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No one could be more qualified to write a memoir on Pakistan's
turbulent history than a grandstand viewer - and a journalist to
boot. With more than half a century of experience in journalism -
49 years at Dawn, South Asia's best paper - Muhammad Ali Siddiqi
has been witness to events which have shaped today's Pakistan and
Karachi. He lived history as a citizen, and reported and commented
as a newsman, in Pakistan and abroad. This book is thus his record
for posterity of a mauled, brutalised nation's history. The book is
also a mirror to the life of a typical, self-made Karachian
struggling to acquire education, while making two ends meet as a
typist. This is a tribute as much to the author as to the city that
threw open its doors to all those who chose to make it their home.
Life for him was anything but a bed of roses, for he would sleep on
the editing desk of the Times of Karachi to proceed in the morning
to the new campus, located in what then was a wilderness of barren
hills and brown land. That was 1960. In 1992, he was at the White
House reporting on the Benazir-Clinton summit conference as Dawn's
Washington Correspondent. Because his entry in the profession
coincided with the first military takeover in 1958, he, like all
Pakistani journalists, worked within the oppressive atmosphere of a
military dictatorship, though, strange as it appears, author
Siddiqi mentions Ayub Khan all along with respect. He makes no
secret of his admiration for Z.A. Bhutto, who, he said, was
murdered because of his reforms, especially the nationalsation of
industry, and quotes Machiavelli, "A man forgets his father (pater)
but not his patrimony." The book describes in detail the impact the
military rule had on the press, the muzzling of the media,
draconian laws, the journalists' epic struggle for freedom, the
historic 1970 strike, the flogging of journalists during Ziaul
Haq's tyranny, and the freedom which finally came after great
sacrifices. Simultaneously, we get a glimpse of the technological
revolution in printing, for Siddiqi began with hot metal and
journeyed through photo-offset to finally enter the computer era
when Dawn's page are sent to Islamabad and Rawalpindi by a click.
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Bazdeed (Paperback)
Sukrita Paul Kumar, Sukrtia, Ali Siddiqi, Muhammad
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R133
Discovery Miles 1 330
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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