You are on page 1of 5

Meet Pakistans Modern Middle Class

SARA FARID FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES


By AMMARA MAQSOOD
SEPTEMBER 24, 2017

Pakistan is often seen as a country with a small Birkin-bag-sporting elite, a poverty-ridden mass
and little in between. The reality is that Pakistan does have a large urban population, which
identifies itself as middle class. Being middle class is a status closely associated with a
progressive modernity in Pakistan, in India that individuals and successive governments
alike yearn for.

In undivided, colonial India, the term middle class was associated with Indian officials,
bureaucrats, doctors, lawyers and teachers who were linked to the colonial state. But while they
displayed the values and ambitions of the modernizing English middle class mediating
between the rulers and the ruled many of them came from aristocratic and landed
backgrounds.

After the formation of Pakistan in 1947, the families employed in the colonial government were
at the forefront of the national project of modernization, along with emerging groups such as
urban professionals from India and educated families from smaller towns in Punjab. They are
known as the old middle class in contemporary Pakistan. Their children dont work for the
state but tend to be employed at midlevel and top positions in the more lucrative private sector.

In Lahore, Pakistans second-largest city, old middle-class families distance themselves from the
upwardly mobile through their genealogical ties to prestigious families, local notables and their
display of affinity for the lost culture of the 1950s and 1960s. They share photos and stories of
Ava Gardner staying at Falettis Hotel during the filming of Bhowani Junction and Dizzy
Gillespie playing saxophone with a snake charmer evidence of a period when Pakistan
enjoyed a more favorable global reputation.

The old middle class sees Pakistan as being on the path toward modernity before the Islamization
agenda of Gen. Zia-ul-Haq (1978-88) brought upheaval. Their nostalgia influences foreign
commentators, who tend to showcase events, such as literary festivals, that glorify the earlier
progressive history of the country.

Implicit in these portrayals is a vilification of the upwardly mobile groups whose more visible
religiosity is viewed as the legacy of General Zia. It is these groups that constitute the new urban
middle class that has emerged since the 1980s. In Lahore, many of them are second-generation
migrants from small towns and rural areas in Punjab.

Products of the state education system of the 1980s a time when General Zia gave religious
clergy free rein and curbed political parties most members of the new middle class are
familiar with the discourses of Islamic groups. While many are sympathetic to Islamist parties
call for social justice, and some have had affiliations with such groups, few are lasting members.
Support for an Islamist party is often issue-based and transient, and in most cases, does not
translate into votes.

The new middle class has a strong sense that the solution to Pakistans problems lies in
becoming better Muslims and instilling Islamic values. But it is also conspicuous for its
members considerable investment in the latest mobile phones and consumer electronics, along
with frequent trips to Western-style shopping malls, megastores and markets in Lahore. Careful
attention is paid to rearing children: using branded diapers instead of local nappies, buying
clothes from well-known Pakistani labels and feeding them Western-style snacks, such as
chicken nuggets and instant noodles.

Yet twinned with the desire for consumption is anxiety about such exhibition and how to sustain
it. Most homes possess microwaves and mixer-grinders, but their owners use them sparingly and
store them in their original packaging. They buy sofas to match what they see in soap operas and
advertisements, but protect them with plain sheets that are removed only on special occasions.

Families on the poorer end of the new middle class visit malls and shopping spaces for
recreational experiences. They rarely make purchases from such places and prefer to look for the
same or similar goods in cheaper bazaars and wholesale markets. Their ability to find more
economical deals becomes a way to distinguish themselves from the presumed decadent and self-
indulgent upper classes.

Members of the new middle class covet government employment, which still remains a mark of
status, but such work does not provide sufficient income to sustain their idealized level of
middle-class consumption. Many in this group augment their state income through investment in
real estate.

Many families in new middle-class circles have acquired their current status through money
made by a relative in a semiskilled job in the Gulf countries or North America. The most
significant waves of semiskilled labor migration from Pakistan over the past half-century have
been for industrial work in Britain in the 1960s, construction labor in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
in the 1970s and 1980s and, since the 1980s, taxi driving, construction and restaurant
employment in the United States. Pakistan received $20 billion in remittances in 2016, according
to the World Bank.

The visible religiosity of the new middle class is often identified as the Wahhabi Islam of Saudi
Arabia. However, it is not Wahhabi Islam but the globalized Islam practiced by Muslims in the
West that better explains contemporary religious trends. Made familiar with Muslim practices
abroad through relatives living abroad and returning migrants, many members of the new middle
class have started incorporating them in their own lives.

For instance, Quran schools and religious study circles, where the Quran is studied with
translation and interpretation, were introduced in Lahore in the early 2000s by returnees from the
United States. Similarly, many women have replaced dupattas and chadors the traditional
ways of showing modesty in public with head scarves and cloaks similar to those worn by
relatives in the West, Saudi Arabia or the Gulf.

It is not so much the desire to be closer to the heartland of Islam that prompts these changes, but
the desire to display a modern Muslim identity, a shift commensurate with their economic
progress.

Denied the status of modernity in the local class hierarchy, these groups look for it through a
familiarity with a global Muslim community. Just as the old middle class gains its modern status
through a narrative that is used to explain Pakistan to the outside world, so the new middle class
attempts to use its own connections to the West to assert its modernity.

Ammara Maqsood, a junior research fellow in anthropology at St. Catherines College,


University of Oxford, is the author of The New Pakistani Middle Class.
Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook and Twitter (@NYTopinion), and
sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter.

Most Popular on NYTimes.com

After Trump Blasts N.F.L., Players Kneel and Lock Arms in Solidarity

Trump Calls for Boycott if N.F.L. Doesnt Crack Down on Anthem Protests

New Order Indefinitely Bars Almost All Travel From Seven Countries

Stephen Curry, on a Surreal Day, Confronts a Presidential Snub

Push for Gender Equality in Tech? Some Men Say Its Gone Too Far

OP-ED COLUMNIST
Will Mark Zuckerberg Like This Column?

Trump Attacks Warriors Curry. LeBron Jamess Retort: U Bum.

How to Survive the Apocalypse

I Love My Fianc, but Am Totally Crushing on a Co-Worker


Back to top
Home
World
U.S.
Politics
The Upshot
New York
Business Day
Technology
Sports
Opinion
Science
Health
Arts
Photos
Style
Video
Most Emailed
More Sections
Settings
Download Our Apps
NYTimes
NYT Real Estate
Crossword
Help
Subscribe
Feedback
Terms of Service
Privacy
2017 The New York Times Company

Get Outlook for iOS

You might also like