Basant
Festival
- 2010
Lahore -
Pakistan
Coming
on: 20 -
21 Feb
2010
The
City of Lahore marks the
beginning of spring with the
Basant Festival, an orgy of
kite-flying, rooftop
soirees, garden parties and
equestrian events, much to
the disgust of Islamic
clerics.
Lahorites and
out-of-town enthusiasts don
glamorous clothes, in the
yellow and green of spring
flowers blooming citywide,
to bid farewell to the
frosts and fogs of winter
and usher in spring.
Nighttime kite-flying in the
walled old quarter around
the 16th century Badshahi
mosque and Lahore fort opens
the festival. Ancient mughal
palaces throw open their
doors for all-night parties
to view the kites,
illuminated by spotlights
slashing the sky. Stars from
the local 'Lollywood' film
industry perform with
classical Qawali musicians
at parties in traditional
haveli homes.
White paper kites shimmer in
the night sky, diving and
soaring as rival fliers
joust in duels ma rked by
battle cries of Pecha! and
victory shouts of bo kata!
Bursts of drums and trumpets
mark the cutting of a kite's
cord.
Men drape themseves in
embroidered shalwar kameeze
with matching ankle-length
scarves, little boys strut
in three piece suits, and
women coat their hands with
henna and stack their arms
with bangles.
"If you wander through the
old city tonight, you will
see a lot of freedom. This
is the true nature of the
Pakistani people," said Basant fan and veteran
political observer Imtiaz
Alam, jailed by former
military dictator Zia ul Haq
in the 1970s for his liberal
writings.
Islamic clerics have issued
edicts each year branding
the festival as Hindu or
pagan in origin. This year,
buoyed by gains made in
October elections by
religious parties, the
clerics have revived public
attacks on the festival.
"The government should not
patronize Basant as many
illegal activities related
to Basant get protection,"
Liaqat Baloch, federal
parliamentarian and deputy
leader of the fundamentalist
Jamat-i-Islami party, told AFP.
"It has been hijacked by
multinational companies who
want to promote free society
culture in Pakistan. "There
are other honourable ways to
earn money." Festival
enthusiasts call it a rare
chance to step out and
celebrate in a country riven
by Islamic militancy, a year
of anti-Christian and
anti-Western terror attacks,
drought, poverty and an
increasingly bellicose
stream of religious
fundamentalism. "Let clerics
do their job while we
rejoice," said Nadeem Sarwar,
35, a business executive in
Lahore. "It is the only
colourful event that my city
can boast about."
Pakistanis from across the
country flock to Lahore for
the festival, crowding the
Islamabad to Lahore motorway
to catch a glimpse of the
flying paper fighting kites.
Top hotels reported full
bookings. "It is an event
not to be missed," said
Islamabad-based lawyer
Waseem Ahmed, 30.
But even such a joyous
festival has a dark side, as
hospitals invariably are
pa cked with kiteflyers who
fell off roofs and children
who were hit by cars as they
ran down the streets, their
faces turned towards the sky
to watch the kites. Quarters
of the city are plunged into
darkness when razor-sharp
kite cords rolled in
powdered glass or made of
steel cut electricity wires.
"If there are 50 one-hour
breakdowns, it costs us 2.5
million rupees (43,00
dollars)," lamented Lahore
Electricity Supply's company
chief Brig Riaz Ahmad Khan
Toor.
Steel and glass-edged wires
are banned but manufacturers
still report roaring trade.
Police have already charged
80 people for selling or
using metal wire and have
made several arrests, Lahore
city council administrator
Khalid Sultan told AFP on
the eve of the festival. The
skies above Islamist-ruled
North West Frontier Province
will be bare of kites as a
drive to enforce orthodox
interpretations of Islam has
prompted a police crackdown
on artistic expression,
driving musicians and
dancers out of business and
putting singers in jail.
But in Lahore, the party is
still a symbol for many,
said Alam. "The extremists
are a tiny minority in this
country," he said. "That's
what Basant proves."
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