pakistan 2015
TRANSCRIPT
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Pakistan formed part of the Mughal Empire, and more recently, together with India and Bangladesh, was part of the British Empire. On independence in 1947 the state of Pakistan
was formed with two wings, West and East. In 1971, after a war, East Pakistan seceded and became the separate country of Bangladesh. Pakistan has five main ethnic groups of its 147 million population, they speak seven main languages and 97% of them are Muslim.
Note to images: where not attributed, the pre-1975 pictures are taken from ‘Women of Pakistan’, a book produced by the Government of Pakistan for International Women’s Year, 1975.
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Women in political struggleWomen in political struggle
Prior to independence from British rule and the creation of Pakistan in 1947 a number of women were involved in the struggles for female emancipation and independence from colonial rule. Women’s dress depended, then as now, on region, class and occasion. The sheer variety of dress has dwindled over the years with a move towards shalwar kurtas (baggy trousers and tunics) becoming the standard.
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Mohtarma Miss Fatima Jinnah, sister of Pakistan’s founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, was prominent in all public arenas and the first Muslim woman to contest the presidency in 1965.
Raana Liaqat Ali, wife of Pakistan’s first Prime
Minister, and founder of the All Pakistan Women’s Association was the first woman ambassador and
provincial governor.
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Fatima Jinnah and Raana Liaqat Ali both wore the ghararas, a loose divided skirt. Ghararas are now only worn in weddings.
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Jahanara Shahnawaz
Shaista Ikramullah, representing Pakistan in a UN conference 1956-57
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The two women members of the first
Constituent Assembly (1946-54) are both in saris.
Saris were commonly worn by urban professional women in West Pakistan (now Pakistan) until the late 1970s.
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A pro-independence procession of Muslim women in pre-independence days.
Demonstration in front of Women’s Jail, Lahore, which had in it many Muslim women arrested by the British Government.
“The national struggle threw many women into the limelight as determined freedom fighters. Hundreds of them filled British jails. The story of the young girl who, defying the Police, scaled the walls to hoist the Muslim League flag atop the Punjab Assembly building in Lahore, has now become
a legend.”
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Begum Nusrat Bhutto, 1975, wife of the Prime Minister on the frontispiece of ‘Women of Pakistan’ wearing a sari. So called ‘Islamization’ under General Zia ul Haq’s dictatorship (1977-1988) branded the sari as an ‘unIslamic’ form of dress. The sari is now making a comeback in fashionable circles but sarong-like lungis and laachas as well as other traditional dresses considered ‘peasant’ wear are steadily disappearing.
“The dream of an egalitarian social order based on a just and democratic economic system will never
come true if the female half of the population continues to be the subservient sex.”
Begum Nusrat Bhutto, wife of Prime Minister Zulfikhar Ali Bhutto, March 1975. Pakistan took an active part in the 1975
International Women’s Year and Nusrat led the delegation to the UN’s first women’s conference in 1975.
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Women’s Action Forum protests the rape and murder of the Masoom sisters.Lahore, 1987. Azhar Jafri
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Women in Karachi protesting against water shortages in 2001.Note that the photographer has chosen to show the women with covered faces, and perhaps they have chosen
to cover for reasons of anonymity. AFP, The Nation, March 2001
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Women activists of Pakistan Peoples Party (one of two major political parties) protest against Maulana Niazi’s fatwa against Benazir Bhutto.
Ishaq Chaudhry – The Muslim 12 August 1992
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Women from one of the mainstream politico-religious parties Jamaat-e-Islami protesting outside the Supreme Court against Qazi Hussain Ahmed’s imprisonment – one of the leaders of the Jamaat-e-Islami. They have filed
a petition against his arrest and are therefore making the ‘Peace’/’Victory’ sign. The Daily – Pakistan – Lahore, January 2002
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Women protesting against the closure of a polling station at its regulatory time arguing that they were already waiting inside the station to vote. T-shirts, Iranian style chador and scarf mingle with local fashion.
AFP. Women voters, 1988 General Elections
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March 8th celebration (1998, Sindh province).
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Women at WorkWomen at Work
These women’s class, backgrounds and status show through their dress as clearly as through the work they do…
Working class fast food outlet, Lahore.
K M Chaudry, The Muslim, March 1990
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Karachi Stock Exchange workers.
AFP, The Nation, September 1999
Harvesting wheat in Punjab (2000)
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Women crossing the dried up Indus river in search of water, Sindh Province.
AFP, The Nation, March 2001
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Drama artists rehearsing in Radio Pakistan’s studio in Rawalpindi.
In the 1960s kameez (tunics) were short and the shalwar wide. None of the women has
covered her head with the dupatta.
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Farming family from a village in Sindh.
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Sorting scrap metal at a Lahore factory.
AFP, Daily Times, May 2003
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SportsSports
Pakistan has always had a strong sporting tradition. In 1975 the Government was very proud and supportive of women’s sports:
“Until recently the concept of young girls sprinting across athletic tracks or dashing around sports arenas was anathema to a social order which had decreed that women’s place was the home. The few bold and the brave who managed to
defy social dictates of the times could, however, move no farther than badminton and table tennis courts. Whatever talents were, they remained undiscovered and underdeveloped in the absence of training facilities and
competitions.”
Women of Pakistan, Government of Pakistan, 1975
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Group of National athletes at the National Training and Coaching Centre, Karachi.
Note the variety of covering which would not nowadays be possible – all would be in track-suit bottoms and baggy long-sleeved shirts to cover the body shape.
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Lahore College for Women sports day
Dawn, February 2000
Hockey in Lahore
Iqbal Ch, The News, April 2001
Punjab University Inter-Collegiate Women’s Cricket Championship at Lahore College.
Dawn, January 2000
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Under the 1977-1985 martial law regime when dress codes tightened, women continued to play sports but under more difficult
conditions. The participation of all Pakistani women in sporting events abroad or in public (in front of an audience that could include males) stopped. In the early 1980s Pakistan’s highly
successful women’s hockey team was turned back from the airport while on its way to an international event. After the return of
democracy, women were able to compete internationally although there is still a reluctance to open women’s sports events to the
public.
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Outside InfluencesOutside Influences
The 1977-1985 martial law regime emphasised Pakistan’s connections with the Middle East and downplayed its Asian history, and promoted the veil. Forms of
purdah never before seen in Pakistan are now widespread in urban areas, including the Iranian-style veils and Middle Eastern headscarves, which are
replacing the traditional Pakistani chaddar and traditional burqas stylised in the cartoon. But dresses vary as seen in the shopping scenes:
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Shirkat Gah
Moment II, 1999Aisha Khalid
Pakistan: Another Vision, Fifty years of painting and sculpture from
Pakistan, 2000
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Urban shopping 1.
(2004) anon. wluml
Urban shopping 2.
Lahore, Camerapix, Pakistan, 1994
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Women on the moveWomen on the move
The freedom of women has ebbed and flowed with successive political regimes. This has not only shown itself in dress but also
in women’s daily activities and individual mobility.
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Karachi Harbour, c 1910-20.Postcard
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“A woman driving a taxi, even today, would make an unusual sight. Mrs Waheeda Baig started operating a driving school for women in the fifties. After the war of 1965, she became a full-time cab driver, astonishing many and annoying some.” No women taxi drivers are to be seen nowadays.
UKS Diary 1998
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Filling up in the 1960s.
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She is one of the very few women riding a motorcycle one can see on the streets of
Lahore.
The Sun, January 2nd 2000
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Woman happily riding her donkey cartDawn, 2001
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A horse drawn tonga in Lahore – a cheap and popular form of transport in Lahore and
other cities.
Pakistan – from mountains to sea, 1994
A young woman getting from A to B on Lake Manchar.
Pakistan – from mountains to sea, 1994
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Modes and Codes:Modes and Codes: traditional dress to traditional dress to
ethnic chicethnic chic
Rural and nomadic women retain their traditional dress
more than urban and better-off women...
Pathan women of Peshawar, c 1910.Postcard
Gujar women and girls in the main street of Madyan, Hindu
Kush.Linden-Museum, Stuttgart, Arts and Crafts of the
Swat Valley, Johannes Katter, 1989
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Torwali women on a visit to MadyanJohannes Katter, 1989
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Stylized variations of the shalwar-kameez traditional to most parts of Pakistan are now commonly seen at specially staged ‘cultural
events’ and sell in shops around the world to better-off women who know little or nothing of the culture the dress comes from or the weight
of meaning it once carried.
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We should know about the women in Swat that, “ … from the age of puberty a women is literally shut up in the house and can leave it only with the permission of her father or her husband, and only on special occasions and under special conditions.”
The Life of the Women in the Zenana, Viola Forster-Luhe, 1989
“Swati traditional dress, baggy Shalwar and Kameez with a Chaddar resting on both the
shoulders.”Women of Pakistan, 1975
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Ministers, baboos asked to wear national dressMinisters, baboos asked to wear national dressBy Ansar AbbasiBy Ansar Abbasi
ISLAMABAD: National dress should be worn on formal occasions, this is not a demand of the newly emerged Islamic political force - Muttahida Majlis-e-Aamal - but a direction of the military regime to all its key members and top bureaucrats.
Through an "immediate" circular issued to all the federal ministers, advisers and key bureaucrats including federal secretaries, the cabinet secretary Javed Masud directs that on all formal occasions the national dress should be worn.
The ministers, secretaries, advisers most of whom have been seen wearing western attire during the last three years of the military regime are now told to wear national dress ie "white or black sherwani/achkan or a buttoned up black waist-coat (V shaped in summer and closed collar in winter), kurta/kamees and shalwar/pyjama, black shoes and matching socks, preferably with Jinnah Krakuli cap."
… A conspicuous change is now expected in Pakistan television where the lady newscasters and announcers have stopped wearing headscarf, models and television artists are shown in western dresses in entertainment programmes and commercials and Azzan (call for prayers) has been stopped.
The News International, Pakistan. October 16 th, 2002