Skip to main content

 

Seeking peace one meme at a time

Instagram in Pakistan is exploding with hilarious memes about an impending invasion by India after the deadly attack in Pahalgam in Indian Kashmir. While Indian media is hurling aggressive threats and invectives, they are met with memes of young Pakistani  girls discussing what clothes to wear when India attacks, or if they will have to delay marriage plans; people run for cover in the dark under an attack of paper planes, a clip of Mr. Bean waiting in a field with increasing boredom as the expected attack does not materialize; students wonder if they should study for the upcoming exams hoping they will be postponed. Some brush up on Indian pronunciation of Urdu words, others share maps showing plans for DHA Goa. Two young men, an Indian and a Pakistani, try to cook a meal together in their shared flat, navigating the different names for onions and potatoes, while others anticipate a visit to their neighbourhoods by actors Salman Khan and Katrina Kaif.

Humour becomes the last line of defence for Pakistanis in the face of increasingly farcical politics and dysfunctional institutions. The gentle humour of Shafiqur Rehman and Mushtaq Yusufi  gradually transformed into subversive comedy.  The Umar Sharif show, Fifty-Fifty, Such Gup, Imran Aslam’s satires for Grips Theatre, Hum Sab Umeed Se Hain, Loose Talk and Anwar Maqsood‘s  witticisms,  developed a taste for an existential theatre of the absurd. Namaloom Afraad ( unidentified people ), a term used in news reports for perpetrators of violence in the city, soon acquired the status of a comic character.  

Gallows humour has been an integral part of wars and conflict. Captain Fred Roberts produced a humorous newspaper called The Wipers Times from the WWI front line of the trenches using an abandoned printing press in France. Post-war comedy shows and films like Blackadder Goes Forth, Dad’s Army, MASH and Good Morning Vietnam replaced the collective memory of horrific wars with a benign narrative. Disney made propaganda cartoons during WWII as did Punch Magazine. Even the Comrade weekly which had a serious mission during the freedom movement to critique British rule in India, carried satirical columns by the humourist Wilayat Ali Bambooq.  Comedian Judy Carter says “turning a problem into a punch line turns you into a winner instead of a victim.”

The current spate of memes generated in Pakistan takes wartime humour to another level. These are unscripted spontaneous narratives put together not by professional writers or propogandists, but ordinary citizens across village and city. Belligerent India anchors are non-plussed by this levity, making Indian war chants sound like overly dramatic posturing.

The Pakistani memes are not a new generation’s version of the 1965 idealistic war songs of Noor Jehan. Neither are they a call for peace. Most memes offer a comic lalkar or challenge, while ridiculing the adventurism implied by the threat of war by India.  In essence they say ‘Come on, man, I don’t want to fight you. I love your movies, but if you must, bring it on.’

This generation has witnessed many failed wars with a heavy price paid by civilians. Memes create a platform of resistance to the insidious powerplay of a generation that no longer speaks for them. Fiction writer, Maggie Slater, says sharing outlandish memes help us manage ‘the crushing collective existential crisis, knowing that we’re not moving through this big scary world all alone’

By making light of the idea of war, meme culture can indirectly promote peace. Young people challenge war rhetoric by pointing out its absurdities, and that an India-Pakistan war is passé,  making it harder to take jingoistic posturing seriously. The latest ban by India on social media accounts of Pakistani actors, some like Hania Aamir with 19 million followers on both sides of the border, is circumvented with VPN accounts.

Today almost 2 billion memes are shared every day, outnumbering the total global strength of armed forces personnel estimated to be 27 million. An Instagram shares  ‘Bombs that cost $100,000 dropping from a plane that costs $ 100,000,000 flying at a cost of $40,000 per hour to kill people living with less than $10 a day’. European countries set aside their centuries-old differences to prosper together, African leaders are talking of a united Africa. Will South Asia choose peace?  

Can this war be laughed away? If it were left to the people of India and Pakistan there would be no war. The memes generation is trying to take back the authorship of their future. They represent the doves standing up to the hawks.

 

Durriya Kazi

May 4, 2025

Karachi

durriyakazi1918@gmail.com

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Decorated Trucks of Pakistan

International Institute for Asian Studies / Association for Asian Studies / Asia Committee, European Science Foundation First International Convention of Asia Scholars Leeuenhorst Conference Centre, Noordwijkerhout , Netherlands , 25-28 June, 1998 Panel: “ Shaking the Tree: New Approaches to Asian Art” / Session: Decorated Transport Decorated Trucks of Pakistan Durriya Kazi June 1998. Karachi Meaning is always in process, what has been called “a momentary stop in a continuing flow of interpretations of interpretations”. This paper pauses at some facts and some observations about decorated trucks of Pakistan , a subject that has elicited tantalisingly few studies. Pakistan is often presented geographically and thus historically as the corridor of land between the mountain passes that separated the near East from the plains of India . Less mentioned and more significant is its identity as the valley of the River Indus which has historically ...
    The Ink of the Scholar   The ancient Greeks were the masters of philosophy and science for over 1000 years. The Agora of Athens which once resounded with the discussions of Socrates, Plato, and Sophocles is silent and empty today with broken pillars covered with weeds.   Rome once ruled the Mediterranean and beyond, but today is associated with Italian cuisine, fashion and art in the shadow of the ruins of the dreaded Colosseum where Roman emperors were entertained by gladiators fighting to the death.   That is the trajectory of all civilizations that reached great heights and then tumbled into fragmentation, their past glory all but forgotten.     The Islamic civilization too was once the most significant custodian of learning, and like the Greeks, many of its inventions, philosophies and laws are still an integral part of modern societies.     Unlike the Greek and Roman empires, the achievements of the Islamic empi...
Choosing to Study Art and Design Another academic year is about to begin. The number of young people wanting to study art and design is growing. Young people in Pakistan seem to know something that parents and policy makers do not. Subjects that will materialize into successful jobs are usually identified as medicine, IT, business studies, and engineering. School and college curricula channel young people in these directions. For the last five decades, education has been serving economic development, and public policies reflect this. The term “human capital” developed by economists Gary Becker and Jacob Mincer in the 60s, is overused as an aim to produce labour capable of increasing economic  growth. But as we know youth has its own recalcitrance, and as society’s elders are less and less able to guarantee pathways to success, there is a growing urge in young people to plan life journeys on their own terms. Along with business school, computer sciences and pharmac...