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Cultural Connect

Pakistan has been able, sporadically, to infuse a momentary impact and presence in the American consciousness of the great treasure of the Pakistani cultural heritage and its vibrant contemporary reality.

By Senator (r) Javed Jabbar | July 2022

On 24th June 2022 the US Consulate-General in Karachi hosted the screening of two out of eight short films made by young Pakistani and Indian film-makers under a US-sponsored programme titled “Kitne Duur Kitne Paas” (How Far, How Close ). A laudable initiative. Except that, I said to be one of the hosts:

“The only subject missing is Kashmir. There should be an attempt to collaborate on a jointly made film on that subject.” Predictably, the Counsel General smiled and rightly expressed scepticism that such a hypothetical film could be made jointly, or if done, could ever be screened in Pakistan or India. He was probably right. But that does not diminish the need for such a project. (The films can be viewed on the internet via the Seeds of Peace website).

Be that as it may, the project theme applies as pertinently to the Pakistan-India relationship, including the cultural dimension, as it does to the Pakistan- American relationship. Distant from each other by about 10,000 miles, the two countries have remained fitfully, variably close yet uneasy with each other over the past 75 years.

There is the sharp contrast in the reach and spread of their respective communication frontiers. America’s media frontiers embrace the entire globe, as omni-present as its 800 military bases and centres, large and small, that are located around the world.

Pakistan’s communication frontiers are far more limited.

Even through social media, and with coverage in news media virtually exclusively focused on the negative, violent aspects, Pakistan has only a nominal, fleeting presence in American media. Our own media barely, or never, penetrate the insulated American media ecosystem.

There is a deep nexus between culture and media, specially when we view culture, as it is generally perceived, to be the array of music, cinema, theatre, literature, poetry, painting, sculpture, dance and other art forms, such as folk arts that a society generates and presents to itself and to other countries. But even when we view culture in a holistic, all-encompassing way, media remain a fundamental conduit for self-expression by a society, both as a mirror and as an external projection to others.

The Pakistan-American cultural connect is shaped by geopolitics, respective states’ self-interests, technology, trade, travel, broader altruistic frameworks, e.g. the United Nations, the specific interest taken by particular governments in office at given times in the subject of promoting conventional cultural exchange.

Between 1947 and 2022, the bilateral cultural relationship has been predominantly shaped by the USA. Just as the same pattern has occurred in most other countries that do not possess the worldwide reach of Uncle Sam. Behind America’s obvious thirst for global supremacy, accentuated after the Second World War and challenged with the rise of China since the 1990s, is, to be fair to America, enormous creative, technological, financial energy and freedom of exploration and of expression, the result of the First Amendment to the US Constitution which bars restriction on the right of freedom of expression, except for incitement to violence and other excessive extremes.

In Pakistan, the vast, inherent talent and potential for creative expression in myriad forms drawing strength from a rich civilizational history and intricate cultural tapestry of thousands of years is, comparatively, stilted and suffocated due to repressive forces being permitted by the state to prevent spontaneity and creativity from flowering, in the name of misinterpreted religious beliefs and primitive social practices. Which is not to suggest that Pakistan should follow in the footsteps of America where it comes to making the name of Jesus Christ an exclamation mark, and worse, prefixing the Prophet’s name with a four-letter word, and being allowed to do so in cinema and TV in the name of freedom of expression. In some irreducible respects, never the twain shall --- or should ! --- meet.

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