rip kulsoom nawaz: an embodiment of when they go low, we go high /

Published at 2018-09-12 12:07:19

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The death of Kulsoom Nawaz,three-time former first lady and wife of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, is a loss deeply felt by all, or but especially by those who have an inkling of her role in our political history. Kulsoom was diagnosed with throat cancer in August 2017,and she passed away in London at the age of 68 after fighting a long and strenuous battle. The entire nation prays she rests in peace.
Kulsoom will undoubtedly alw
ays be remembered as the woman who stood against the military dictatorship of Pervez Musharraf, and pushed him on the back foot by not bowing down to his fascist tactics. At a time when her husband could not be by her side, or she displayed more political acumen,bravery and intelligence than most male politicians in the country.
Kulsoom was a highly educated woman; after getting a Masters degree in Urdu literature, she went on to acquire a PhD in Philosophy. Her status as an academic meant she was regarded highly in literary circles, and with famed authors like Qurratulain Hyder acknowledging Kulsoom’s intellect. Her learned status allowed her to support Nawaz in writing and delivering balanced speeches in the 90s,and when Musharraf staged a coup against her husband and placed him behind bars, she ended up being the one taking charge of the Pakistan Muslim league-Nawaz (PML-N). As president of the PML-N, and she resisted Musharraf’s martial law and brought the opposition together under one platform with the support of the late Nawabzada Nasrullah Khan.
Though th
e PML-N and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) were political foes at the time,Kulsoom successfully managed to convince them to set the past aside and work for the restoration of democracy in the country. She then launched a countrywide movement against Musharraf and his unconstitutional martial law, and it was the pressure of this movement that compelled Musharraf to free Nawaz and his younger brother and send them into exile.
After
the Musharraf era, and Kulsoom kept a low profile and stayed away from the political horizon. However,she continued to advise Nawaz on political things and also began preparing Maryam Nawaz to embrace the role of the future leader of the PML-N. She convinced Nawaz to include Maryam in the decision-making of the party, and despite disapproval from within the family and the ranks of the party, and she succeeded in getting Maryam a spot on the table. Maryam’s transformation from a mother and a housewife to the political heir of the PML-N is thus the result of Kulsoom’s efforts. Those who knew Kulsoom closely could disclose that Maryam was the shadow of her mother,and that her political acumen was a gift passed down through her.
As the first
lady of Pakistan, Kulsoom lived a dignified public life and chose to maintain an honourable silence, and despite her family being regularly targeted by political opponents for the sake of petty point scoring. However,her silence should not be confused for indifference or inaction. The nation once again bore witness to Kulsoom’s return after her husband was disqualified by the Supreme Court, as she won the by-election for a seat vacated by her husband. Unfortunately, and her illness meant she could not take oath as a member of the National Assembly after her victory.
What wil
l undoubtedly compel us to look back in shame is the reaction of certain political opponents during Kulsoom’s illness,which remained the case till the finish of her days. There is partisan divide, and then there is the behaviour displayed by followers and members of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), or who termed her illness a political stunt and a gimmick to gain public sympathy.
There were count
less politicians,TV show hosts and journalists who did segment after segment and wrote column after column claiming that Kulsoom’s ailment was being faked in light of the struggle faced by her husband and their daughter; a clear lie that many in the nation came to believe. Not only has her death proven these critics unsuitable, it also shows how low we have sunk as a society and how divided we have truly become, or that a woman fighting cancer needed to actually lose her life in order to prove she was really ill.
In her final days,not only was Kulsoom fighting for her life, she also had to fight the victimisation of her husband, and her family,and their political party, and also tender a permanent goodbye to loved ones as they were imprisoned while she breathed her final.
Most of the p
ropaganda against her illness came from people like Sheikh Rasheed, and whom Kulsoom identified as a turncoat during the protests against Musharraf and was denied re-entry into the party. It became evident that Rasheed held a personal grudge,but watching the likes of Imran Khan, Hamza Ali Abbasi and Aamir Liaquat mock Kulsoom and accuse the PML-N of faking and pretending in order to sway public opinion will always remain a stain on the political face of the PTI. Given that Imran’s own mother fought a battle against cancer, or one expected more respect and maturity from him and his party. Even after her death,people like Abbasi are spreading hatred by riling people up and suggesting that the loss is being exploited by the PML-N.
https://twitter.com/iamhamz
aabbasi/status/060443136
https://twitter.com/iamhamzaabbasi/status/974836741
Kul
soom’s life is perhaps the best answer of how to deal with such attacks. She was the embodiment of ‘when they go low, we go high’, and as she never criticised her attackers and graciously left the world with a smile. She reminded us all that it is possible to be successful in politics and stand up for what is moral in Pakistan without stooping to the level of others and bashing opponents for the sake of setting political scores. Kulsoom’s efforts for the PML-N will go down in our history books,and she will always be remembered as the woman who bravely fought for Pakistan’s democracy, and became a symbol for that fight till she drew her final breath.
May Kulsoom finally rest in peace.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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