Monday, December 23, 2019

Misuse of mass protest politics & PIC incident of Lawyers & Doctors. Some in-depth discussion


Misuse of mass protest politics & PIC incident of Lawyers & Doctors. Some in-depth discussion in Lok Lhar Show

دھرنیاں تے ہجوم  نوں ورتن دا سیاسی کھیڈ اتےپی آئی سی لہور دا وقوعہ۔اک ریڈیو پروگرام 

Radio discussion at Lok Lhar weekly Punjabi program regarding politics of mass protest and its misuse by numerous groups, mafia etc and rise of new interest groups in Pakistan. In less then few weeks we stop discussion on it and it looks a dangerous trend. In last three decades we have witnessed mushroom growth of new interest groups and unlike laborers, trade unionists, students they have more power and wealth. It is also important that there is a huge increase in anger in previous decades, thanks to unlawful practices like dictatorships, money power nexus and flawed textbooks. are we ready to understand and deconstruct it? let us listen the program,it may help you in some way. 

News at wichaar

http://www.wichaar.com/news/119/ARTICLE/34149/2019-12-23.html


چیتے رہے پئی 11 دسمبر نوں پی آئی سی حملہ ہویا سی تے اج 23 دسمبر ہے تے پی آئی سی حملے بارے گل   بات میڈیا تے مک چکی ہے۔ ہن کسے اگلے اجہے وقوعے بعد میڈیا فیر
رولا پائے گا۔ ساڈا ایہہ آزاد میڈیا کدوں چہ ہوندا ہے، کدوں بولدا ہے تے کدوں بہوں زیادہ بولدا ہے ایس بارے وی پڑچول لوڑی دی ہے۔

مکدی گل ایہہ ہے کہ پی آئی سی حملہ کیس نوں ٹسٹ کیس بنا کے ایس دے سارے پکھاں بارے بھرنویں گل نہیں ہوئے گی تےفیر اینج دے وقوعے فیر ہون گے۔
ا

Listen complete discussion
https://voca.ro/6JnJF8p55PL





Saturday, December 14, 2019

Punjabi poet Talib Jatoi died @77

Punjabi poet Talib Jatoi died @77

کال پئیا خوشبوواں دا ، راتاں دی اے رانی چُپ
کتھوں چوڑے دی چھنکار، چاٹی چُپ مدھا نی چُپ
سارا ویھڑا روگی اے ،  بندہ  چُپ  سوانی  چُپ
بیلی چُپ بیلانی چُپ ، کر گئے سارے ہانی چُپ



Baba Talib Jatoi, renowned Punjabi poet breathed his last at his native village 110/9-L, Athwain Meel, Pakpattan Road between the nights of Wednesday and Thursday. Baba Talib died at the age of 77. Baba je funeral was attended many and he buried in his ancesteral village in heavy rain shower during afternoon today. Babai Talib Jatoi is also known for using Ganji Bar dialects in his poetry. Family sources told he was sick from last many weeks. Baba Talib was among those poets who consciously decided to use mother tongue for poetry. Baba Talib took pride to be a Punjabi poet and he many times said, “Punjabi has a debt upon me and I have to lay its debt by serving Punjabi Langauge”. His Punjabi poetry depicts tradition associated with land, people and its culture. Although Baba Jee is a bit shy person but he has four Punjabi poetry books on his credit including - “Jagratay Da Thal”, Chanan De Had Beeti”, “Bolda Koi Nai” and last one going to be published named “Mela Akhrain Da”. His first book published in 2001 which get him introduce into Punjabi circles.  Baba Talib Jatoi, belongs to Balooch tribe named Jatoi and born on March 2, 1942. His orginal name was Noor Ahmed Samad but he was not known to his original name since last 30 years. His father Noor us Samad was an agriculturist. Baba Talib completed his Matric from Tehsil Sahiwal and later did five years Patwari Course. For his living during early age he worked as Patwari, Stamp Paper Seller and also an Assistant of a Lawyer. Later he left Patwari Job and gave full time to agriculture and started earning his living by directly ploughing his ancestral land in village. Once he told this correspondence that at early age he has strong passion of listening poetry. “I never missed a single Mushera held in in surrounding localities of Patoki, Chichawatni, Mian Chanu, Okara, Pakpattan Vehari, Depaplur, Multan and Sahiwal” he told once. Many times I have to travel on foot from Sahiwal Pakpattan chowk to village because Mushera mostly ends late at night and I found no public transport for village, he once said. “I have killed 7-8 snakes while returning village from Mushera”, Talib once told in a Mushera at Sahiwal Arts Council. Bashir Ahmed Bashir, Punjabi Poet of Pakpattan was my teacher in Punjabi poetry who give me Talib Jatoi name. Baba Talib Jatoi won many awards from different Punjabi organizations across Punjab. Bahadin Zikriya University, Multan literary Magazine named “Lahrain” published a research article on Baba Talib Poetry. One of his poem is also part of university BA, Punjabi Syllabus. Mirza Mooen, HOD, Punjabi Department, GPGC while paying tribute to Baba Talib Jatoi said, “Many poets opted Punjabi language and did Punjabi Poetry but Baba Talib was doing something different special. His poetry was depicting Punjabi heritage and culture along with its roots in land”. Baba Jatoi believed “truth always prevailed and none can suppressed it by any force”. Fida Bokhai, young Punjabi Poet said, Baba’s romance in poetry was not seen in traditional way. “His romance was with his culture and folk lore”,  

Shafique Butt



پنجابی کے صاحب  کتاب شاعر طالب جتوئی پورے ہو گئے۔بابا طالب  جتوئی کی عمر 77 برس تھی۔

2 مارچ 1942 کو نور صمد کے گھرپنجاب کے  بلوچ جانگلی  گھرانے میں پیدا ہونے والے بابا طالب جتوئی پرسوں  سائیوال کے ڈسٹرکٹ ہسپتال میں انتقال کر گئے۔جگراتے دا تھل،  چانن دی ہڈ بیتی ، بولدا کوئی نہیں  اور میلہ اکھراں دا ،ان کے  پنجابی شعری  مجموعے ہیں۔وہ اکثر کہتے تھے کہ پنجابی میری مادری زبان ہے اور مجھ پر اسکا قرض ہے۔ پتوکی، چیچا وطنی، پاک پتن، وہاڑی،میاں چنوں، اوکاڑہ،دیپال پور، ملتان اور سائیوال میں ان کی گنجی بار کے لہجے والی پنجابی شاعری کو پسند کیا جاتا ہے۔ ان کے چند اشعار


کال پئیا خوشبوواں دا ، راتاں دی اے رانی چُپ

کتھوں چوڑے دی چھنکار، چاٹی چُپ مدھا نی چُپ
سارا ویھڑا روگی اے ،  بندہ  چُپ  سوانی  چُپ
بیلی چُپ بیلانی چُپ ، کر گئے سارے ہانی چُپ

Some more things


Introduction of Baba Talib Jatoi Sahib Punjabi Poetry Program Sahiwal 2019




Some more things sent by Qaswar Butt regarding
 Baba Takib Jatoi


In his own words Baba shared his thoughts







Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Simply matchless: Not shy as many say but consciously avoiding the limelight

Simply matchless

Not shy as many say but consciously avoiding the limelight

He was least pushed about worldly gains, not even bothered to be recognised as an outstanding journalist worthy of state award

His knowledge of cricket was immense. I learnt a lot from him and cannot pay back except to write these few lines to tell Pakistanis what a great person ZIM was.

ZIM’s command over English was highly commendable—he was eloquent and stylish, not pedantic, simple sentences and phrases with ability to impress the common readers and intellectuals alike. He had a rare talent of writing—almost rare these days. Besides English, he was well-versed in Urdu and Punjabi. He was an ardent reader, a great writer and above all a great human being—a Sufi with a unique style that cannot be explained in words.

ZIM, indeed, was a brilliant thinker with an extraordinary creative mind—he was unique from all journalists of his time.

For us, who were very close to ZIM, he was a legend, though he wanted to remain gumnaam [fameless]—not shy as many say but consciously avoiding the limelight. Cheap popularity, vulgar ostentation of wealth and unrestrained power were loathsome for ZIM.  He was lucky to secure enviable recognition during his life time....For what he received as fame and appreciation, any ordinary immortal would certainly turn to be arrogant, but he showed not even an iota of it. He was so humane and unassuming that even a novice in the field of journalism would not feel uneasy in his company. This was where his real greatness lay.

Read complete article here
https://nayadaur.tv/2019/12/adieu-zim-a-unique-sufi-of-our-time/

It was ZIM who helped me as lone fighter at 4-Lawrence Road, office of Viewpoint, after the arrest of all senior, to keep the torch of enlightenment rekindled and ensure the readers that nobody, not even the ruthless dictator like Zia, can gag the voice of freedom and resilience.

For further readings about ZIM, click the link below
https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2019/12/zims-reference-at-safma-in-order-to.html



Available @ READINGS, Lhore

Saturday, December 7, 2019

Voice of Sindhis living in the Punjab & Sindhi cultural day in Lhore. (Discussion about harmony)


Voice of Sindhis living in the Punjab & Sindhi Cultural day in Lhore. (Discussion about harmony)

پنجاب سندھ ملن ورتن

 Listen the discussion of three Sindhis living in Lhore, associated with Sindh Associate Association who organized Sindhi Cultural Day in Alhamra the mall Lhore at December 7th 2019. These 3 gentlemen were present in MastFM103 weekly Punjabi radio show #LOKLHAR at December 6 Friday in Lhore Station. Guests were

Ashok Kumar: Assistant Professor Punjab University , also associated with Gurmani Center LUMS,   belongs to Mithi, Tharparkar, Sindh.

Hafeez Channa Bureau  Chief Awami Awaz, belong to Khairpur Mirus, Sindh.

Anwar Aziz Chanio Government servant WAPDA, belong to Larkana, Sindh





Ashok Kumar, Aamir Riaz, Anwar Aziz Chandio & Hafeez Channa


Listen the show by clicking the link below

https://voca.ro/mQ6xMfchrjL

Pictures of Sindhi Cultural Day organized in Lhore.











ZIM's reference at SAFMA : In order to understand ZIM, it`s important to understand Lhore



ZIM's reference at SAFMA 

In order to understand ZIM,

it`s important to understand Lahore


Masood Ullah Khan
Once he was out of there and joined Punjab Punch, he somewhat broke shackles. He showed his class as a writer and editor in Punjab Punch.

As it is, the editorial policy of Punjab Punch meant that there was no need to be extra careful with the content. This gave ZIM more of a push when being open as a journalist. He said everything in his own peculiar and bold style.

Mr Khan recalled how they both thought of dramatic headlines together, and how committed he (ZIM) was to not only his work but to people too.

Mr Khan deplored it was sad how no one from the government came forward to express grief at his death.
----------------------
Senior journalist Mr Ziauddin Ahmed sent his message saying ZIM would be well remembered and that he was an all-in-one package.

Khawar Mumtaz also spoke about her time spent with ZIM in Viewpoint, saying he always had a twinkle in his eye. `Initially, I did not understand who this disheveled, unkempt person was,` she laughed. `In f act, I remember how Auntie Alys (Faiz) used to get annoyed at him.
----------------------------
Salima Hashmi added that her mother would probably be irked mostly at his appearance: she wanted him neat and shaved when coming to of fice but he refused to do so. `But as a journalist, my mother was a great admirer of his work, so we can say there was a love-hate relationship! His colleague and friend Husain Nagi said that in order to understand ZIM, it`s important to understand Lahore. `In those days Lahore was a strange and crazy city with strange and crazy people, he said. `There were all kinds of weird people here.

He said he met ZIM, a well dressed and handsome man, for the first time in the Pak Tea House. He described ZIM as an earthy and affable person who made friends with all kinds of people. `He once gave five rupees (guite an amount at that time) to a beggar, and when asked why, he told us his logic: the man had come from another province and so would need more! He had made friends with rickshaw drivers and they would often have tea on his expense.
---------------------
`He was a genuine person and immensely disliked bogus people, said Mr I A Rehman. Dr Akmal Hussain also spoke appreciating ZIM`s resistance to the status quo and dictatorship through a fine selection of words.

`Now with a clampdown on freedom of expression, what ZIM did must be remembered.

It was because of him many journalists and columnists grew their readership. They wrote their stories and it was ZIM who was their `back.

For complete article click below link 
https://epaper.dawn.com/DetailNews.php?StoryText=07_12_2019_176_006

Further readings click here

Zafar Iqbal Mirza, better known as ZIM, is no more. He worked for the Civil and Military GazettePakistan TimesMuslimViewpoint and Dawn. Sub-editor of speed and accuracy, editor who had an eye on each department, an incisive comment-maker and a penetrating columnist — yes, but these traits hardly exhaust the possibilities of covering in full the many-sided person that was ZIM.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2112442/6-tahir-zim-no/

https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2019/12/zim-by-saqlain-imam-by-choice-he-was.html

https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2019/12/zim-by-rauf-kalasara-let-us-rethink.html

https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2019/12/iconic-journalist-zafar-mirza-is-no.html

https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2019/12/obituary-of-zim-by-imtiaz-alam-last-man.html

Interview of Zim by Mahmood ul Hassan
https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2012/06/interview-of-zim-bhadur.html

My government college days
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10157571453911648&set=pcb.10157571464151648&type=3&theater

His book Last Man IN available @Readings Lhore. 

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Zim by Saqlain Imam: By choice he was against stink tanks




Zim by Saqlain Imam
By choice he was against stink tanks

زم نے صحافتی نوکری دا آغاز سول اینڈ ملٹری گزٹ توں کیتا سی۔ زم دی یاریاں لیفٹ رائٹ دی پڑچول توں آزاد سی اتے اوہ آزاد دانشور سی۔ اوہ درمیانے رستیاں دا راہی سی۔ ایہہ اوس دی چوئس سی نہ کہ مجبوری۔ اس اپنے دوستاں دے دہرے معیاراں والی
جندڑی نیڑے توں ویکھی سی۔


لاہوری‘ کے نام سے کالم لکھنے والے ظفر اقبال مرزا صحافت میں گمنام کیوں رہے؟


 جب یحییٰ خان پاکستان کے صدر تھے تو اس وقت ان کے وزیر اطلاعات نوابزادہ شیر
 علی خان پٹودی نے پروگریسو پیپرز جہاں بائیں بازو کے کئی ایک دانشوران کام کرتے .تھے، انھیں تنگ کیے رکھا تھا۔ اس پر زِم نے سرخی لگائی:
شیر علی، باز آ جاؤ
"Sher Ali Behave" 

ویسے زِم کو پنجابی، اردو اور انگریزی پر مکمل عبور حاصل تھا اور اس زمانے کے لاہوری اشرافیہ کی روایت کے مطابق انھیں فارسی سے بھی شغف تھا۔ لاہوری کے نام سے لکھے گئے اپنے ایک کالم میں انھوں نے لکھا تھا کہ پنجابی شاعری میں واقعۂِ کربلا کا ذکر اس واقعہ کے چند برس بعد ہی ہونا شروع ہوگیا تھا۔

Link of the article
https://www.bbc.com/urdu/pakistan-50660276


Zim's book is available @Readings, Lhore.
For Online orders click
https://readings.com.pk/pages/BookDetails.aspx?BookID=10638


For further readings about Zim click the link below
https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/2019/12/zim-by-rauf-kalasara-let-us-rethink.html

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

ZIM by Rauf Kalasara: Let us rethink what we have missed.

ZIM by Rauf Kalasara 

Let us rethink what we have missed. 

میں نے اپنے افسردہ چہرے پر زبردستی مسکراہٹ لانے کی کوشش کی‘ جس میں ناکام رہا۔ انہوں نے بغیر کچھ بولے میرا ہاتھ پکڑا اور اپنے دفتر لے گئے۔ مجھے کرسی پر بٹھایا اور پنجابی میں کہنے لگے : چلو مجھے بتائو تم ملتان میں کس قسم کی رپورٹنگ کرسکتے ہو؟ میں انہیں بتاتا رہا۔ وہ چپ چاپ میرے چہرے پر نظریں جمائے سنتے رہے۔ اچانک بولے: چلیں میں تمہیں تین ماہ کے لیے ملتان میں اپوائنٹ کر رہا ہوں۔ ان تین مہینوں میں خود کو ثابت کرنا ہے۔ قسمت کا عجیب کھیل تھا کہ جس نے نوکری دینی تھی وہ انکار کر چکا تھا اور جس کے لیے کوئی سفارش ریفرنس تک نہیں تھا اس نے بیٹھے بٹھائے نوکری دے۔ میں نے ڈرتے ڈرتے کہا ‘لیکن طاہر مرزا صاحب؟ وہ بولے میں ان سے کہہ دوں گا۔
وہیں انہوں نے طے کیا کہ تم ہر ہفتے ملتان سے ڈائری لکھا کرو گے۔ ہر ڈائری کے چھ سو روپے ملیں گے اور ڈائری تم مجھے بھیجو گے۔ اُلجھی ہوئی داڑھی اور لمبی مونچھوں کے درمیان سے انہوں مسکرا کر مجھے آنکھ ماری‘ ہاتھ ملایا اور میری تقدیر بدل گئی۔ ایک اجنبی نے اتفاقا ًملاقات میں سب کچھ بدل دیا تھا۔
سوچتا ہوں اگر ایک لمحہ مرزا صاحب کے دفتر سے لیٹ نکلتا یا وہ وہاں سے نہ گزر رہے ہوتے تو ؟
Link of the complete article reproduced in HumSub & published in Dunya.

Some links to reach ZIM Bhadur



Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Iconic journalist Zafar Mirza is no more: but why media ignore it ?



There was not a single photo or news at Dawn.com web front page since 72 hours of his death. ZIM has served for Dawn since 1983 till early 21st century.  An article on inner pages does not justify it at all.

Iconic journalist Zafar Mirza is no more
            
Increase font size Decrease font size Reset font size
By Ahmed Fraz Khan | 12/3/2019 12:00:00 AM
LAHORE: Iconic journalist Zafar Iqbal Mirza popularly known as ZIM based on his initials or by his pen name Lahori breathed his last in the early hours of Monday morning after a pneumonia attack that came at the back of his long persisting lungs` complications. He was 83.

Mr Mirza was laid to rest later in the day. He left behind his wife and a son to mourn his death. His Soyem will be held at his residence after Zuhr prayers on Tuesday.

According to his son, Iqbal Mirza, Mr Mirza was taken to a hospital on Sunday morning after a pneumonia attack where doctors` investigation revealed that one of his lungs had completely stopped working. He was given some emergency treatment which failed to revive him and he breathed his last at around 2am.An illustrious son of Lahore, Mr Mirza was born on Aug 9, 1936, in the Mochi Darwaza areaof the Walled City. The only son in an educated household headed by a police officer father and a doting mother, he acquired his own set of `royal` rules that were to govern his life. He went to the Government College and began his journalistic career in the early 1960s.

Mr Mirza served the profession for four decades. It was only problems with his spinal cord that confined him by and large to the bed in the early 2000s. Even then he would battle excruciating pain to pen a column on one of his favourite topics. He was passionate about the city, about the game of cricket and often prepared the inhabitants of `his` Model Town with mild reprimands over offences that would seem serious to many others.

Mr Mirza started his journalistic career from The Civil and Military Gazette and after it he worked for Pakistan Times. He became editor of The Muslim in1981, but it was more an aberration. The stint with The Muslim requiredhimtoliveinIslamabad while his heart had always been in Lahore. Shortly he returned to his first love and joined Dawn in 1983 in the company of many incorrigible pursuers of journalism that was pro-people.

Quite remarkably Mr Mirza could be heard applauding friends taking their fights for the supremacy of people`s rights outside the realm of journalism. He retained the old aura of a newspaper man through so many momentous events and disasters taking place around him.

While at Dawn, he was a very important member of the team that brought out paper from Lahore and headed the Lahore bureau of the newspaper after two most respected trade union leaders and journalists, Nisar Osmani and I.H. Rashid. Not any less awe-inspiring was his stint with the Viewpoint, a left-wingweekly under the editorship of Mazhar Ali Khan, which was a thorn in the flesh of authorities at that time. The magazine brought together quite a galaxy of the Lahore-based progressive journalists.

Mr Mirza stood his ground amongst them with the nonchalance of Wasim Raja to strike an analogy between him and a true character from his favourite game. He also worked with The Punjab Times and Punjab Punch, which was edited by Hussian Nagi, a lifelong friend of him.

To Mr Nagi, Mr Mirza`s most solid contribution to the profession was his commitment to truth and professional ethics he inspired. `Remarks by an Indian editor summed up ZIM`s (Mr Mirza) contribution to subcontinent`s journalism. He said the Indian journalists had learnt writing between the lines from ZIM, which they then practisedduring the emergency in their country in the 1970s,` Mr Nagi said, paying his tribute to his comrade.

`ZIM was very clever with his lines during the most-dreaded martial law of (Gen) Ziaul Haq and he always achieved his purpose with his between the lines style.

Mr Nagi recalled that Mr Mirza excelled while studying at the Central Model School and later at the Government College.

He excelled in his chosen profession, rising from working in the reference section of Pakistan Times to the coveted posts of editing national papers.

Khaled Ahmed, a scholar-journalist, describes Mr Mirza as a brave man, saying: `He challenge d the order, which was never easy to do through his editorials in Pakistan Times, despite being a government paper, and later in his columns in Dawn.

`Though he compromised hispotential by opting for editing rather than writing very early on, he caught up very quickly when he started writing and became one of the most effective journalists of his time. His influence and effectiveness grew further when he joined The Muslim in early 1980s.

LA. Rehman, journalist and old-time friend of Mr Mirza, was all praise for the man. He said it was impossible to put Mr Mirza`s contribution into words. `He was a courageous man who held the torch of truth high often at great risk,` Mr Rehman said, going on to highlight the allrounder that Mr Mirza was. `His work in the area of sports journalism was as significant as his contribution to journalism about political and social issues.

He said what he felt and said it without fear and favour. He also trained a whole lot of journalists, who have, and will keep his legacy alive. 
Some links to reach at ZIM

Monday, December 2, 2019

Obituary of ZIM by Imtiaz Alam The Last Man IN gone






“I belong to a vanishing tribe and I think I will leave no successors”, wrote ZIM (1936-2019) the last surviving editor of the bygone era. And how true this ‘Lahori’ was.

Book Last Man IN available @Readings, Lhore. you may check or order Online
https://readings.com.pk/pages/BookDetails.aspx?BookID=10638 and Kitab Trangan 3 Temple road Lhore.

Alam ZIM: ‘Last Man in’ is gone

Obituary

By Imtiaz Alam

“I belong to a vanishing tribe and I think I will leave no successors”, wrote ZIM (1936-2019) the last surviving editor of the bygone era. And how true this ‘Lahori’ was. Yesterday, “he escaped from the tedium of a world you cannot change, nor accept”, wrote Jugnu Mohsin about him a long time ago.

Who was he? “An ingrate and an Uzbek”, as his mother used to debunk her nonchalant child. And what was he? “Immersed in the liberal tradition to love a person without loving his (Left) views”, he once said about his most respected Editor Mazhar Ali Khan. He lived along with left-oriented intellectuals and journalists and stood fast for all good human causes while staying on the sidelines and under the shadows of too big stalwarts. His passion for brevity as a sub-editor even persuaded him to abbreviate his own name— from Zafar Iqbal Mirza into ZIM. The ‘Last Man in’. is the collection of his 94 articles he chose from a plethora of columns that he wrote for Dawn for twenty years with the pen name of ‘Lahori’ that he truly was.

ZIM was, perhaps, a man you could not fit into any ideological category, nor attribute great accomplishments in his otherwise a most credible professional career of 42 years. He was what he truly was: untidy in appearance, but meticulous in his craft of editing and writing. Perhaps, he was the last journalist who worked at the Civil and Military Gazette, which was once banned and discontinued. His second last inning was at the Pakistan Times, one of the great papers of the Progressive Newspapers Ltd, where he worked in various capacities between 1962 and 1979 when he sought a premature retirement due to prevailing McCarthyism of General Sahibzada Sher Ali Khan, who was Gen Ziaul Haq’s information henchman. In between, during Mr Bhutto’s people’s government, he joined hands with the rabble-rouser Hussain Naqi to produce the Punjab Punch—a fiercely critical weekly. For sometimes, in his love for the passion of his friend eminent Punjabi writer Najam Syed and adventurous Hussain Naqi, he helped to realize the dream of a Punjabi daily newspaper, ‘Sajjan’, to only find out that the Punjabis weren’t interested in their mother tongue on this side of the divide.

On the persuasion of his friend A. T. Chaudhri, he joined The Muslim and later became its editor (1979-82). Those were the worst days of martial law and cutthroat censorship. Defying the scissor of censorship, he used to fill the empty spaces with the pictures of film actresses, including the empty editorial columns. That was a very novel way of refusing to coalesce in. Since he found Islamabad quite boring, he came back to Lahore and joined left wing Viewpoint weekly, where he had had the taste of vocation, but with a melancholy found out that his wonderful work went “unrecognized and unrewarded”. For a living, he started the longest inning of his career by joining the Dawn as an assistant editor in 1983 and retired as its resident editor in 2000.

When I regularly joined journalism as a professional journalist, I met the man at the Viewpoint who eventually became my teacher. Initially I used to right longer and complex sentences and he always reprimanded me and used to turn the Hegelian stuff into small and smart pieces. While meticulously editing he never changed the content or tenor and tone of the write-ups and the stories. The time we spent with him at the Viewpoint was of both learning the ethos of professional journalism and enjoying the late evenings with him with classical music and feel-good drinks. He was a kind of Sufi who loved people, cricket, music and, above all, literature. In his death, we have lost a man who was more than an angel. We will all miss you ZIM in our sad and happy hours! Cheerup in the heavens!
(ZIM’s Reference will take place on Friday at 04 pm at SAFMA Secretariat, 177-A, Shadman-2, Lahore)


You may read book ONLINE
http://www.sajjanlahore.org/corners/zim/lastman/index.htm?fbclid=IwAR1LeGdK7TvwPyO7VkFAhDTzzX70Aey-qcUVw3XP0w7G7nxPjliFkXPIgWA

Some more things of ZIM Bhadur
https://punjabpunch.blogspot.com/search?q=zim

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Student Voices from Baluchistan: Listen What they are saying (Open discussion in Lok Lhar Punjabi Show



Student Voices from Baluchistan
Listen What they are saying (Open discussion in Lok Lhar Punjabi Show

Pakistan's democracy is linked with acceptance of diversity and without accepting and respecting diversity it is hard to move toward a democratic, liberal, progressive and welfare state in Pakistan. In this regard rejection of diversity as well as playing with diversity are the misleading approaches, we often confront it. Pride & Prejudice often hit inclusiveness largely and push us to use hate speech intentionally or unintentionally. Generalizations about communities and colonial base national narratives often play vital role in strengthening divisions and exclusiveness and that is why it needs little attention. That is why Lok Lhar (People's movement) in its Friday radio shows always love to invite people from different communities.  You may find many such programs, posts in this blog i-e Punjab Punch. 
At 29th November we had invited two young female students from Baluchistan, currently studying in Lhore, enjoying Punjabi culture yet very much linked with their diverse background too. In many ways both are quite different from stereotype nationalists. Both knew very well that as women they have very little spaces in their native communities and provinces. The important thing is their decision to live in their communities after completion of studies in-spite of all odds. 
Guests
A- Sarah Mahwish, MBA, MPhil From Quetta, belonged to Yousafzai and married in Baluch family.
B- Maleeha Kyani, MPhil, Masters from UK. Conflict & Peace Studies. born at Sibi, Baluchistan.
C- Hurmat from Punjabi city Khan e Wal. MPhil
D- Anica Hasnat. From Chitral. 



This is video clip of a Punjabi radio show Lok Lhar recorded @MastFM103 at Friday 29th November Lhore station. Participants were Sarah Mahwish (Yousafzai who married in Baluchs), Maleeha Kyani (Speaking in this clip) her grandfather came from Sindh and her father is living in Baluchistan and she born in Sibi. Other guests included Hurmat from Punjabi district Khaniwal, and Anica from Chitral. 

Watch the clip  https://youtu.be/ePW4Vz20qIA


For complete radio show click the link below
https://voca.ro/18PDCL0GevJ

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