Terrorism on Art Centers in Lahore - Instablogs
Terrorism on Art Centers in Lahore
Karim Khan , Peshawar: Jan 12 2009
Made Popular Jan 12 2009
Pakistan :

Terrorism on Art Centers in Lahore

Lahore is Pakistan’s leading center of art and culture. Recently, on January 09 2009, two theaters in Lahore were targeted by what are thought to be fundamentalist terrorist groups. Five explosions rocked the city’s theaters in the evening, four of them at the Al Falah Theater and one at the Tamaseel Theater.
While no casualties were reported and no one claimed the responsibility for the attacks, most people including the police officials of the area believe that fundamentalist hostile to cultural/artistic activities would make such attacks. A few suspects have been arrested and are being interrogated. Security has been tightened around other theaters and the blasts have induced a general state of fear among the residents of the area.

As manifest from the Lahore attacks, the terrorist elements are now targeting art/culture centers; female education and certain sects being already their target. The National College of Arts (NCA) and other pro-art institutes have expressed their concern on the blasts and regarded them as violation of basic human rights. Certainly, our lives without art would feel mechanical and alienating. However, it is also true that certain theatrical shows need revision in order to keep in line with the ethical standards for propriety.

Add Images and Videos
Close X
Recommended Tags or Keywords
Search by Tags or Keywords
Selected Media ( You can Upload only Six media )
Sorry no picture found for this combination of tags. Try to search minimum number of tags at once
2 Stars
”Certainly, our lives without art would feel mechanical and alienating.”
Thumbs up for that!
The radicals are looking for attacking arts and all the symbols which they dislike in their viewpoint.
They only want to remove happiness from people’s life, be it Pakistanis, Indians or Iraqis.
1 Stars
Sonu Purohit
Bangalore, India
You stopped where you should have taken up the cudgels. Do you think there could be some sort of a legal artifice that could alleviate such nefarious and disturbing activities?
(Global Perspectives)
2 Stars
Sonu Purohit
Bangalore, India
Come on, you are again playing skeptic in a field that rarely needs skepticism. If you think art must follow some guidelines to appease a sect or a group of people then you are treading very close to accepting such violent and nefarious acts of destruction. Nobod, at these times of trouble, should justify any form of volence - not even in the name of religion.
1 Stars
Sonu, the violence is not justified and not justified in any form. But giving things a free hand in every matter is also not wise. Cultural sensibilities need to be taken in consideration because, if not follwed, these careless ventures serve as a pretext for justifying the violence. I hope you get the point: it’s like keeping the cup full but not allowing to spill over and call the wrath of someone who is actively looking for a bone of contention.
1 Stars
Sonu Purohit
Bangalore, India
You have simplified the issue. Why do you not see that people who perpetrate such acts of destruction, can never be contained by goodwill, sense or idle table talk? It has to be driven home with these people that Al Falah Theater of Lahore did not spill the tea. Indeed terror mongers must be made to understand that people who take to arms on half provocation, have no business in sippin’ or spillin’ tea. They have to be behind the bars.
(Global Perspectives)
1 Stars
Yes, I agree with you on the point that such criminals should be arrested and punished. I am not at all saying that thier crime of bombing is justified. What I mean is that if some theaters could remain careful with respect to cultural like and dislike, it will decrease the risk of not getting support from general public. When such a thing happens, people should support the authorities in punishing the culprits but if the same theaters win a bad reputation from the general public, the public will not supprt them in such times and even the culprits will have the pretext of destroying a bad place. I would like the theaters to end this risk of non-support from the public. Just my two cents!
1 Stars
Sonu Purohit
Bangalore, India
My friend Karim, tell me honestly, do your people visit that blasted theater too frequently? Do they have the means to consume culture copiously? If not, then how should they know that their faith is being impinged upon at some closeted theater? It is absurd to think that people walk their lives with religion in the bosom. If someone does that, he needs to be treated both physically and mentally.
(Global Perspectives)
Add your Comment