon transformed into a session of lengthy clarification.
“My mother asked me what Harvard was and my father asked me to wait for potential offers by other universities” he says with a laugh. “It took a while to convince them that I got into the world’s top university.”
But ironically for a student, who was left disconcerted by the ‘westernised’ student body at LUMS, adjusting to life at an American institution was smooth sailing.
“After LUMS, I was very used to being around different types of people so studying and living in the US was not such a problem.”
Karrar completed his Master’s last year and is currently pursuing a PhD in Economics from the University of Southern California.
What does he want to do with all the knowledge he is amassing?
“I want to increase educational awareness in Balochistan—particularly amongst people from my community,” he says.
The young academic’s goal might seem like the reiteration of the clichéd promise of “development” that many educated Pakistan promise their country. However, Karrar is actually a first-hand witness of how education can revolutionize communities and places.
“Because of all that I achieved, my parents allowed my sister to get college education in Lahore and my brother got the motivation to get a scholarship to study in Australia,” he says with a hint of pride.
Karrar confesses that most of his family and friends cannot even comprehend what his life is like in the US. But he is fairly confident that after he returns, he can change that.
“I can make them realise the value of education,” he says.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2011.
Published: September 8, 2011
Karrar Hussain Jaffar (left) at his commencement at Harvard University. PHOTO KARRAR HUSSAIN
KARACHI:
Located on the outskirts of Quetta, is the barren valley of Mariabad where the Hazara lead slow-paced lives. These tribal people, living in narrow brick huts speckled along the rugged hillside, typically sell loose cloth, sweaters or tea for their livelihood.
Like most poor people, their aspirations rarely go beyond sustaining themselves in this underdeveloped nook of Balochistan. Many of them live and die in Mariabad — unaware of the complex concerns and tremendous pace of life in urban centres like Karachi and Lahore.
But one student — the son of a trader who sold Quaid-e-Azam style caps in Mariabad for a living — dared to tread a radically different path. Karrar Hussain Jaffar transcended the confines of an obscure town in Balochistan, where people rarely educate themselves beyond matriculation, to study at the prestigious Harvard University. His story — a narrative about the wondrous possibilities of equal educational opportunities — is truly inspirational.
“My childhood friends, with whom I spent my youth playing cricket, drive suzukis and rickshaws in Quetta for a living, while I am a PhD student in the US,” says Karrar in a humble tone. “I often wonder why God chose me, out of all the people in my community, to get ahead in life?”
Karrar attributes his educational achievement to his father’s passion for his children’s higher education. He vividly remembers the chilly morning when his father showed him the ad for Lahore University of Management Sciences’ national outreach programme (NOP), which aimed to sponsor education and living expenses for capable students who could not have afford to pay.
“I was doing my FSc at Cadet college and didn’t even know a single thing about LUMS at that point in time,” he fondly recollects. “I didn’t take the ad seriously because LUMS did not offer engineering, the field I was interested in.”
When he returned back to college from his winter break, he attended a presentation by a LUMS’ faculty member, who introduced students to the national outreach programme.
“At the end of the presentation we all took a pre-screening exam,” he explains. “A few weeks later, I got a letter from LUMS inviting me to attend sponsored classes for SAT preparation.”
During the four weeks he spent rigorously studying for the SATs, he fell in love with LUMS. To him the institution seemed otherworldly; its grand building, spacious classrooms and impressive teachers fascinated him.
“I never knew things could be so orderly and perfect; it was like I was in a foreign country,” he remarks. “I felt very motivated to study hard and join the institution.”
But his herculean struggle with English often left him frustrated.
“I had always dismissed English as a colonial remnant in our country so I really struggled while preparing for the test.”
Yet with utmost dedication, Karrar managed to clear the screening exam at the end of the four-week training and was selected to take the SAT exams, sponsored by the university. After obtaining an impressive score in his SATs, Karrar got admitted in LUMS and was offered a full scholarship and a monthly stipend.
“I came to LUMS in very high spirits,” reminisces the bright student.
But Karrar, who had attended the NOP training program at LUMS during the quiet summer break, had never seen the institution in full semestral bloom. When he saw throngs of students, clad in western wear and fluent in English, emerging from every nook and cranny, his excitement gave way to culture shock.
“I was used to wearing shalwar kamiz, but at LUMS most people were wearing jeans. I would greet people by saying salaam, while the other students would ask ‘what’s up?’” he recollects in an amused tone.
Often feeling like a misfit during his first year at university, Karrar mostly spent his days with other NOP students. “But after a year I managed to befriend other students from Lyceum and Karachi Grammar school.”
He sheepishly adds, “After a year I figured out that ‘what’s up?’ is equivalent to saying salaam.”
Karrar graduated on the Dean’s honour list, with a cumulative grade point average of 3.7 and 3.68 in his majors, Maths and Economics, respectively.
“I got job offers in the banking industry after graduating but I turned them down because I wanted to tread an academic path,” he explains in a categorical tone.
A year after graduating, Karrar got a Fulbright scholarship to study in the US.
“I simply told the interview panel that I want to come back to Balochistan after completing my studies. That’s where my home is; that’s where I belong,” he explains passionately.
But perhaps the most memorable moment in his life — an incident he recalls quite animatedly — was when he found out that he made it to Harvard University.
“I had no internet at home in Mariabad so I walked 15 minutes or so to a nearby internet cafe to check my email for Harvard’s decision,” he explains. “When I saw the acceptance email, I just thought it was too good to be true.”
Yet after he raced back home to reveal the news to his parents, his moment of rapture soon transformed into a session of lengthy clarification.
“My mother asked me what Harvard was and my father asked me to wait for potential offers by other universities” he says with a laugh. “It took a while to convince them that I got into the world’s top university.”
But ironically for a student, who was left disconcerted by the ‘westernised’ student body at LUMS, adjusting to life at an American institution was smooth sailing.
“After LUMS, I was very used to being around different types of people so studying and living in the US was not such a problem.”
Karrar completed his Master’s last year and is currently pursuing a PhD in Economics from the University of Southern California.
What does he want to do with all the knowledge he is amassing?
“I want to increase educational awareness in Balochistan—particularly amongst people from my community,” he says.
The young academic’s goal might seem like the reiteration of the clichéd promise of “development” that many educated Pakistan promise their country. However, Karrar is actually a first-hand witness of how education can revolutionize communities and places.
“Because of all that I achieved, my parents allowed my sister to get college education in Lahore and my brother got the motivation to get a scholarship to study in Australia,” he says with a hint of pride.
Karrar confesses that most of his family and friends cannot even comprehend what his life is like in the US. But he is fairly confident that after he returns, he can change that.
“I can make them realise the value of education,” he says.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2011.
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