Omar A Khan
Naseebo Lal is by far and away the most popular singer in
Pakistan and has been so for the last ten years outselling the
likes of Atif Aslam and Ali Zafar combined. She is
unquestionably the only worthy and rightful successor to the
throne that Madam Noor Jehan abdicated as the queen of
Pakistani popular music and has achieved her success on the
sole basis of her extraordinary talent unlike so many in this
land who have clamoured to positions thanks to daddy’s
membership at The Old Boys Club. Maybe it is only fitting and
natural that an ex-colony should follow the example of the
Victorian hypocrisy of its former masters or then perhaps it’s
merely yet another symptom of the Taliban-inspired curse of
intolerance that has led to Naseebo Lal and her sister Nooran
Lal being silenced. A case has been lodged by Pakistan’s
reincarnation of Anita Bryant and Mary Whitehouse in the LHC.
The besieged singer is due to appear in court to defend
charges of promoting 'obscenity, vulgarity and coarseness’ and
has been denied a legitimate earning which is a travesty of
the woman’s most basic human right. Why should Naseebo have to
defend herself when she didn’t write any of the songs in
question? Surely it is the lyrics that are the source of the
ailment that apparently causes some weaker men to abandon
their pious thoughts for more carnivorous ones? Someone has
managed to relegate the countless injustices and obscenities
that ravage our land in the form of hatred, intolerance,
corruption and terror and find that extra reserve of zeal in
order to persecute a singer who should actually be receiving
the Pride of Performance award for her incredible talent. When
the entire country is faced with the prospect of implosion it
is mind-boggling that people can still find the time to crib
over a bunch of songs with infantile lyrics about "juicy
thirst quenching melons and shiny round ripe-ripe berries". It
ought to be noted that nobody yet in history has died as a
result of listening to a saucy song or indeed watching a 'thumka’
and one would have thought the LHC has rather more important
issues to deal with.
One of Pakistan’s most celebrated icons is Madam Noor Jehan
who in her day sang numerous numbers at least as suggestive or
"vulgar" as anything Naseebo Lal has recorded. Why not lodge a
case against the deceased Noor Jehan, exhume her corpse and
drag her dead bones to court and make her family answer for
her vulgar, coarse and sinful songs?
Essentially Naseebo’s songs, like Madam’s and Naheed Akhtar’s
before her, contain all the essential ingredients of Punjabi
movie song-writing since the 60s up until the current era;
there flows much Kachcha Doodh while juicy ripe melons and
round-round bursting berries are in plentiful supply and lassi,
cream and butter churned in copious quantities while juicy
ripened virgin mangoes await plucking from slender twigs. A
typical Lollywood verse might read "the fresh milk has been
churned to a frothy cream which you can whip to form a smooth
hot butter". If all else fails in life there may still be hope
of eking out a living in the wasteland that is current
Lollywood writing clandestine 'masala’ numbers -- songs that
ludicrously but perfectly reflect the pseudo-Victorian age
that we live in complete with double standards of the truly
obscene and vulgar kind. Pakistani society epitomes hypocrisy
and though we claim to be the leading light of righteousness
in the universe, the fact remains that life in the social
welfare states of infidel Scandinavia is undoubtedly truer to
the essence of Islam than in those regions obsessed with
rituals, jingoism and hysteria.
Remarkable that in such dire times when our nation itself is
at stake we should find the time to target the ridiculously
daft double entendre songs of Naseebo Lal while remaining
oblivious to the fact that all sorts of real porn is readily
found being peddled all over Pakistan. A 14-year-old can
stroll down to one of the many pirated DVD shops in any market
in any of our cities and lay their hands on explicit porn
without any problem at all. In Pakistan we download more
pornography off the net than almost all nations of the world
barring a couple of fellow Muslim members of the ulema
brotherhood. There is much in Pakistan that is indeed obscene;
the disparity between the rich and the masses, the lack of
justice, the VIP set, bonded labour, honour killing, the lack
of funds allocated to education and the excessive amounts
splurged on the armed forces, levels of corruption and the
list could go on and on and on.
The very issue of defining obscenity is fraught with pitfalls
and if you start banning one song then you set in motion a
slippery slope that would render most songs and thus most
popular music and indeed literature worthy of a ban. Secondly,
where do you draw the line, at melons or at apples? At the
recently aborted Shanakht Festival in Karachi, was the picture
that caused all the hoopla truly 'obscene’ or was it a
delightfully depicted satirical caricature of the way
Pakistani political history has unfolded over the years? Was
pony-tailed, dungaree-wearing Nazia Hasan singing "Dil Ko Dil,
Badan Ko Badan Har Kisiko Chahiye Tan Ka Milan" any less
obscene than Naseebo Lal singing about her melons and butter?
Does it really matter?
Apparently the censor board is also being summoned by the LHC
to explain how such evil songs have been allowed but what
about previous boards? Should they not also be hauled up to
explain how they certified the Pashto masterworks of the 90s
or the blood-stained Sultan Rahi massacres of the 80s?
How so that Naseebo Lal should be restricted from earning a
living while transvestite Nawazish Ali can pout and flirt
innuendos into the wee hours? Multi-award-winning Naheed
Akhtar should likewise be summoned to court to explain some of
the numbers she recorded during her reign in the 80s.
Incidentally Finders Keepers, a highly reputable UK-based
record label, has just released a collection of Lollywood
gems, including the stunning Akthar number "Kadh le Kadh le we
Kadh le" along with Madam Noor Jehan’s epic "Saab Ji Very
Sorry". The CD called "The Sounds of Wonder" is receiving some
very positive reviews in the UK press and has just been
nominated as The Compilation Record of the Year at the
upcoming Mojo Music Awards – Britain’s Music Oscars.
There is a practical solution to all this which would free the
courts from having to deal with such trivialities and the
whims of attention-seekers. The answer would be to classify
films for public consumption like there exists in most
countries of the world. The more adult-oriented films, perhaps
the ones containing the racy songs -- ought to be classified
as such while music CDs and cassettes ought to have a warning
label if containing material that might be offensive to those
whose pristine morals are likely to be shocked by songs about
the occasional ripened melon. Sadly Jack and Jill went up the
Hill may have to be abolished for obvious reasons.
The fact remains that in Karachi’s infamous Rainbow Centre and
many of its kind you can procure the vilest level of
pornography being sold like fruit and vegetables often by
children who already have developed a chilling understanding
of the words 'animals’, 'children’ and 'rape’. Wherever there
is a demand for something in a land as lawless as Pakistan,
there will be a supply made available and pornography is in
abundant supply and dirt cheap. Ironically many of those who
sit at stalls manning heaps of smut will be the first to haul
down their shutters and pull out the cap upon hearing strains
of the azaan and then five minutes later it is back to
business again. It ought to be mentioned that watching an
Indian film that has not been certified by the Pakistani
Censor Board is a punishable offence and those of you who
watched Om Shanti Om for example should actually be dragged
off to court for committing a serious crime.
Penalizing Naseebo Lal in any manner for any of the songs she
has recorded will be a step towards institutionalising double
standards and hypocrisy as well as a further capitulation to
the insidious cancer of Talibanisation. If this does come to
pass Naseebo Lal ought to consider shifting to a society that
values talent rather than one that persecutes it. Incidentally
ever wonder why so much porn is available in Pakistan? The
answer is really quite simple – because there is an insatiable
appetite and demand for it. By the way Naseebo Lal’s songs are
increasingly available on iTunes, so even if the powers that
be play the court jester, her music will live on.
The News:Saturday,
May 09, 2009
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