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Why My Father Hated India
Aatish Taseer, the son of an assassinated Pakistani leader, explains
the history and hysteria behind a deadly relationship
By AATISH TASEER

Ten days before he was assassinated in January, my father, Salman
Taseer, sent out a tweet about an Indian rocket that had come down
over the Bay of Bengal: "Why does India make fools of themselves
messing in space technology? Stick 2 bollywood my advice."

My father was the governor of Punjab, Pakistan's largest province, and
his tweet, with its taunt at India's misfortune, would have delighted
his many thousands of followers. It fed straight into Pakistan's
unhealthy obsession with India, the country from which it was carved
in 1947.

Though my father's attitude went down well in Pakistan, it had caused
considerable tension between us. I am half-Indian, raised in Delhi by
my Indian mother: India is a country that I consider my own. When my
father was killed by one of his own bodyguards for defending a
Christian woman accused of blasphemy, we had not spoken for three
years.

To understand the Pakistani obsession with India, to get a sense of
its special edge—its hysteria—it is necessary to understand the
rejection of India, its culture and past, that lies at the heart of
the idea of Pakistan. This is not merely an academic question.
Pakistan's animus toward India is the cause of both its unwillingness
to fight Islamic extremism and its active complicity in undermining
the aims of its ostensible ally, the United States.

The idea of Pakistan was first seriously formulated by neither a
cleric nor a politician but by a poet. In 1930, Muhammad Iqbal,
addressing the All-India Muslim league, made the case for a state in
which India's Muslims would realize their "political and ethical
essence." Though he was always vague about what the new state would
be, he was quite clear about what it would not be: the old pluralistic
society of India, with its composite culture.

Iqbal's vision took concrete shape in August 1947. Despite the
partition of British India, it had seemed at first that there would be
no transfer of populations. But violence erupted, and it quickly
became clear that in the new homeland for India's Muslims, there would
be no place for its non-Muslim communities. Pakistan and India came
into being at the cost of a million lives and the largest migration in
history.

This shared experience of carnage and loss is the foundation of the
modern relationship between the two countries. In human terms, it
meant that each of my parents, my father in Pakistan and my mother in
India, grew up around symmetrically violent stories of uprooting and
homelessness.

But in Pakistan, the partition had another, deeper meaning. It raised
big questions, in cultural and civilizational terms, about what its
separation from India would mean.

In the absence of a true national identity, Pakistan defined itself by
its opposition to India. It turned its back on all that had been
common between Muslims and non-Muslims in the era before partition.
Everything came under suspicion, from dress to customs to festivals,
marriage rituals and literature. The new country set itself the task
of erasing its association with the subcontinent, an association that
many came to view as a contamination.

Had this assertion of national identity meant the casting out of
something alien or foreign in favor of an organic or homegrown
identity, it might have had an empowering effect. What made it
self-wounding, even nihilistic, was that Pakistan, by asserting a new
Arabized Islamic identity, rejected its own local and regional
culture. In trying to turn its back on its shared past with India,
Pakistan turned its back on itself.

But there was one problem: India was just across the border, and it
was still its composite, pluralistic self, a place where nearly as
many Muslims lived as in Pakistan. It was a daily reminder of the past
that Pakistan had tried to erase.

Pakistan's existential confusion made itself apparent in the political
turmoil of the decades after partition. The state failed to perform a
single legal transfer of power; coups were commonplace. And yet, in
1980, my father would still have felt that the partition had not been
a mistake, for one critical reason: India, for all its democracy and
pluralism, was an economic disaster.

Pakistan had better roads, better cars; Pakistani businesses were
thriving; its citizens could take foreign currency abroad. Compared
with starving, socialist India, they were on much surer ground. So
what if India had democracy? It had brought nothing but drought and
famine.

But in the early 1990s, a reversal began to occur in the fortunes of
the two countries. The advantage that Pakistan had seemed to enjoy in
the years after independence evaporated, as it became clear that the
quest to rid itself of its Indian identity had come at a price: the
emergence of a new and dangerous brand of Islam.

As India rose, thanks to economic liberalization, Pakistan withered.
The country that had begun as a poet's utopia was reduced to ruin and
insolvency.

The primary agent of this decline has been the Pakistani army. The
beneficiary of vast amounts of American assistance and money—$11
billion since 9/11—the military has diverted a significant amount of
these resources to arming itself against India. In Afghanistan, it has
sought neither security nor stability but rather a backyard,
which—once the Americans leave—might provide Pakistan with "strategic
depth" against India.

In order to realize these objectives, the Pakistani army has led the
U.S. in a dance, in which it had to be seen to be fighting the war on
terror, but never so much as to actually win it, for its extension
meant the continuing flow of American money. All this time the army
kept alive a double game, in which some terror was fought and
some—such as Laskhar-e-Tayyba's 2008 attack on Mumbai—actively
supported.

The army's duplicity was exposed decisively this May, with the killing
of Osama bin Laden in the garrison town of Abbottabad. It was only the
last and most incriminating charge against an institution whose
activities over the years have included the creation of the Taliban,
the financing of international terrorism and the running of a
lucrative trade in nuclear secrets.

This army, whose might has always been justified by the imaginary
threat from India, has been more harmful to Pakistan than to anybody
else. It has consumed annually a quarter of the country's wealth,
undermined one civilian government after another and enriched itself
through a range of economic interests, from bakeries and shopping
malls to huge property holdings.

The reversal in the fortunes of the two countries—India's sudden
prosperity and cultural power, seen next to the calamity of Muhammad
Iqbal's unrealized utopia—is what explains the bitterness of my
father's tweet just days before he died. It captures the rage of being
forced to reject a culture of which you feel effortlessly a part—a
culture that Pakistanis, via Bollywood, experience daily in their
homes.

This rage is what makes it impossible to reduce Pakistan's obsession
with India to matters of security or a land dispute in Kashmir. It can
heal only when the wounds of 1947 are healed. And it should provoke no
triumphalism in India, for behind the bluster and the bravado, there
is arid pain and sadness.

—Mr. Taseer is the author of "Stranger to History: A Son's Journey
Through Islamic Lands." His second novel, "Noon," will be published in
the U.S. in September.

-- 
Marge: Quick, somebody perform CPR!
Homer: Umm (singing) I see a bad moon rising.
Marge: That's CCR!
Homer: Looks like we're in for nasty weather.
Sudhakar Chandra                                    Slacker Without Borders

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