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Wherever
we have witnessed major conflicts in the last century, we also see
art today in the shape of public monuments. This artistic intervention
is increasingly becoming a social tool to heal national wounds inflicted
by social discord and war.
Why
does a nation need these tangible reminders, and how do 'brick and
mortar' acquire a symbolic meaning that some times transcends the
very event or person that they honour? While the answers to these
questions have changed with time, the very act of monument-building
remains intrinsic to national identity.
Recorded
history reveals that most early monuments were built by conquerors
to commemorate victories and heroism. In the 20th century, the pivotal
role of civil society has bestowed a greater responsibility on the
artist of the monument to reflect the ethos of a nation. The monument,
as a repository of a nation's memory today, is expected to emerge
from the sensibility and sentiments of the people and not be imposed
upon them through the edict of its ruling elite.
In
a rapidly changing world, artists are seen to evolve new symbols
as old one's loose their vitality and relevance. Amin Gulgee's monument
in Karachi, with its reference to donkey cart racing, a popular
sport among the coastal communities, is an important precedent in
its acknowledgement of folk culture. The very grammar of monument
design has embraced participation and reflection through different
means. The vertical scale, once symbolic of power and glory, is
giving way to a more organic horizontal sprawl that allows the visitor
to enter the architecture at different levels of his/her being.
In
Berlin, the recently completed monument 'Field Of Stelae,' a memorial
to the murdered Jews of Europe by Peter Eisenmen, is being hailed
as a contemporary memorial that, according to a press release, "quite
intentionally refrains from imposing a clearly 'readable' symbolic
statement."
Pivotal to this monument design is spatial innovation, which
explores the emotional and physical responses to space. The concept
successfully turns modest building material like concrete and its
simple forms into an experience that can be provocative and reflective
simultaneously.
As
I walked through this monument, which is a landscape of 2711 rectangular
stelae that sit quietly like huge coffins, the first thing I realised
after the entry into the space, which is several feet below street
level, was that the land beneath the feet was undulating. Intermittently,
one has to pass through a tight passage between towering walls of
the box-like structures, and this confrontation with the changing
height of the stelae offers no other symmetry than a distant, narrow
view of the street on the parameter of the monument. To be completely
dwarfed by tall stelae, and then walk a few feet on an incline to
face an equally bewildered visitor, brings home that there is a
deliberate attempt to keep your senses alert. Peter Eisenmen jolts
you out of your mental and physical comfort zone and transforms
the visit from a ritual of conscience into an introspective journey.
The process through which this monument was achieved is equally
important, as it is reflective of the country's passage to a participatory
society. Since the time the idea was introduced by the journalist
Lea Rosh, it has taken the German nation decades of social and political
negotiations, and the very location in the prime administrative
core of the city and in the environs of the other major historical
monuments is indicative of how, in the end, all the stakeholders
were unified in favour of the project. People's representatives
at all levels of government came together with members of civil
society and families of the victims to chalk out the goals for the
memorial, which include not only to honour the murdered Jews and
keep their memory alive but also "to admonish all future generations
never again to violate human rights." Other objectives were
to defend the democratic constitutional state at all times and secure
equality before the law for all people and to resist all forms of
dictatorship and regimes based on violence.
These
are objectives that many regimes in the world since World War Two
have failed to uphold and even the history of Pakistan, a young
nation of 57 years, is marked by two violent social and political
ruptures, the first marked its birth and the second the loss of
its eastern wing. Despite these highly traumatic experiences, nowhere
in the country has there been an artistic intervention that reflects
the nation's anguish and addresses issues of failure and loss.
In
the country's largest city, Karachi, that is host to the greatest
number of displaced persons from these ruptures, we encounter two
monuments on the main Clifton Road. Popularly known as the Teen
Talwar (Three Swords) Monument and the Do Talwar (Two Swords) Monument,
both are connected to the history of 1947. Since they were probably
born on a civil engineer's drafting table, to term them as artistic
interventions would be a travesty.
No
one seems to care that the redundant symbolism of a sword is in
direct contradiction to the Quaid's democratic ideals of Unity,
Faith and Discipline, which are so blatantly tattooed on the surface
of the drab marble of The Two Swords Monument. Perched on a small
island of grass in the centre of a busy intersection, the only way
it can be viewed is while waiting for a traffic light to turn green.
Its scale can be best appreciated from the top of the Clifton bridge
from where it looks more like an arched gateway than a monument.
Downstream is located the 'Two Swords Monument.' This name has been
given to it by 'the man on the street,' mainly to mark the different
bus stops on the long Clifton road. The main structure is an abstract
form with sloping sides that have been sliced into two equal parts
and can be read as two stylised swords. Built on an elevated platform,
it also has a small dedication to the heroes of the Freedom Movement.
Presently this monument has been fenced off and its location in
the centre of the heavy flow of traffic discourages visitors.
These
monuments, despite their tangible presence, are strangely 'silent'
sites and have no presence in the nation's consciousness. This has
largely to do with the fact they were not built for an interface
nor conceptualised with the input of the citizenry but were the
product of a ruler's arbitrary whim. Maybe if the stakeholders were
allowed to take ownership through a dialogue that not only identifies
the objectives of the monument but uses this democratic mechanism
for the participation of multiple voices, only then can a nation
negotiate an outcome that belongs to all.
An
artist who was part of such a process would be better aware of his/her
responsibility towards the aspirations of a people and all the aesthetic
decisions would then be tempered with the shared sensitivity and
sensibility.
As
I write this piece, the legacy of Quaid-e-Azam is, once again, under
discussion on the electronic media to commemorate his birth anniversary
celebrations. The main difference this year is that there is a more
progressive interpretation of the social implications of his philosophy.
There is both a need for soul-searching and a growing will in civil
society not to repeat its past mistakes.
Perhaps the monument
of the future can prove to be the catalyst at this time to facilitate
national cohesion. What better way than to seek inspiration from
the Founder of the Nation's fervent belief that all Pakistanis are
equal, irrespective of their cast, creed or religion. Similar to
the Lea Rosh initiative of a memorial to the murdered Jews of Europe
that brought her nation together, over a contentious issue, we,
too, may be able to build a monument that can bury bigotry and discord
in an artist's vision of the nation's future.
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