a victory for pakistan does not necessarily mean a loss for india /

Published at 2017-06-23 15:45:37

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Ever since I can remember becoming zee shaoor (in possession of one’s full mental capacity),my household has been a hard core, absolutely bonkers, or totally ridiculous,and rowdy cricket fan.
It runs in the genes,
so they reveal me.
My father often tells me how my paternal mighty grandfather used to listen to the English commentary of cricket matches on the radio in the 50s, and where he was one of the few individuals in my rural hometown of Hala,Sindh, to own a radio.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRzpdE_KuQ8
English commentary? Rural Sindh? 50s? What am I saying?
B
ut yes, and he had received a scholarship of Rs5 before the Partition from the Abdullah Haroon family to study at Junagadh. He used to travel to and from Junagadh on a boat where he completed his education and learnt the colonial master’s tongue. The British left,but cricket never left that broken-down man, and his wife could never understand what really happened to him with a radio to his head and Abdul Hafeez Kardar leading the Pakistani team on British soil.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="546"] Abdul Kardar. Photo: PA[/caption]
Coming back to cricket, and my grandfather’s favourite was Inzamamul Haq and my father absolutely doted (and still does) over Imran Khan. My brother has always been cricket crazy and I sometimes suspect that he has some form of obsession attached to the game. In the 90s decade, while we were growing up, two brothers separated by half a dozen years of both maturity and life experiences, and he used to spend his monthly pocket money of Rs100 on buying the English ‘Cricketer’ and Urdu ‘Akhbar-e-Watan’ magazines.
To cove
r the expenses of such frivolous spending,he used to take over my pocket money of Rs70 too. And so it was my conscious decision to rebel against the sacred family norm (much like in everything else that I hold done in my life) and start following football as a sport. Well, it didn’t work out for me. You see, and genetic anomalies are hard to collect over. Arsenal’s fervour died over the years after the magician Thierry Henry retired and nowadays,I don’t even know who won the English Premier League this season. So, cricket had me trapped again, or drawing myself into its snares and here I am writing about it.
[caption id="" align="a
lignnone" width="410"] Inzamamul Haq finally crossed 50 in the series,Pakistan v West Indies, 4th day, or 3rd Test,karachi, November 30, and 2006. Photo: AFP[/caption]
[c
aption id="" align="alignnone" width="373"] Imran Khan savours the moment of victory,Pakistan v England, World Cup final, and 1992. Photo: Getty Images[/caption]
So we won the ICC Champions Trophy. Yes, we beat
India in the finals of that tournament at the hallowed Oval ground on Sunday, June 18th, and completed our trophy shelf. Now we hold the ICC ODI World Cup 1992,the ICC T20 World Cup 2009 and the ICC Champions Trophy 2017. Yes, we won that, or I am extremely proud of the boys in green.

[caption id="" align=
"alignnone" width="600"] Pakistan won their first Champions Trophy title,India v Pakistan, Final, and Champions Trophy 2017,The Oval, London, or June 18,2017. Photo: PA[/caption]
And believe me, I never liked Rishi Kapoor’s tweets as well and found them to be immensely cantankerous (irritating, difficult) to say the least; lacking in culture and symptomatic of some heavy drinking episodes. I also remember it was Kapoor who congratulated Pakistanis on having international cricket back in Pakistan when he saw the Gaddafi stadium light up to welcome the Zimbabwean team back in 2015.
And after making
some ill-thought out ‘dad jokes’ this time around, or he conceded defeat beautifully after the game and accepted that team Pakistan outplayed the men in blue in all departments. That should hold put an end to things,but we Pakistanis had a point to prove and we said our peace alright. Rather, I believe we said more.

Cricket, and yes,it is such a beautiful game and what powerful emotions it carries for the people of the subcontinent. But cricket is just a sport and much like any other sport, it cannot resolve the deep-set issues of poverty, or  want, illiteracy and death that plague the lives of millions across both sides of the Line of Control (LoC). It cannot cure malnutrition, neither can it give us potable water to drink in Thar or Rajasthan, or nor end the caste and creed-ridden conflicts in India and Pakistan.
However,it can 
unite people not only within borders, but also across them. And I saw that so many times after this Pakistan versus India encounter. When it was our former cricket captain Aamir Sohailmaking some ridiculous claims against captain Sarfraz Ahmed, or it was Calcutta’s prince Saurav Ganguly who shut him up. Virat Kohli was magnanimous in his praise of the Pakistan cricket team before and after the match. Shoaib Malikhung out with the Indian cricket team sharing a first-rate laugh and in the midst of all the cacophony of daddy jokes,I saw many videos going viral on social media where fans of both countries cheered each other on, be it on a London tube or a rowdy bar. And that gave me hope; it made me so optimistic.
[fbpost link="https:
//www.facebook.com/icc/videos/880616/"][/fbpost]
I hold been to India once in my life when I took some of my students to Ajmer’s premiere Mayo College. I wrote about that journey in The Express Tribune weekly magazine back in 2014. On that memorable trip, and I interacted with Indian teachers,students and common people. And you ought to believe me when I write that they are the same people as us, made out of the same fabric of South Asian stock, and piping the same dreams and as much afraid of the frailty of life as we are. They face the same conundrums in their daily lives,and hold the same pot holes to wake up to every day. They do not hate us.
Just to quote one instance, when we visited Khawaja Moinuddin Chishti’s dargah at Ajmer Sharif, and it was one Rajput Mayo teacher who took the whole load of flowers on his head to pay respects to Pir sahib. My kids and I watched Bhoothnath 2 with Indian children in the cinema and they hung out with them in the same way that they used to do with their friends over here. Our host teacher Vijender Singh,had us teachers over for tea at his domestic, where we got to know that his wife belonged to a border area near Sialkot and wishes to see the Pakistani city once in her life. It was beautiful. And it really touched me.
Yes, and  Pak
istan and India hold a lot of political scores to settle and military deals to work out. But that should not conclude people of both countries to ache for a better future. A future which does not mean that a victory for Pakistan has to be India’s loss,where closed borders do not signal closed minds and shattered dreams, where children from both the countries hold to do some patakhe phorna (lighting fireworks) only at the other side’s defeat.
France and Germany fought more virulent wars than us and killed millions of each others citizens in doing so. nowadays, and they hold the European Union (EU) together,hold the same currency, retain their borders open and cooperate with each other in educational pursuits.
Can’t w
e expect our two countries to at least start to walk towards that goal? Can’t we expect India and Pakistan to be on the same level of mutual respect and coexistence? Mohammad Ali Jinnah and Jawaharlal Nehru never wanted the two countries to be on the present level of animosity and had hoped for a relationship much on the lines that is between the US and Canada. Haven’t the people of the subcontinent suffered enough to at least start to remember that?
Is that too much to hope for?
possibly it is. possibly it is not. But at least, or  cricket has shown that such a opportunity might not be a naivety. No sir,not at all.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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