When Taliban militants stormed a school in Pakistan’s northwest in December last year, killing 150 people, mainly children, in the country’s deadliest terror attack, comic book creators Mustafa Hasnain and Gauhar Aftab decided it was time to act.
The pair had already been working on a series to raise awareness about the corruption that plagues the economically underperforming Muslim giant of 200 million people.
However, they quickly decided to shift their focus to violent extremism — and felt holding candlelight vigils was not the best way to effect change.
Photo: AFP
Hasnain, a British-educated computer graphics specialist, founded his own company, Creative Frontiers, in 2013, today employing 20 people, including young male and female artists, programmers and writers, in a hip Silicon Valley-style office in the city of Lahore.
He explained: “It was a huge watershed moment for us. I got together with Gauhar and I said, ‘We really have to do something about this.’ We used to stand over there [at vigils] with a candle ... but we wanted to do something more.”
The result was Paasban — or “Guardian” — a three-part series featuring a group of close friends at college who begin to worry when one of them drops out to join a religious student group that is ostensibly working for charitable causes. However, some in the group suspect it might have darker aims.
Fifteen thousand of the books are set to be distributed for free from today at schools in the cities of Lahore, Multan and Lodhran, while some copies are to be made available in book stores. The comic is also to be distributed on a tailor-made app the group have developed for Apple and Android smartphones.
For English-language script writer Aftab, the pathway from disillusionment to signing up to carry a gun and fight the so-called enemies of Islam was not just something he had read about in the news — it was a choice he had almost made as a child.
A product of Aitchison College in Lahore, Pakistan’s elite equivalent to Britain’s Eton, Aftab came under the influence of a charismatic teacher who convinced him at the age of 13 to leave behind his school and family to fight against the Indian army in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.
Eventually pulled back by a last-minute family intervention, he came to identify the methods that radicals use to attract young people to violent extremism.
“De-emphasizing the virtues and values of your traditional faith, moving you towards the more minimalistic standpoint when it comes to religion, demonizing various factors or forces that you feel to be threatening Islam, then [finally] glorifying the aspect of martyrdom,” he said.
By creating a storyline that features a protagonist going through these experiences, Aftab said, young people who see the same thing going on in their lives or those of their friends will be better equipped to identify and avoid the same fate.
The Urdu translation was written by renowned script-writer Amjad Islam Amjad, responsible for some of Pakistan’s most popular TV shows, in an effort to ensure an audience that is as wide as possible in a country where English is mainly used by the educated elite.
While comic books in the US tradition often feature heroes with superpowers such as Superman, Paasban’s creators decided to concentrate on creating ordinary heroes, or “guardians,” they felt the Pakistani audience would relate better to.
The art is inspired by Alphonse Mucha and Pakistani artist Abdur Rahman Chughtai, although the action is more in line with Western comics and Japanese manga, according to creative director and cocreator Yahya Ehsan.
However, what the three hope will eventually land them a sustainable revenue stream beyond the donor funding they currently receive is a digital app they have developed that they say is the best of its kind in the world for bringing graphic novels to life on smartphones.
The app is optimized to work on low-end smartphones available from about US$70 that have flooded the Pakistani market since the advent of 3G data connections last year, with some estimates placing smartphone penetration at 20 percent of the country’s estimated 80 million mobile users.
Users can swipe from panel to panel, with simple animations depicting new characters entering a scene, all set to a brooding background soundtrack.
Aftab, the writer, said he hoped other writers and artists would follow their lead and use the app to encourage a debate on what he calls the “real” Islam of peace, which he discovered once out of the clutches of his former teacher.
“We want to promote the idea that you don’t have to be secular to be nonviolent... What you need to be is a Muslim who rejects the violent extremist form certain groups have given to our faith,” he said.
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