To a lady, nay, a lioness called Asma - I pay my humble tribute
A beacon of hope she was to the oppressed and mute
Who lit a divine
torch of love, peace, liberty and goodwill
Whose loss
sends in our hearts a deep, painful, unending chill
Let's salute this lioness amongst pygmies
We in India must shed tears over the untimely death of this brave, unorthodox, unconventional, enlightened,
liberated woman- at least those of us who are not jingoists but patriots in
real, liberal sense. In the present times when dark gloomy clouds of mutual
hatred, muscle flexing, abuse, eye-for-an-eye kind of attitude loom low and
ominous over our sub-continent, she was one of the few crusaders for peace,
amity and goodwill between the people of two nations, India and Pakistan.
Besides being a zealous champion for human rights and liberty, it was she who
helped found Pakistan-India Peoples’ Forum for Peace and Democracy (PIPFPD).
And no less significant is the point that she was not an Indian but from the
Taliban-infested, crisis-ridden and violence-scarred land of Pakistan where
human life sells dirt cheap and such intrepid voices attract bullets rather
than applause. Well, she was Asma Jahangir. As you must have read in the news,
she died last Sunday, the 11th of February, at the young age of 66,
felled not by a fanatic’s bullet but sadly, owing to a heart attack. And at a time
when the common people of India and Pakistan, people like you and me, needed
her the most. Asma Jahangir was an advocate by profession and the first woman
president of Pakistan’s Supreme Court Bar. She was a lady with the guts - a lioness among pygmies I would say - to take the
all-powerful Pakistan army head-on for its anti-India approach, its war
rhetoric, for paddling terrorism and for the ongoing sordid drama of death and
destruction across the Indo-Pak border. Besides that she was an irrepressible
voice for women, minorities and the LGBT community.
She
was a frequent visitor to India and had a sizeable number of admirers,
supporters, associates, followers and fans (myself included) in India who
shared her vision and joined her mission for mutual peace with hope and gusto.
When
in India she was not the one to be cowed down by the diehard, misguided,
anti-Pakistan fanatics, and fundamentalists. She was as forthright and
outspoken in her views here as in Pakistan. Therefore – as I read in the
obituary to her in a newspaper – she had no hesitation in asking bold and blunt questions from the big and mighty in India such as Bal Thackeray on his
politics of revenge and retaliation when she happened to meet him… the Bal Thackeray
feared and dreaded by even the most powerful and the rich in India…and before
whom the bigwigs of film industry have squirmed, cowered before and payed due
obeisance to just to keep him in good humour.
The
liberated souls like Asma Jahangir are rare and an almost extinct species. Both
in India and more so in Pakistan. Particularly in these times: when bigotry and
jingoism are rearing their ugly heads like never before; when communal, caste
and religious hatred are radicalizing the nation like never before; when
‘intolerance’ is at an ascendant to the extent that even movies like ‘Padmavat’
are being sought to be banned through sheer goondagardi; where under the veneer
of (perverted) logic of 'religious sentiments' or ‘old values’, even perfectly inoffensive scenes
and songs are being violently protested against by the goons in the land of
Kamasutra and Khajuraho.
Asma
Jahangir, you leave a huge void in the sub-continent. May your kind, loving,
never-to-die soul rest in eternal peace! May the rich legacy of courage,
goodness, harmony and amity that you left behind keep on inspiring us!
***



She will be missed. RIP Asma Jahangir!
ReplyDeleteYes dear SA; in fact sorely missed.
ReplyDeleteThanks.
Her life can be summed up as,"Cowards die many times before their death,valiant dies but once".
ReplyDeleteVery rightly said.
DeleteThanks
Very upright and bold lady. Especially being in a country where its hard for a lady to find her right place. A pleasure to read your views on her.........May her soul Rest In Peace........We do need more women like her.....
ReplyDelete