Saeed Urrehman December 21, 2007
#5 Posted by mangotree on January 16, 2008 10:09:11 am
A well-written article especially the part about losing weight made me really laugh.
#4 Posted by TaheraSajid on January 8, 2008 6:19:13 pm
A thought-provoking read, Saeed Urrehman. Selfish motives, diverse perspectives and simple pleasures...that's life.
#3 Posted by Xafay on December 31, 2007 2:37:10 am
My Text-Book sort of comments:
It is a good record of a normal night life in the 'cultural capital' of the contemporary confused society of Pakistan. Where the narrator is trying to address the intellectual demands standardized by the developed countries while at the same time showing his preference for the local flavors over the 'others'. Followed by a good commentary on the collective indifference of this society towards its surroundings but on the other hand their futile but 'juicy gossip' about the global and local politics.
Amjad and Mehboob present the dichotomy that most of the Pakistanis are trapped in. Amjad, while doing a 'sinful' act is asking for forgiveness, while Mehboob clearly making fun of the 'holy war' and its promised fruits in the hereafter. Pakistanis are stuck in the land which was declared a Secular-Islamic state and we still don't know actually who made this country? We haven't yet decided that any exploitation/offense is a sin or a crime.
This story is a beautiful depiction of this confusion.
The answer to Nikhat's rhetorical question: If just by being part of life can justify these, then everything is justified, as everything is part of life.
It is a good record of a normal night life in the 'cultural capital' of the contemporary confused society of Pakistan. Where the narrator is trying to address the intellectual demands standardized by the developed countries while at the same time showing his preference for the local flavors over the 'others'. Followed by a good commentary on the collective indifference of this society towards its surroundings but on the other hand their futile but 'juicy gossip' about the global and local politics.
Amjad and Mehboob present the dichotomy that most of the Pakistanis are trapped in. Amjad, while doing a 'sinful' act is asking for forgiveness, while Mehboob clearly making fun of the 'holy war' and its promised fruits in the hereafter. Pakistanis are stuck in the land which was declared a Secular-Islamic state and we still don't know actually who made this country? We haven't yet decided that any exploitation/offense is a sin or a crime.
This story is a beautiful depiction of this confusion.
The answer to Nikhat's rhetorical question: If just by being part of life can justify these, then everything is justified, as everything is part of life.
#2 Posted by Nikhat on December 26, 2007 11:09:53 pm
Great! Good description of the paradoxical situations we are encountering, the strangest choices we are making daily as a conscientious person who harbours insight, virutes, philosiphical mind and faith also.
But don't you think these contradictions, the ironies, the absurdities is what the life is all about and makes it soooooo.....well...life like?
Nikhat Riaz
But don't you think these contradictions, the ironies, the absurdities is what the life is all about and makes it soooooo.....well...life like?
Nikhat Riaz
#1 Posted by Rukhsana-shama on December 26, 2007 10:48:58 pm
you did it really well, by explaining the extremes in the thought processes of the present youth (can i say youth for these???;)
we are a confused generation by and large, in terms of religion, cultural norms and fastly changing world...all we need to do is to think rationally...and in order to think rationally we have to shed our individual biases first.
we are a confused generation by and large, in terms of religion, cultural norms and fastly changing world...all we need to do is to think rationally...and in order to think rationally we have to shed our individual biases first.
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