Other Side of the Divide The


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About The Book

Pegged on journalist Sameer Arshad Khatlani's visit to Pakistan this book provides insights into the country beyond what we already know about it. These include details on the impact of India's soft power thanks to Bollywood and the remnants of Pakistan's multireligious past and how it frittered away advantages of impressive growth in the first three decades of its existence by embracing religious conservatism.The book profiles extraordinary people-lawyers poets musicians and even a former military chief-who stood up to an oppressive state. It has historical anecdotes like the story of an ordinary woman who became the 'muse and mistress' and often the 'brains behind the regime of a swinging general' who led Pakistan to ignominy in the 1971 war that of a Sikh family which dared to swim against the tide to stay back in Pakistan after Partition and a prostitute's son who uses his art to humanize commercial sex workers in defiance of a conservative society.The book attempts to present a contemporary portrait of Pakistan-where prohibition remains only on paper and one of the biggest taxpayers is a Parsee-owned brewery-as a complicated and conflicted country suspended between tradition and modernity. Review Sameer Arshad Khatlani's book is a very personal travelogue about Pakistan. But it is more than a travelogue across the India-Pakistan border-it is a journey in time from the trauma of Partition and even before till today. And it is more than an exploration of the affinities that remain so strong between the two countries-via cinema among other things-because the book also speaks more specifically about the resilience of Punjabiyat. Based on vignettes and anecdotes as well as an erudite historical accountThe Other Side of the Divide offers a comprehensive portrait of Pakistan including the role of the army and religion-not only Islam. -- Christophe JaffrelotThe Other Side of the Divide is a heartfelt account of a week spent in the historic city of Lahore which unfortunately remains out of bounds for those on this side of the divide. The book is a fascinating insight into the life of Lahoris whom the author encounters in his 2013 visit. Through its reflections and descriptions the book brings the political into the personal and captures a milieu which takes us back in time. A snapshot an album it reminds us of a time when there was more individual reciprocity and less manufactured rage. To that extent the human interactions that are central to the book help in demystifying the other allowing Khatlani to weave together a complex integrated history of the divided present. -- Pippa Virdee...the book... is sure to be talked about for many years to come. Khatlani's book is modelled around his discovery of Lahore and its people. Each discovery follows the hub and spokes theory. Every discovery is the hub. And the stories that emanate from these hubs are the spokes. In this he touches all the right chords. There is the Bollywood connection the history of the army and its ubiquity in Pakistani life the cricket connection the stories of shared miseries and standout acts of personal friendship there is the story of alcohol and conservatism the liberals of Pakistan and their sentimental pro-India politics and the special story of minorities especially the Sikhs....Khatlani shapes his narrative with great background stories provides rich historical accounts and at times manages searching insights into the intricate sentiments that guide the existing reality between the two nations. The Other Side of the Divide is an important intervention at a difficult time. ...Khatlani's book is an invaluable source of solace and possibilities. -- Debraj Mookerjeeborderlessjournal.com Published On: 2020-07-14While making most of his brief stay in Pakistan Sameer tried to make sense of the complex history of a country born out of the womb of diabolical 'divide-and-rule' polic
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