Magazines
NON-FICTION: THE LONG ROAD TO HUMAN RIGHTS
Insani Huqooq Ka Irtiqa Aur Tasawwur
By Tauseef Ahmed Khan and Irfan Aziz
Workers Education & Research Organisation (WERO)
ISBN: 978-969-7753-09-1
316pp.
Behind the flourishing or decay of societies and states, one factor operates quite noticeably — the presence or absence of human rights.
Rights enable people to harmonise with one another and allow the state to secure the legitimate adherence of its citizens. Other factors notwithstanding, human rights ensure the sustainability of both state and society and energise them. An understanding of the idea of human rights and its practical manifestations helps individuals locate their own situation within society.
Although there is no dearth of literature on human rights, the book under review — Insani Huqooq Ka Irtiqa Aur Tasawwur [The Evolution and Conceptualisation of Human Rights] by Tauseef Ahmed Khan and Irfan Aziz — is noteworthy for its wide scope and its inclusion of themes generally held taboo in a hypocritical society and by a reluctant officialdom. Leaving aside the low level of awareness about human rights in Pakistani society and the state’s failure to create an enabling environment, one encounters hesitation, if not resentment, towards the idea of human rights at the level of successive governments.
One recalls that human rights education was introduced into the national curricula only after persuasion by the United Nations, which had declared 1995 to 2005 as the Decade of Human Rights Education. The Ministry of Education and the Higher Education Commission undertook this task reluctantly, inviting university faculty to suggest topics for inclusion. These consultations revealed sharply divided perceptions.
An Urdu book free of complex theoretical jargon and clearly intended for students combines conceptual discussions about the idea of human rights with the history of attempts to realise them in different societies
Some argued that human rights were a Western agenda; others claimed NGOs used the discourse to undermine the moral fabric of society by encouraging women’s liberation and empowerment. There were assertions that traditional society, grounded in tribal and mediaeval values, had little need for such concepts. A commonly proposed solution was to divide human rights into ‘Western’ and ‘Islamic’ chapters. Even senior faculty appeared deeply divided on the concept and the utility of teaching human rights.
In one meeting, the suggestion that violations such as honour killings or marriage to the Quran be included in curricula was aggressively opposed on the grounds that students would be exposed to vices they supposedly did not know existed. Such reactions revealed how difficult it was, and remains, to educate new generations about rights. The situation has not changed substantially since that decade ended.
The authors, both professors of Mass Communications, have written this book with the objective of having it included in academic syllabi. Written free of complex theoretical jargon, it is clearly intended for students. The question remains: how will it be received?
The book is organised into seven chapters that combine conceptual discussions with historical and practical efforts to realise human rights in different societies. The authors focus primarily on rights that have been formally accepted, rather than those that are still emerging or are contested.
They begin by examining the evolution of the state and the need for law in societies. Ancient civilisations, including Egypt, Iraq, Greece and the Indus Valley, are discussed in relation to agrarian economies and divisions of labour that necessitated defining duties and rights. In these societies, the state functioned as a regulator of social relations through law.
Particular emphasis is placed on means of production and the division of labour in Athens and Mesopotamia, including Hammurabi’s legal code, often described by anthropologists as the world’s first written constitution. Moving into the mediaeval period, the authors examine religious traditions including Confucianism, Buddhism, Jainism, Hinduism, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, highlighting shared ethical teachings, such as kindness, dignity of labour, justice, sacrifice and honesty.
While these values may retrospectively be described as human rights principles, the book rightly notes that human rights as a coherent doctrine, supported by legislative and institutional frameworks, emerged in the modern era, with the rise of nation states.
The book then turns to the evolution of rights among different social groups, including peasants, labourers, women and slaves. These groups are discussed separately, with attention to the historical struggles through which their rights were realised. Several movements receive detailed treatment, including peasant struggles in mediaeval England, the erstwhile Yugoslavia and India. The impact of the French Revolution on human rights and the long history of struggles in the Western world are also explored.
Slavery is discussed as a practice that was abolished at different stages in different societies. Similarly, women’s rights took centuries to gain recognition and legal codification. Labour rights evolved gradually from the 16th and 17th centuries onward, achieving varying degrees of success across societies and historical moments.
The 20th century is examined in terms of rights movements and the institutionalisation of human rights. The book discusses in detail the creation of the League of Nations after the First World War and the United Nations following the Second World War in 1945. The authors explain the historical context that necessitated these organisations, their objectives, and areas of contribution, particularly by the United Nations, to peace and harmony, as well as their failures. The evolution of foundational documents over time is also addressed in a critical manner.
In a separate chapter, human rights are classified thematically. The topics discussed include the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), women’s rights — particularly the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) — the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. The expanding scope of the UN human rights frameworks to include LGBTQ+ and transgender rights is also addressed, and a historical background is provided.
Turning to Pakistan, the book surveys major human rights institutions and their work, including the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, the National Commission for Human Rights, the National Commission on the Status of Women, the Pakistan National Commission for Minorities and the Pakistan Information Commission, alongside several provincial bodies.
Despite its comprehensive scope, the omission of a dedicated discussion on the Fundamental Rights chapter of Pakistan’s 1973 Constitution is surprising. The chapter is substantial in its original form and has been further enriched through constitutional amendments.
Overall, two broader issues merit attention. Firstly, the subject of human rights benefits from a historically grounded approach that traces not only the expansion of rights but also the changing meanings of particular rights over time. Historicism also requires that past concepts be understood within their own contexts rather than retroactively imposed with contemporary categories.
In the case of slavery, for example, it is difficult to meaningfully apply the concept of rights within a system that fundamentally negated human personhood. The abolition of slavery marked the first formal recognition of slaves as humans entitled to rights.
Secondly, rights must be understood within their social context. The recognition or codification of rights is distinct from the ability to exercise them. Access to rights is socially structured; a reality that complicates rights-based discourse. The guest article by journalist Sohail Sangi at the end of the book addresses this issue through a Marxist lens, questioning which classes truly benefit from the rights regime.
The reviewer is Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences, Sohail University, and Director, Institute of Historical and Social Research (IHSR), Karachi
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, January 25th, 2026
Magazines
SMOKERS’ CORNER: MIRACLES AND MATERIALITY
A recent video showing a Quran that survived the devastating fire at Karachi’s Gul Plaza has reignited a centuries-old conversation. Throughout history, accounts of Bibles, Qurans or Buddhist sutras emerging unscathed from catastrophic floods and fires have been celebrated as Divine interventions. While these events offer profound spiritual solace, a closer look reveals a fascinating intersection of material physics and psychological bias.
From a physical standpoint, Dougal Drysdale, Professor Emeritus at the University of Edinburgh, suggests that a hardbound book’s survival is often due to the ‘Closed Book Effect.’ When shut, a book functions as a dense, oxygen-starved block of cellulose. Because fire requires a steady flow of oxygen to consume fuel, the tightly packed pages resist ignition by preventing airflow from reaching the interior.
In the event of a flood, the surface tension of water against tightly pressed pages creates a natural barrier. This prevents deep seepage for a significant period, often leaving the heart of the book perfectly dry.
American psychologist Thomas Gilovich explains that when a sacred text survives a disaster, it often becomes more than just a book. It is elevated to a sacred relic. This transformation, according to Gilovich, can significantly redefine a community’s cultural path. In the aftermath of the 2011 Joplin tornado in Missouri, US, survivors and news outlets frequently highlighted the ‘miraculous’ discovery of intact Bibles among the rubble of flattened homes.
The survival of holy texts in the aftermath of natural catastrophes is often termed ‘Divine protection’, revealing the cultural and spiritual narratives people love to attach to such instances
While hardbound dictionaries and cookbooks likely survived in the same ruins due to their similar physical construction, these secular items were ignored by the media as mere debris. The surviving Bibles were immediately elevated from functional reading material to sacred relics, often being framed and displayed as symbols of Divine protection.
By focusing on these specific books, the media triggered a cognitive bias that led people to view the event through a supernatural lens rather than recognising the simple physical durability of bound paper.
British scholar Susan Whitfield, in her 2004 work The Silk Road: Trade, Travel, War and Faith, details the discovery of the Mogao Caves in China. In that instance, the sealing of the Buddhist text the Diamond Sutra (868 CE) within a dry, walled-up chamber created a “natural vault” that protected the world’s oldest-dated printed book from the degrading effects of humidity and oxygen for nearly a millennium. The perception of such objects often shifts from the literary to the ‘miraculous’.
During World War I, pocket Bibles carried by soldiers occasionally stopped shrapnel due to the high density of their compressed paper. This led many soldiers to treat the Bibles as protective talismans.
The Codex Amiatinus, frequently referred to as the ‘Grandfather’ of Latin Bibles, has survived for over 1,300 years due to its immense physical durability. According to Drysdale, this enormous volume, created around 700 CE in Northumbria, England, weighs over 34 kilogrammes and was crafted from the skins of more than 500 calves.
The use of high-quality parchment makes the Bible significantly more resistant to fire and decay, as organic animal skins lack the highly flammable, oxygen-trapping fibres found in wood-pulp paper. This Bible remained virtually untouched for a millennium, preserved by the stable environment of an Italian abbey that served as a ‘natural vault.’
In West Africa, the Desert Manuscripts of Timbuktu offer a compelling example of texts surviving environmental factors, a story often framed as miraculous. When Islamist militants set fire to the Ahmed Baba Institute in 2013, there was widespread global concern over the potential loss of thousands of ancient Islamic manuscripts. However, according to the researcher Mauro Nobili, the extreme aridity of the Sahara desert was critical in aiding their preservation for centuries.
The persistently low humidity prevented mould growth and kept the delicate ink stable, allowing for their long-term survival, which many viewed as a modern miracle. However, the more vulnerable manuscripts were secretly shifted to safer locations before the militants set fire to the Ahmed Baba Institute.
During the Viking raid on Lindisfarne — a tidal island off the northeast coast of England — in 793 CE, a legend emerged concerning a sacred book, Lindisfarne Gospels, which was said to have been dropped into the sea by fleeing priests. Three days later, it washed up perfectly dry. While this specific account is often considered apocryphal, the physical survival of such ancient texts is frequently due to their durable leather and metal bindings, which act as a protective shell for the internal vellum.
Gilovich would point to stories such as this ‘dry’ recovery of a Bible as prime examples of how the media and oral tradition prioritise miraculous narratives over the mundane reality of material science, thereby reinforcing spiritual beliefs.
According to the prominent professor of psychological sciences J. Park, communities frequently transform these survival stories into powerful symbols of “Divine protection” as a means of processing the profound trauma of disasters. This phenomenon ultimately highlights a dynamic intersection, where material science meets deep human sentiment.
While the inherent fire-resistant properties of vellum offer logical, scientific explanations for the physical survival of many books, the human psychological element remains paramount. The inherent human need to find order, meaning and hope within chaos is what elevates these surviving sacred objects from mere material items to vital spiritual anchors for a community’s recovery and continuity.
The endurance of these texts represents a profound intersection between material science and human psychology. It is not merely the density of vellum, the chemical stability of ancient inks or the aridity of a desert that ensures survival. Rather, it is the way these physical realities interact with our inherent drive to find order in the wake of destruction.
Gilovich’s research posits that when a community witnesses the survival of a sacred text, they are not simply observing a quirk of physics. They are engaging in what Park describes as “meaning-making”, using the survived sacred object to process trauma and reclaim a sense of ‘Divine protection.’ Whether through the preservation of the Diamond Sutra in caves, or a Bible or a Quran found amidst the ruins of a modern disaster, these serve as a bridge between the tangible and the transcendent. Their survival is a testament to the fact that, while fire and time may consume the material, the cultural and spiritual narratives we attach to them remain indestructible.
Yet, it is equally important that we recognise the physical realities of their endurance, acknowledging that the science of material durability does not diminish the ‘miracle’, but rather provides a rational foundation for understanding how the written word survives the very elements meant to destroy it.
Published in Dawn, EOS, February 1st, 2026
Magazines
GARDENING: SWISS ONLY IN NAME
Different varieties of leafy green vegetables (locally known as saag) are commonly grown in the Subcontinent due to the favourable growing conditions here. These green vegetables are prepared in traditional meals that contain the signature South Asian touch. However, Swiss chard remains relatively unknown to many.
Swiss chard is one of the easiest-to-grow leafy green vegetables. Unlike other leafy green vegetables, Swiss chard has beautiful bright green-coloured leaves with white, yellow or maroon midribs and stem. No wonder that a few sub-varieties of the Swiss chard are referred to as rainbow chard!
It is also known as spinach beet and leaf beet, while other names reflect the colour of its stems. For instance, the ones with white midribs are referred to as silver beet and those with red or maroon stems are known as rhubarb chard. Its striking colour combinations make it attractive enough as an ornamental plant.
Scientifically known as Beta vulgaris L. var. cicla, Swiss chard belongs to the Amaranthaceae family, which was formerly known as the Chenopodiaceae family. While it is also considered a beet, its root is inedible. Due to its close resemblance to spinach and beet root, it is not recommended to grow Swiss chard near either of them. Pests and diseases affecting beet root and spinach will likely attack Swiss chard as well.
While many other types of saag dominate South Asian kitchens, Swiss chard — of Mediterranean origin — remains largely unknown here…
Contrary to its name, Swiss chard does not originate from Switzerland. The origin of the ‘Swiss’ prefix remains contentious. One theory is that it is widely grown in Switzerland. In fact, Swiss chard primarily originates from the Mediterranean region. However, it is extensively used in Swiss cuisine.
Another theory is that the botanist who first classified this vegetable was Swiss and used the prefix to create a distinction from other leafy vegetables. The most common theory is that the European seed merchants added Swiss to distinguish it from the closely related French chard. If that were not enough to confuse you all, the word ‘chard’ is of Latin origin, meaning thistle — a common gardening term referring to a flowering plant which has prickly bracts.
Swiss chard seeds are easily confused with those of spinach, due to their stark resemblance. The seeds of Swiss chard are faded brown to dark brown in colour. They have a dry, rough texture and are irregular in shape. The seeds are hard and are surprisingly light for their size. Like spinach, one seed of Swiss chard can result in three to four seedlings. For this reason, it is known as a seed ball, containing potentially three to four seeds.
Being hardy, Swiss chard has minimal requirements. One of the best aspects about sowing Swiss chard seeds is that they can be grown in almost any available space. You can grow it on a strip of land, small pots and even around other plants in the same pot. However, when sowing Swiss chard seeds for a full crop, certain aspects should be taken into account.
In climates similar to Karachi, the seeds can be sown from mid-October onwards or when the temperature falls to 20 degrees Celsius. The potting mix should be pre-moistened and clear of pebbles and stones. Seeds should be placed half an inch below the surface and covered with a layer of compost. The soil should remain moist, not wet.
Depending on the desired yield, any pot size can be used, since the roots are small. Pots should then be placed in a cool shade with indirect sunlight. If the Swiss chard plant is being grown in an open field or in raised beds, it should be shielded from direct sunlight exposure, to minimise evaporation.
Some gardeners prefer to soak the seeds in water for four to six hours to ensure better and quick germination. In favourable conditions, Swiss chard seeds are likely to sprout within one week to 10 days.
Please send your queries and emails to doctree101@hotmail.com. The writer is a physician and a host for the YouTube channel ‘DocTree Gardening’ promoting organic kitchen gardening
Published in Dawn, EOS, February 1st, 2026
Magazines
ADVICE: AUNTIE AGNI
Dear Auntie,
Hope you are well. I am seeking your advice regarding a situation that has been bothering me for a long time. I’m a university student and I met this girl. She seemed very interested in me at that time and so was I in her. We had great chemistry, something I’ve never felt in my life. But I never confessed my feelings to her because of certain things I heard about her. Later, I found out she was dating someone. I internalised my love for her for quite a long time, almost a year, until I couldn’t hold it in, and confessed everything to her, even though I knew she was in a relationship.
The nature of my work requires me to face her and, whenever we work together, that chemistry-like muscle memory hits like a truck and I fall head over heels for her all over again. Even though getting her is nothing but a distant dream, I still can’t get over her and long for her all the time. It’s like a stalemate. I would really appreciate your advice on this.
Longing and Yearning
‘I Am Obsessed With a Woman I Can’t Have’
Dear Longing and Yearning,
This is a classic case of excellent chemistry but bad timing. Auntie has seen this film before and the hero always thinks that this one love is ‘different’. Maybe it is different for you. But the situation is very, very old.
Let’s start with the fact that you don’t want to face… that this is not love. This is emotional attachment, mixed with a heavy dose of imagination. And it is a powerful mix, made more powerful because the person in question is unavailable.
Every time you see her, your brain tells you “Ah yes, the unfinished business.” But notice something important… the girl chose someone else. This was not because you are not good enough, but because her life moved in a different direction. That is her choice, and chasing emotionally after someone who has chosen another path slowly kills your self-respect.
The chemistry you talk about is a result of you training your mind for a year to revolve around her. Of course, your brain runs back there. Our minds do what seems familiar and comfortable. Right now, you are feeding the feeling every time you replay moments and analyse your interactions with her. You are emotionally investing in a door that is firmly shut and you are wondering why you feel stuck outside. Of course, you are stuck!
It is time to start acting professionally with her. And it is time to stop any emotional conversations with her and avoid needless eye-contact. When your mind starts romanticising anything about her, interrupt it with reality, by reminding yourself that she is in a relationship and that you deserve someone who is available.
The person who is meant for you will not require this much suffering just to exist in your life. Mutual love is supposed to feel stable.
You are not losing her. You are grieving a life that you imagined. The grief will pass when you stop feeding it. You are simply holding on to an illusion because it once felt beautiful. Just let it be beautiful. And let it go.
Disclaimer: If you or someone you know is in crisis and/or feeling suicidal, please go to your nearest emergency room and seek medical help immediately.
Auntie will not reply privately to any query. Please send concise queries to: auntieagni@gmail.com
Published in Dawn, EOS, February 1st, 2026
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