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An “identity crisis” looms before the Baloch people as Pakistan is killing their intellectuals and strategically suppressing their history, says a Baloch freedom activist, adding that they will “not let Pakistan take our cultural identity from us”.
The lullabies of Baloch mothers “are the only source of history lesson for the new generation” of their people, according to prominent Baloch freedom movement activist Mazdak Dilshad Baloch, who was recently in New Delhi.
The issue of manipulated history in text books was also raised in the Pakistan Parliament earlier this year, after the 12th standard sociology books defined Baloch as “uncivilised people who engage in murder and looting”.
He said most of the Baloch leaders and intellectuals are either dead, underground or have fled Pakistan fearing for their life.
Terming the Pakistani media a “puppet” and Pakistan an “artificial nation”, the young activist who was in Delhi to garner support of Indians for Baloch people, said:
“They teach us about Ahmed Shah Abdali. He was a great person in history and should be celebrated by Afghans. We have nothing to do with him, Sher Shah Suri, Mahmood Gaznavi or Mughals. You can’t just snatch someone else’s history and make it your own.”
“We have our own history, culture and lifestyle. You can see our clothes and carpets - they have the same pattern and geometry as were in Mehergarh (an ancient site in Balochistan). Our historic finger prints are still intact. Our culture and language is never dying and we will not let Pakistan take it from us,” Mazdak said.
He also speaks of Hindu shrines in Balochistan including the famed Hinglaj or Nani Mandir.
“All around the world mothers would tell their children a fairy tale. But a Baloch mother while putting her child to sleep tells about how the forefathers got this land, this is how they fought and got martyred. So, this is how the children there are brought up. This is how a sense of sovereignty is inherited in their blood,” he explained.
Asked why he opposes the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a project that allows China to access the Gwadar Port in Balochistan from its western province of Xinjiang, the activist in exile called it “a conspiracy to loot our resources”.
Mazdak also added:
Saying that while they want to nurture a free Balochistan as a “democratic”, “secular” and “gender-balanced” nation, Mazdak calls Pakistan an “artificial country”.
(Published in an arrangement with IANS.)
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